James Richards <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Personally, I can't recall any decent programmer I know who objects
> to actually writing out a variable name. In fact, I don't know a
> single "real" programmer (this is one who writes programs he intends
> to look at again in, say, 3 weeks) who doesn'
Prabahar wrote:
>I want to know difference between
> Python-cgi and Perl-cgi and also I want
> to which one is efficient from the performance.
The difference between a cgi program written in Perl and a cgi program written
in Python is the choice of programming language. Both work quite
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On Thu, 28 Jul 2005 15:23:46 -0500, Rocco Moretti wrote:
>
>
>>Professionals (and even decent hobbyists) don't
>>escalate flame wars, even unintentionally.
>
>
> You don't get out much, do you? *wink*
>
> If your comment is meant to be _prescriptive_ rather than _desc
anyone know some good reliable html scraping (with python) tutorials.
i have looked around and found a few.
one uses urllib2 and beautifull soap modules for scraping and parsing
http://www.dalkescientific.com/writings/diary/archive/2005/04/21/screen_scraping.html
and the other uyses mechanize, cli
Scott David Daniels <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>What kind of shenanigans must a parser go through to translate:
> <
>
>this is the comparison of two functions, but it looks like a left-
>shift on a function until the second with is encountered. Then
>you need to backtrack to the shift and co
Major big apologies if this has been covered to death before.
It's been a few years since I played with these two technologies.
I seem to recall a python wrapper over aiksaurus. I can't find it now.
(Or maybe it's just my own stupidity. That's been known to happen :-/).
Is there a project/wrap
On 2005-07-28, Sidd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
> I was recently reading an article on threading in python and I
> came across Global Interpreter Lock,now as a novince in python I was
> cusrious about
>
> 1.Is writing a threaded code in python going to perform well than a
> normal pyt
Dear All,
I want to know difference between
Python-cgi and Perl-cgi and also I want
to which one is efficient from the performance.
regards
Prabahar
___
Too much spam in your inbox? Yahoo! Mail gives you the best spam p
On 2005-07-30, Scott David Daniels <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Christopher Subich wrote:
>> g =
>> g(1) == 1
>>
>> Basically, I'd rewrite the Python grammar such that:
>> lambda_form ::= "<" expression "with" parameter_list ">"
>>
>> Biggest change is that parameter_list is no longer optional,
I was interesting in adding selection and hit testing to ZOE, and was
looking at the PyOpenGL wrappers' handling of selection and picking. I
see glSelectBuffer to specify the size of the buffer, and glRenderMode
properly returns the number of hits when put back into GL_RENDER mode,
but I don't
NickC wrote:
> I'm usually not much of a purist, but C++ has convinced me that
> overloading an operator to mean something entirely unrelated to its
> mathematical meaning can be very unwise.
Me too. In general. I've yet to overload a single operator that way in
years of writing Python code, th
Michael Hoffman wrote:
> In that case, I think he just wasted a lot of time in the article, and
> would have been better off saying "use Getopt::Long."
This is why I think he was more concerned with design than implementation.
--
Jorge Godoy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
--
http://mail.python.org
thanks for the great info and urls, i have downloaded the pymedia
module and playing around with it now. Thx alot
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Jorge Godoy wrote:
> Michael Hoffman wrote:
>
>
>>True, but a lot of his point *is* parsing input from the command line.
>>Consider the following points paraphrased from his article:
>>
>>* Don't mix multiple ways of specifying options. (Solved by optparse)
>>* If a flag expects an associated val
Rocky Burt wrote:
> Installing fresh PyDev 0.9.7 onto eclipse 3.1 (no prior PyDev installed)
> yields the following error when opening a python file. Seems like a
> simple enough error... the PyEdit class seems to be present.
I had the same problems today. Then I read the requisites: Java 1.5.0
>> (Those who are offended by sweeping generalisations should
>> ignore this next bit)
[...generalisation bit snipped...]
> This is not only bullshit, it's elitist bullshit. "Windows users are
> more clueless than users of posix systems." Pfui. Prove it
> or withdraw it.
Sigh. I guess you di
Hi All--
Tony Meyer wrote:
>
> So far, there have been various statements that look like +0 for __div__,
> but no-one with a +1. (And I've said this a couple of times now, which
> really is just trolling for a +1 from someone).
>
> > It's not a question of saving characters, but readability whi
Here:
http://diveintopython.org/http_web_services/index.html#oa.divein
Here:
Cookbook rel 2, and:
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python?kwd=Web
Here:other really good py intros which cover 2.2 / urllib (maybe 2.3, I
don't have them with me), but examples should all not give deprecation
Installing fresh PyDev 0.9.7 onto eclipse 3.1 (no prior PyDev installed)
yields the following error when opening a python file. Seems like a
simple enough error... the PyEdit class seems to be present.
java.lang.ClassNotFoundException: org.python.pydev.editor.PyEdit
at
org.eclipse.osgi.fr
Christopher Subich wrote:
> g =
> g(1) == 1
>
> Basically, I'd rewrite the Python grammar such that:
> lambda_form ::= "<" expression "with" parameter_list ">"
>
> Biggest change is that parameter_list is no longer optional, so
> zero-argument expr-comps would be written as , which makes
> a b
> We're talking at this point about how Path should work, not
> whether it's preferable to os.path.join, even though that was
> really the point of Reinhard's original post.
That's not what I'm talking about. I'm talking about whether __div__ should
be a shortcut to joinwith, or whether users sh
Christopher Subich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> My personal favourite is to replace "lambda" entirely with an
> "expression comprehension", using < and > delimeters.
But how does that let you get more than one expression into the
anonymous function?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pyt
Mike Meyer wrote:
> My choice for the non-name token is "@". It's already got magic
> powers, so we'll give it more rather than introducing another token
> with magic powers, as the lesser of two evils.
Doesn't work. The crux of your change isn't introducing a meaning to @
(and honestly, I prefe
[Re: how to get at the base class]
Do you really want to have a "only works for Path" way to get at the
base class, rather than using the canonical Path.__bases__[0]?
How about a new property in the os.path module instead? Something like
os.path.path_type.
Then os.path.path_type is unicode if an
Mike Meyer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > When handling resources in Python, where the scope of the resource is
> > known, there seem to be two schools of thought:
> > (1) Explicit: ...
> > (2) Implicit: let the GC handle it.
>
> The only cases I see the first school of thought is when the resour
"John Perks and Sarah Mount" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> When handling resources in Python, where the scope of the resource is
> known, there seem to be two schools of thought:
>
> (1) Explicit:
> f = open(fname)
> try:
> # ...
> finally:
> f.close()
>
> (2) Implicit: let the GC handle i
[Re: alternatives to overloading '/']
Is there a reason the Path constructor is limited to a single argument?
If it allowed multiple arguments, the following would seem very
straightforward:
p = Path(somePath, user.getFolder(), 'archive', oldPath + ".bak")
I'm usually not much of a purist, but C
John Perks:
> When handling resources in Python, where the scope of the resource is
> known, there seem to be two schools of thought:
> ...
This is part of what PEP 343 addresses:
http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0343.html
Neil
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
"I am looking for an xml-object mapping tool ('XML Data Binding-design
time product') where I can define the mapping rules in 'binding files'
and the parser is generated automatically.
Similar to the solution of Dave Kuhlman
(http://www.rexx.com/~dkuhlman/ generateDS.html) where the mapping is
def
"I'm looking for a library that can search through an XML document
tree,
locate an element by attribute (ideally this can be done through
XPath), and insert an element (as its child).
Simple? Yes? ...but the code I've seen so far which does this uses
'nested for loops' for trees which are relative
On Thu, 28 Jul 2005 17:24:06 -0400, Asad Habib wrote:
> Well, even if you are a hobbyist, that does not excuse you from being
> civil. After all, we are all humans beings that deserve to be treated with
> respect. Professional, hobbyist, vagabond, ogre, instigator, troll ...
> THERE IS NO EXCUSE .
On Thu, 28 Jul 2005 15:23:46 -0500, Rocco Moretti wrote:
> Professionals (and even decent hobbyists) don't
> escalate flame wars, even unintentionally.
You don't get out much, do you? *wink*
If your comment is meant to be _prescriptive_ rather than _descriptive_, I
don't entirely agree.
Flame
Certain pages cause urllib2 to go into an infinite loop when using
readline(), but everything works fine if read() is used instead. Is
this a bug or am I missing something simple?
import urllib2
url = 'http://www.naylamp.com'
f = urllib2.urlopen(url)
i = 0
#this works fine when uncommented
#pr
When handling resources in Python, where the scope of the resource is
known, there seem to be two schools of thought:
(1) Explicit:
f = open(fname)
try:
# ...
finally:
f.close()
(2) Implicit: let the GC handle it.
I've come up with a third method that uses decorators to achieve a
useful
I know, lambda bashing (and defending) in the group is one of the most
popular ways to avoid writing code. However, while staring at some Oz
code, I noticed a feature that would seem to make both groups happy -
if we can figure out how to avoid the ugly syntax.
This proposal does away with the wel
phil wrote:
> I use PySerial in a 16 line data collection system
> with LOTS of threads, and yes am frustrated by read().
> This sounds excellent, keep us updated.
>
> BTW, haven't done any event driven Python except Tkinter.
> Would this a class library which would let you
> define an event and
"Michele Simionato" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> adding methods on the fly and metaclasses could live pretty well
> without
> multiple inheritance. There would be no real loss
> of power and hopefully less monstruosities such
> a Zope 2. But maybe this is just wishful thinking ...
Um, no real lo
Peter Otten wrote:
> Seems my description didn't convince you. So here's an example:
Got it. In my test case the longest element happened to be the last
one, which is why it didn't catch the problem.
Thanks.
Andrew
[EMAIL PROTECTED
"Fuzzyman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Ajar wrote:
>> I want to write a program which will automatically login to my ISPs
>> website, retrieve data and do some processing. Can this be done? Can
>> you point me to any example python programs which do similar things?
>>
>> Regards,
>> Ajar
>
> Ver
Sarir Khamsi wrote:
> Peter Hansen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>I'm not sure what "completion" means in this case, and I'm not aware
>>of any "command-line completion" support in cmd.Cmd though it may well
>>be there, so I can't say. Certainly there is nothing in any way
>>different about the new
Jason Drew wrote:
> Also, I think
> using file("C:\file.txt") is now preferred to open("C:\file.txt").
As others have noted, "open" is preferred as the method for opening
files, while "file" is the _type_ involved, for testing or subclassing
or what-have-you.
But neither file("C:\file.txt") nor
Dan Sommers wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Aahz) wrote:
>>Dan Sommers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>>Was Tim writing about developing Python itself, or about developing
>>>other programs with Python?
>
>>Yes.
>
> It was a rhetorical question. :-)
That's all right... Aahz gave a rhetorical answer.
Peter Tillotson wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm looking for an advanced concurrency module for python and don't seem
> to be able to find anything suitable. Does anyone know where I might
> find one? I know that there is CSP like functionality built into
> Stackless but i'd like students to be able to use a
Peter Hansen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I'm not sure what "completion" means in this case, and I'm not aware
> of any "command-line completion" support in cmd.Cmd though it may well
> be there, so I can't say. Certainly there is nothing in any way
> different about the new attribute created by
Michael Hoffman wrote:
> I use path in more of my modules and scripts than any other third-party
> module, and I know it will be very helpful when I no longer have to
> worry about deploying it.
Same here. An object-oriented path module is extremely useful, and
makes one's code much less cluttere
Steven Bethard wrote:
> So open("C:\file.txt") is still fine
I think it is more like it is recommended, not just OK.
--
Benji York
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Jason Drew wrote:
> Also, I think using file("C:\file.txt") is now preferred
> to open("C:\file.txt").
Guido has said he wants to keep open() around as the way to open a
file-like object, with the theory that in the future open might also
support opening non-files (e.g. urls). So open("C:\file.
Steve Holden wrote:
> >>> tt = "".join([chr(i) for i in range(256)])
Or:
tt = string.maketrans('', '')
STeVe
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Michael Hoffman wrote:
> True, but a lot of his point *is* parsing input from the command line.
> Consider the following points paraphrased from his article:
>
> * Don't mix multiple ways of specifying options. (Solved by optparse)
> * If a flag expects an associated value, allow an optional = be
Hello,
I am using Asyncore.dispatcher around a socket (well call the wrapped
version a channel). This channel is passed around to other objects.
These objects call "send" on the channel.
My question is, what do you do for "writable" and "handle_write"?
Those seemed designed for channel-internal b
Firstly, there's probably a better way to do whatever you're trying to
do w.r.t cd/dvd burning. I'm not familiar with gear, but its webpage
lists "Batch file scripting capability" as a feature, which suggests
that you might be able to do what you want without parsing output
intended for humans. T
I can say with some certainty that opening a "music file" with open
won't launch media player. If rather, you do os.system('musicfile.mp3')
it will launch whatever application is associated with the file type
.mp3. You can either automate Windows Media player or use pymedia
to play such files.
H
Well, using the open function in Python doesn't launch any application
associated with the file (such as Media Player). It just makes the
contents of the file accessible to your Python code. Also, I think
using file("C:\file.txt") is now preferred to open("C:\file.txt").
To answer the specific que
Hi,
I found out about your Python community and thought you may be able to help me out.
I am supporting an elite group of traders (more like the Who's Who on Wall Street). We are building algorithmic trading models to analyze market movements, economic indicators, and various factors to pre
Scott David Daniels wrote:
> Can I play too?
Not unless you buy the expensive but good-looking c.l.py gaming license
which is only available trough me :)
> How about:
> import itertools
>
> def fillzip(*seqs):
> def Nones(countactive=[len(seqs)]):
> countactive
Andrew Dalke wrote:
> Me:
>>> Could make it one line shorter with
>>
>>> from itertools import chain, izip, repeat
>>> def fillzip(*seqs):
>>> def done_iter(done=[len(seqs)]):
>>> done[0] -= 1
>>> if not done[0]:
>>> return []
>>> return repeat(None)
>>>
QOTW: "Guido has marked the trail; don't ignore the signs unless you really
know where you're going." - Raymond Hettinger
'Proverbs 28:14 JPS "Happy is the man that feareth alway; but he that
hardeneth his heart shall fall into evil." Obviously an exhortation to not
ignore raised exceptions with "
Scott David Daniels wrote:
> Can I play too? How about:
Sweet!
Andrew
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Me:
>> Could make it one line shorter with
>
>> from itertools import chain, izip, repeat
>> def fillzip(*seqs):
>> def done_iter(done=[len(seqs)]):
>> done[0] -= 1
>> if not done[0]:
>> return []
>> return repeat(None)
>> seqs = [chain(seq, done_iter()
Well, im not no expert on the python programming language but i just
wanted to know if there was a quick way to hide certain things when
programming in python. Such as, i wanted some music or sound effects
with my python program. So, i type...
print "Music is by blah blah"
music-file = open(file c
thats pretty cool, could someone post a example program of a python
web-based program?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
thats pretty cool, could someone post a example program of a python
web-based program?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Jorge Godoy wrote:
> Michael Hoffman wrote:
>
>
>>He spends so much space on "Create Consistent Command-Line Interfaces,"
>>a section that, in Python, could be replaced with a simple "Use optparse."
>
>
> In Perl there's also the equivalent of optparse, but where does it guarantee
> that you'll
On Fri, Jul 29, 2005 at 01:18:10PM -0400, Jeremy Moles wrote:
> On Fri, 2005-07-29 at 17:59 +0200, Torsten Bronger wrote:
> > one thinks "well, perfect, I have the choice between four
>
> Four?
>
> 1. wx
> 2. PyGTK
> 3. Tk (Are you including this one even?)
> 4. ???
Well, QT at least. And sure
On Fri, 2005-07-29 at 14:19 -0300, Jorge Godoy wrote:
> Jeremy Moles wrote:
>
> > Four?
> >
> > 1. wx
> > 2. PyGTK
> > 3. Tk (Are you including this one even?)
> > 4. ???
>
> PyQt / PyKDE.
Ah! Can't believe I forgot that one! :)
> > Of the few I can think of, only one would qualify as great. :
On 29 Jul 2005 07:45:33 -0700,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Aahz) wrote:
> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> Dan Sommers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>> Was Tim writing about developing Python itself, or about developing
>> other programs with Python?
> Yes.
> (C'mon, didja really expect any other answ
Jeremy Moles wrote:
> Four?
>
> 1. wx
> 2. PyGTK
> 3. Tk (Are you including this one even?)
> 4. ???
PyQt / PyKDE.
> Of the few I can think of, only one would qualify as great. :)
The fourth one? ;-)
--
Jorge Godoy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-
Michael Hoffman wrote:
> He spends so much space on "Create Consistent Command-Line Interfaces,"
> a section that, in Python, could be replaced with a simple "Use optparse."
In Perl there's also the equivalent of optparse, but where does it guarantee
that you'll use consistent name options and de
Andrew Dalke wrote:
> Peter Otten wrote:
>> Combining your "clever" and your "elegant" approach to something fast
>> (though I'm not entirely confident it's correct):
>>
>> def fillzip(*seqs):
>> def done_iter(done=[len(seqs)]):
>> done[0] -= 1
>> if not done[0]:
>>
On Fri, 2005-07-29 at 17:59 +0200, Torsten Bronger wrote:
> Hallöchen!
>
> Michael Hoffman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > Dark Cowherd wrote:
> >
> >> GUI, Web development, Application Framework - it is shambles.
> >
> > Yeah, I agree. When I finally make that GUI application I still
> > don't
Peter Otten wrote:
> def fillzip(*seqs):
> def done_iter(done=[len(seqs)]):
> done[0] -= 1
> if not done[0]:
> return
> while 1:
> yield None
> seqs = [chain(seq, done_iter()) for seq in seqs]
> return izip(*seqs)
Can I play too? How abou
On 7/29/05, Dark Cowherd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I am new to Python. I tried it out and think it is fantastic.
Congrats and have fun learning all there is to learn.
> I really loved this from import this statements:
>
> There should be one-- and preferably only one --obvious way to do it.
>
The choice is GUI toolkits is largely seperate from Python. Consider
that they are just bindings to libraries that are developed completely
seperate of the language. GUI is should be seperate from the language,
and thus not bound to same expectations and desires as elements of the
language itself.
Torsten Bronger wrote:
> Hallöchen!
>
> Michael Hoffman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>
>>Dark Cowherd wrote:
>>
>>
>>>GUI, Web development, Application Framework - it is shambles.
>>
>>Yeah, I agree. When I finally make that GUI application I still
>>don't know whether I am going to use wx or P
Sion Arrowsmith
> That way lies Java
well, no, a dynamic language such as Python with the possibility of
adding methods on the fly and metaclasses could live pretty well
without
multiple inheritance. There would be no real loss
of power and hopefully less monstruosities such
a Zope 2. But maybe th
I was explaining the difference between irony and sarcasm to my
daughter just the other day. It was nice of Asad to provide us with
such a besutiful example. Not that I'm sure that was his intent...
Jeff
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hallöchen!
Michael Hoffman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Dark Cowherd wrote:
>
>> GUI, Web development, Application Framework - it is shambles.
>
> Yeah, I agree. When I finally make that GUI application I still
> don't know whether I am going to use wx or PyGTK.
I agree, too, although I can onl
Dark Cowherd wrote:
> There should be one-- and preferably only one --obvious way to do it.
>
> But this not true of Python.
> GUI, Web development, Application Framework - it is shambles. It is so
That's because there is no *obvious* way to do these.
> -Quote - Phillip J. Eby from dirtsimple.o
Peter Otten wrote:
> Combining your "clever" and your "elegant" approach to something fast
> (though I'm not entirely confident it's correct):
>
> def fillzip(*seqs):
> def done_iter(done=[len(seqs)]):
> done[0] -= 1
> if not done[0]:
> return
> while 1:
>
Dark Cowherd wrote:
> GUI, Web development, Application Framework - it is shambles.
Yeah, I agree. When I finally make that GUI application I still don't
know whether I am going to use wx or PyGTK.
> Is there some place to discuss topics like this? Is this the right place?
Sure, although you m
I am new to Python. I tried it out and think it is fantastic.
I really loved this from import this statements:
There should be one-- and preferably only one --obvious way to do it.
But this not true of Python.
GUI, Web development, Application Framework - it is shambles. It is so
frustrating fo
> although, as some argue, it's
> possible [GvR] thinks in base 9.5, that just doesn't seem Pythonic to me.
+1 QOTW
Peace
Bill Mill
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Dan Sommers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>Was Tim writing about developing Python itself, or about developing
>other programs with Python?
Yes.
(C'mon, didja really expect any other answer?)
--
Aahz ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) <*> http://www.pythoncraft
Asad Habib wrote:
> Well, even if you are a hobbyist, that does not excuse you from being
> civil. After all, we are all humans beings that deserve to be treated with
> respect. Professional, hobbyist, vagabond, ogre, instigator, troll ...
> THERE IS NO EXCUSE ... please treat others with respect.
[Dan Sommers]
> Ok, not universal. But as usual, Zen is not easily nailed to a tree.
>
> Was Tim writing about developing Python itself, or about developing
> other programs with Python?
Tim was channeling Guido, and that's as far as our certain knowledge
can go. It _seems_ reasonable to believ
According to Jeff Epler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> I'd consider it a doc bug too. If you feel comfortable doing it, dive
> in and improve the documentation of poplib. Submitting a patch to the
> patch tracker on sf.net/projects/python is probably the best way to do
> this, if you have the necessary
[Steve Holden]
>> If I canpoint out the obvious, the output from "import this" *is*
>> headed "The Zen of Python", so clearly it isn;t intended to be
>> universal in its applicability.
[Michael Hudson]
> It's also mistitled there, given that it was originally posted as '19
> Pythonic Theses' and n
Adriaan Renting wrote:
> def StripNoPrint(self, S):
> from string import printable
> return "".join([ ch for ch in S if ch in printable ])
>
>
> Adriaan Renting| Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> ASTRON | Phone: +31 521 595 217
> P.O. Box 2 | GSM: +3
EnderLocke wrote:
> I have a friend who wants to learn python programming. I learned off
> the internet and have never used a book to learn it. What books do you
> recommend?
>
> Any suggestions would be appreciated.
I have just uploaded a podcast specifically about which tutorials and
books might
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On Fri, 29 Jul 2005 06:37:52 +, Bengt Richter wrote:
>
>
>>I suggested in a previous thread that one could support such a syntax by
>>supporting an invisible binary operator between two expressions, so that
>>examine "string" translates to examine.__invisbinop__("stri
fuzzy's urllib2 info is excellent. The other way peopel snarf stuff
over HTTP and FTP is using 'wget' or 'libcurl'. THere's
http://pycurl.sourceforge.net/
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Find a new release of python-ldap:
http://python-ldap.sourceforge.net/
python-ldap provides an object-oriented API to access LDAP directory
servers from Python programs. It mainly wraps the OpenLDAP 2.x libs for
that purpose. Additionally it contains modules for other LDAP-related
stuff (e.g. p
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> At top of a module I have an integer like so...
>
> foo = 4
>
> In a function in that module I know I need to do 'global foo' to get at
> the value 4.
Actually, you don't need a "global foo" statement to
_access_ the value. You do need
I use PySerial in a 16 line data collection system
with LOTS of threads, and yes am frustrated by read().
This sounds excellent, keep us updated.
BTW, haven't done any event driven Python except Tkinter.
Would this a class library which would let you
define an event and a handler?
Do you have a
Ajar wrote:
> I want to write a program which will automatically login to my ISPs
> website, retrieve data and do some processing. Can this be done? Can
> you point me to any example python programs which do similar things?
>
> Regards,
> Ajar
Very easily. Have a look at my article on the ``urlli
Bryan wrote:
> Thanks for the clarifications. One more question, can I catch this
> exception in my main thread and then do another sys.exit() to kill the whole
> process?
Not as such. Exceptions can be caught only in the thread in which they
are raised. There are tricky techniques to change
Neil Benn wrote:
> PySerial doesn;t have any kind of event firing to notify you when data
> is available. The way I get round this is to have a loop polling (in a
> seperate thread) to see if any data is available (it's a method on the
> interface), then read all the data in and fire this off t
I want to write a program which will automatically login to my ISPs
website, retrieve data and do some processing. Can this be done? Can
you point me to any example python programs which do similar things?
Regards,
Ajar
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"Peter Hansen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Andrew Dalke wrote:
>> sys.exit() is identical to "raise SystemExit()". It raises a Python
>> exception which may be caught at a higher level in the program stack.
>
> And which *is* caught at the highest levels of thre
Bob Greschke wrote:
> "Peter Hansen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message >
>>I'd call it very unusual
>>(in my experience) to have a program open and close a serial port
>>repeatedly.
>
> One of the serial ports (there are actually two) is used to read some NMEA
> sentences from a GPS. It i
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