"Terry Reedy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> The fact that the -1 return *has* lead to bugs in actual code is the
> primary reason Guido has currently decided that find and rfind should go.
> A careful review of current usages in the standard library revealed at
> least a couple bugs even there.
"Sidd" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>I tried finding and example of multithreaded client-serve program in
> python. Can any one please tell me how to write a multithreaded
> client-server programn in python such that
> 1.It can handle multiple connections
> 2.It uses actual threads and not selec
Bengt Richter wrote:
> On 28 Aug 2005 18:54:40 -0700, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> >Steven Bethard wrote:
> >> Adam Tomjack wrote:
> >> > Steven Bethard wrote:
> >> > ...
> >> >> Using a two element list to store a pair of counts has a bad code
> >> >> smell to me.
> >> > ...
"Steve Holden" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Antoon Pardon wrote:
>> So what happens if you have a module that is collecting string-index
>> pair, colleted from various other parts. In one part you
>> want to select the last letter, so you pythonically choose -1 as
Mike Meyer wrote:
> Bryan Olson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> > Bryan Olson writes:
>> > Trivially, an 'if' statement that depends upon input
>> >>data is statically predictable. Use of async I/O means makes the
>> >>programs execution dependent upon external timing.
>>Mike Meyer wrote:
>>
On 2005-08-30, Devan L <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Grant Edwards wrote:
>> On 2005-08-30, Devan L <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> >
>> > RoundToInt(2.0) will give you 3.
>>
>> That's what the OP said he wanted. The next bigger integer
>> after 2.0 is 3.
>
> It's not really clear whether he wanted i
Hi,
I tried finding and example of multithreaded client-serve program in
python. Can any one please tell me how to write a multithreaded
client-server programn in python such that
1.It can handle multiple connections
2.It uses actual threads and not select() or some other function
--
http://ma
Grant Edwards wrote:
> On 2005-08-30, Devan L <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > RoundToInt(2.0) will give you 3.
>
> That's what the OP said he wanted. The next bigger integer
> after 2.0 is 3.
>
> --
> Grant Edwards grante Yow! I'd like TRAINED
>
thanks.
pydev is very nice, I like it.
But sometimes the code completion will not work.On 8/30/05, Frank Wierzbicki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
The code, as well as the files for javacc and asdl (both were changed)
are available in the pydev cvs at sourceforge, in theorg.python.pydev.parser module
On 2005-08-30, Devan L <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>> Hi all. I'd need to aproximate a given float number into the
>>> next (int) bigger one. Because of my bad english I try to
>>> explain it with some example:
>>>
>>> 5.7 --> 6
>>> 52.987 --> 53
>>> 3.34 --> 4
>>> 2.1 --> 3
>>
>> The standard way
Thomas Bartkus wrote:
> On Sun, 28 Aug 2005 23:11:09 +0200, billiejoex wrote:
>
> > Hi all. I'd need to aproximate a given float number into the next (int)
> > bigger one. Because of my bad english I try to explain it with some example:
> >
> > 5.7 --> 6
> > 52.987 --> 53
> > 3.34 --> 4
> > 2.1 -->
On 29 Aug 2005 17:57:34 -0700, rh0dium <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>So here's how I solved this.. It's seems crude - but hey it works.
>select not needed..
>
>def runCmd( self, cmd, timeout=None ):
>self.logger.debug("Initializing function %s - %s" %
>(sys._getframe().f_code.co_name,cmd
On Sun, 28 Aug 2005 23:11:09 +0200, billiejoex wrote:
> Hi all. I'd need to aproximate a given float number into the next (int)
> bigger one. Because of my bad english I try to explain it with some example:
>
> 5.7 --> 6
> 52.987 --> 53
> 3.34 --> 4
> 2.1 --> 3
>
The standard way to do this is
It's not clear to me from your posting what possible order the tags may
be inn. Assuming you will always END a section before beginning an new,
eg.
it's always:
A
some A-section lines.
END A
B
some B-section lines.
END B
etc.
And never:
A
some A-section lines.
B
some B-section lines.
END B
Angelic Devil <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> BAR
> END BAR
>
> FOOBAR
> END FOOBAR
man csplit
--
William Park <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Toronto, Canada
ThinFlash: Linux thin-client on USB key (flash) drive
http://home.eol.ca/~parkw/thinflash.html
BashDiff: Super Bash shell
h
Alan Balmer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 29 Aug 2005 21:12:13 GMT, John Bokma <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>>> Now, go away. And please, stay away.
>>
>>Like I already said, it doesn't work that way.
>
> Goodbye, John. Filters set.
Saidly you didn't get the message. Moreover you think that t
Kuljo wrote:
> Kuljo wrote:
>>I'm so sorry to bore you with this trivial problem. Allthou: I have string
>>having 0x0a as new line, but I should have \n instead.
> I have found this in the meantime:
nl="\\"+"n"
Note: this is unnecessary. You could just do nl='\\n' instead, and you
don't nee
Ulrich Hobelmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Mike Meyer wrote:
>> I'm still waiting for an answer to that one - where's the Java toolkit
>> that handles full-featured GUIs as well as character cell
>> interfaces. Without that, you aren't doing the job that the web
>> technologies do.
> Where is t
"Adriaan Renting" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Marked -1 Flamebait, but I'll respond anyway.
Yup.
> I do agree that a lot of OSS projects seem to lack somewhat in the
> documentation department, compared to a lot of commercial software.
You know what? My experience is just the opposite. Commerc
So here's how I solved this.. It's seems crude - but hey it works.
select not needed..
def runCmd( self, cmd, timeout=None ):
self.logger.debug("Initializing function %s - %s" %
(sys._getframe().f_code.co_name,cmd) )
command = cmd + "\n"
child = popen2.Popen3(command)
Kuljo wrote:
> Dear friends
> I'm so sorry to bore you with this trivial problem. Allthou: I have string
> having 0x0a as new line, but I should have \n instead.
> How should I solve it?
> I've tried
text_new=tex_old.replace(str(0x0a), '\n')
> and other things, but none of them worked.
> Thank
On Sun, 28 Aug 2005 23:27:07 -0400, "Terry Reedy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I suspect that PyPy, when further alone, will make it easier to do things
>like develop a customized interpreter that has alternate definitions for
>builtin operators. So maybe the OP should ask again in a year or two
[The HTML version of this Summary is available at
http://www.python.org/dev/summary/2005-08-01_2005-08-15.html]
=
Announcements
=
QOTF: Quote of the Fortnight
Some wise words from Donovan Baarda in the PEP 347 di
"[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Your best bet is probably to look into your LISP environment's FFI
> (Foreign Function Interface). Most LISP environments have some way to
> call C code directly. Insofar as going back the other way... that I'm
> a little more sketchy on. Guile (
Bryan Olson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Mike Meyer wrote:
> > Bryan Olson writes:
> > phil hunt wrote:
> >> > What's important is *predictability*, e.g. which instruction will
> >> > the computer execute next?
> >> > If you only have one thread, you can tell by looking at the code
> >> > wh
I'm building a file parser but I have a problem I'm not sure how to
solve. The files this will parse have the potential to be huge
(multiple GBs). There are distinct sections of the file that I
want to read into separate dictionaries to perform different
operations on. Each section has specific
Hi,
I have to create a ListBox in which I have to move items up and down
using DnD. How to create drag and drop call backs in wxListCtrl.
I can see EVT_LIST_BEGIN_DRAG but I could not find any
EVT_LIST_END_DRAG.
So, how can I achieve DnD with ListCtrl?
Thanks in advance for the suggestions.
Reg
OK I'm tired, I've got a cold, and my brain isn't working very well. I
have a result set ( a tuple of tuples) from a db. Each element has two
elements; classification number, and classification heading. i.e.
result=((001,'heading one'),(002,'heading two'),...)
classification numbers may not
On 29 Aug 2005 21:12:13 GMT, John Bokma <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Now, go away. And please, stay away.
>
>Like I already said, it doesn't work that way.
Goodbye, John. Filters set.
--
Al Balmer
Balmer Consulting
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 28 Aug 2005 18:54:40 -0700, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Steven Bethard wrote:
>> Adam Tomjack wrote:
>> > Steven Bethard wrote:
>> > ...
>> >> Using a two element list to store a pair of counts has a bad code
>> >> smell to me.
>> > ...
>> >
>> > Why is that?
>>
>> Note that
I'm seeking learn more about Python, and specifically to talk with
people in the greater Boston, MA area. Can anyone suggest the best way
to do this? Feel free to contact me offline: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Amf
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
fantastic. many thanks.
regards,
eric
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Mon, 29 Aug 2005 12:04:46 -0700 (PDT), Steve Young <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Hi, I was wondering if anybody knew of any good
>tutorial/example of AJAX/xmlhttprequest in python.
>Thanks.
>
There's a short example of Nevow's LivePage online here:
http://divmod.org/svn/Nevow/trunk/examples/live
On Mon, 29 Aug 2005 21:30:51 +0200, Michael Goettsche <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Hi there,
>
>I'm trying to write a simple server/client example. The client should be able
>to send text to the server and the server should distribute the text to all
>connected clients. However, it seems that only t
Steve Horsley schreef:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > Steve Horsley schreef:
> >
> >
> >>Probably the same problem. If you didn't send a 2 byte length
> >>indicator first, then java's readUTF() will have tried to
> >>interpret the first 2 bytes that you did actually send as the
> >>string length,
Robin Becker wrote:
> Steve Holden wrote:
>
>>Is anyone aware of (a fix for) problems I'm having getting PIL 1.1.5 to
>>create bitmaps using TrueType and openType fonts? When I create an image
>>using the standard PIL fonts everything seems fine, but when I use
>>ImageFont.truetype(, ) no text
Antoon Pardon wrote:
> Op 2005-08-27, Steve Holden schreef <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
>>>
>>If you want an exception from your code when 'w' isn't in the string you
>>should consider using index() rather than find.
>
>
> Sometimes it is convenient to have the exception thrown at a later
> time.
>
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> this code
>
> h=httplib.HTTPConnection('euronext.com')
> h.request('GET',
> 'http://www.euronext.com/home/0,3766,1732,00.html')
>
> fails with this message
>
> File "httplib.py", line 532, in connect
> socket.SOCK_STREAM):
> socket.gaierror: (
Steve Young wrote:
> Hi, I was wondering if anybody knew of any good
> tutorial/example of AJAX/xmlhttprequest in python.
> Thanks.
I can't say if it's "good" since I haven't looked at it yet, but it's
certainly timely: this was just posted to the c.l.p.announce group:
--
Subir wrote:
> I am trying to build an application to explore the contents of an
> outlook .pst files. All the reference that I have seen uses the
> registry to do so. Does any one know any other way of doing this. Also,
> is anyone has any code which does something related to this, please let
>
Paul Rubin wrote:
> "rh0dium" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > Thanks much - Alternatively if anyone else has a better way to do what
> > I am trying to get done always looking for better ways. I still want
> > this to work though..
>
> You don't have to use select, since you can use timeouts with
Alan Balmer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 29 Aug 2005 18:21:12 GMT, John Bokma <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>>Alan Balmer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>>> Why on earth was this cross-posted to comp.lang.c.? Followups set.
>>
>>Your reply is even more meaningless and more noise compared to the
On Mon, Aug 29, 2005 at 10:43:46PM +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Date: Mon, 29 Aug 2005 16:32:59 -0400
> To: python-list@python.org
> From: Steve Holden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: NYC Opening
> >THEY ARE LOCATED IN NEW YORK, THIS IS FULL-TIME ONLY, WILL NOT CONSIDER
> >ANYONE FROM O
"rh0dium" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Thanks much - Alternatively if anyone else has a better way to do what
> I am trying to get done always looking for better ways. I still want
> this to work though..
You don't have to use select, since you can use timeouts with normal
socket i/o. So you co
Kevin McGann wrote:
> A major Investment Bank is searching for a strong Java or C++ developer that
> can build Pipes to Electronic Exchanges and ECNs. This is a new Internal
> Hedge Fund Business and they are looking for superb C++ or Java programmers
> that can enable them to go live in 1-2 months
Stewart Midwinter wrote:
> I need a graphing library that I can access from within a Tkinter
> application running on Windows.
http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net
--
Robert Kern
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
"In the fields of hell where the grass grows high
Are the graves of dreams allowed to die."
-- Ric
Kuljo wrote:
> Dear friends
> I'm so sorry to bore you with this trivial problem. Allthou: I have string
> having 0x0a as new line, but I should have \n instead.
In [9]: '\x0a'
Out[9]: '\n'
They're the same thing.
--
Robert Kern
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
"In the fields of hell where the grass grows hi
Hi all,
Another newbie question. So you can't use signals on threads but you
can use select. The reason I want to do this in the first place it I
need a timeout. Fundamentally I want to run a command on another
machine, but I need a timeout. I have to do this to a LOT of machines
( > 3000 ) an
Yoav wrote:
> I run a Java command line program. The point is, that it's not the
> program that output this error message for sure. And I don't expect
> popen3() to catch and report errors. I just want to keep my screen
> output clean, and I expect popen3() to run the program and not let
> anyt
"Kuljo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> schrieb im Newsbeitrag
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Dear friends
> I'm so sorry to bore you with this trivial problem. Allthou: I have string
> having 0x0a as new line, but I should have \n instead.
> How should I solve it?
> I've tried
> >>>text_new=tex_old.replace(str(0x0a
I need a graphing library that I can access from within a Tkinter application running on Windows.
It needs to be able to draw some *simple* 2D plots, and then output
them to a file (e.g. .PNG, .JPG) for inclusion in a HTML-formatted
e-mail to interested parties.
Many of the packages that I've lo
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Robert Kern wrote:
>
>
>
>>If you find suitable
>>FORTRAN or C code that implements a particular "robust" algorithm, it
>>can probably wrapped for scipy relatively easily.
>
>
> An alternative would be to call R (a free statistical package) from
> Python, using somet
Steve-
I recently ported version 1.3 of cpaint to python. Soon after version
2.0 was released and I haven't really looked at it since. The 1.3
stuff was really simple though if you understand cgi, then you just
implement a endpoint for your request to call. The javascript side is
really the onl
jog <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
> I want to get text out of some nodes of a huge xml file (1,5 GB). The
> architecture of the xml file is something like this
>
>
> bla
>
>
>
> blablabla
>
>
>
>
>
>
> I want to combine the text out of p
praba kar wrote:
> Dear All,
>
>I am working in web based email system project.
> Here I try to build email message
> from scratch. I used below code to build email
> message
>
>msg = email.MIMEBase('text','html')
>msg['Return-Path'] = user+'@'+domain
>msg['Date'] = formatdat
Michael Goettsche wrote:
> Hi there,
>
> I'm trying to write a simple server/client example. The client should be able
> to send text to the server and the server should distribute the text to all
> connected clients. However, it seems that only the first entered text is sent
> and received. When
APCass wrote:
> How do you execute a .py in Linux with KDE? If I double click on my
> program it opens Kwrite, for editing.
Try inserting this as the first line of the file:
#!/usr/bin/env python
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Mike Meyer wrote:
> Bryan Olson writes:
> phil hunt wrote:
>
>> > What's important is *predictability*, e.g. which instruction will
>> > the computer execute next?
>> >
>> > If you only have one thread, you can tell by looking at the code
>> > what gets executed next. It's very simple.
>>N
Chris Dewin wrote:
> Hi. I run a website for my band, and the other guys want an image gallery.
>
> I'm thinking it would be nice and easy, if we could just upload a jpg into
> a dir called "gallery/". When the client clicks the "gallery" link, a
> cgi script could search the gallery/ dir, and cr
Dear friends
I'm so sorry to bore you with this trivial problem. Allthou: I have string
having 0x0a as new line, but I should have \n instead.
How should I solve it?
I've tried
>>>text_new=tex_old.replace(str(0x0a), '\n')
and other things, but none of them worked.
Thanks in advance
--
http://mail
Sybren Stuvel wrote:
> Bryan Olson enlightened us with:
>
>>I recently wrote a module supporting value-shared slicing.
>
> Maybe I'm dumb, but could you explain this concept? Why would someone
> whant this?
My original motivation was reduce the amount of copying in some
tools that parse nest
Hi there,
I'm trying to write a simple server/client example. The client should be able
to send text to the server and the server should distribute the text to all
connected clients. However, it seems that only the first entered text is sent
and received. When I then get prompted for input agai
use R. it's pretty highend, and there is an interface for python.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
"Fredrik Lundh" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > You could do it with PIL, or run jpegtran in an external process.
> > jpegtran may be easier.
>
> eh? are you sure you know what jpegtran does?
>
> JPEGTRAN(1)
Whoops, sorry, right, jpegtran is for rotating the images. I meant:
use a pipeline li
Hi !
Here : http://wikipython.flibuste.net/moin.py/AJAX
@-salutations
Michel Claveau
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Subir wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am trying to build an application to explore the contents of an
> outlook .pst files. All the reference that I have seen uses the
> registry to do so. Does any one know any other way of doing this. Also,
> is anyone has any code which does something related to this, plea
Hi, I was wondering if anybody knew of any good
tutorial/example of AJAX/xmlhttprequest in python.
Thanks.
-Steve
Start your day with Yahoo! - make it your home page
http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs
--
http://mail.python.org/mai
[Alan Kennedy]
>>SAX is perfect for the job. See code below.
[Fredrik Lundh]
> depends on your definition of perfect...
Obviously, perfect is the eye of the beholder ;-)
[Fredrik Lundh]
> using a 20 MB version of jog's sample, and having replaced
> the print statements with local variable assi
Steve Holden wrote:
> Is anyone aware of (a fix for) problems I'm having getting PIL 1.1.5 to
> create bitmaps using TrueType and openType fonts? When I create an image
> using the standard PIL fonts everything seems fine, but when I use
> ImageFont.truetype(, ) no text is drawn.
>
> setup.py r
Alan Kennedy wrote:
> SAX is perfect for the job. See code below.
depends on your definition of perfect...
using a 20 MB version of jog's sample, and having replaced
the print statements with local variable assignments, I get the
following timings:
5 lines of cElementTree code: 7.2 seconds
60+
Alan Balmer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Fri, 26 Aug 2005 16:47:10 GMT, Chris Head <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>
>>This point I agree with. There are some situations - 'net cafes included
>>- - where thick e-mail clients don't work. Even so, see below.
>
> I use Portable Thunderbird, on a US
Alan Balmer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Why on earth was this cross-posted to comp.lang.c.? Followups set.
Your reply is even more meaningless and more noise compared to the
crosspost. Why? You didn't add anything, you quote an entire message and
you just tweaked the follow up to header in a b
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Your best bet is probably to look into your LISP environment's FFI
> (Foreign Function Interface). Most LISP environments have some way to
> call C code directly. Insofar as going back the other way... that I'm
> a little more sketchy on. Guile (the Scheme compiler fro
Your best bet is probably to look into your LISP environment's FFI
(Foreign Function Interface). Most LISP environments have some way to
call C code directly. Insofar as going back the other way... that I'm
a little more sketchy on. Guile (the Scheme compiler from GNU) is a
strong contender, tho
Does someone know if there is a setting in the python Unix world to
make the command history behave as it does in the Windows intepreter?
Specifically, I like the fact that the command history remembers which
of a sequence of commands is the one that I last issued. For example,
suppose that I typed
On 27 Aug 2005 17:00:07 -0700, "sonicSpammersGoToHellSmooth"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Cool, I went to the UofA for my MS in ECE, 2000. I did my theses under
>Chuck Higgins. --
>http://neuromorph.ece.arizona.edu/pubs/ma_schwager_msthesis.pdf
>
>The tools we had were constantly underwhelming me,
On Sat, 27 Aug 2005 16:56:03 -0500, Terry Hancock
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>On Saturday 27 August 2005 03:21 am, David MacQuigg wrote:
>> There is a similar lack of interest in the academic community. None
>> of this is likely to lead to publications in scholarly journals.
>
>I'm confused by wh
[jog]
> I want to get text out of some nodes of a huge xml file (1,5 GB). The
> architecture of the xml file is something like this
[snip]
> I want to combine the text out of page:title and page:revision:text
> for every single page element. One by one I want to index these
> combined texts
> So I'm going to try to pump you for a little more information here. Is
> your goal to count, for each week, how many times it's "full" and how
> many times it's "not full"? What do you use the counts for? What does
> "full" mean? Is it always a 0 or 1? What's the importance of the
> outp
Hi,
I am trying to build an application to explore the contents of an
outlook .pst files. All the reference that I have seen uses the
registry to do so. Does any one know any other way of doing this. Also,
is anyone has any code which does something related to this, please let
me know.
-Subir
On Fri, 26 Aug 2005 16:47:10 GMT, Chris Head <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>This point I agree with. There are some situations - 'net cafes included
>- - where thick e-mail clients don't work. Even so, see below.
I use Portable Thunderbird, on a USB memory stick. All I need is a USB
port and an inte
Hi All,
PyDev - Python IDE (Python Development Enviroment for Eclipse) version
0.9.8 has just been released.
Check the homepage (http://pydev.sourceforge.net/) for more details.
Details for Release: 0.9.8
Major highlights:
---
* Jython integrated.
* Jython debugger sup
Antoon Pardon wrote:
> I think a properly implented find is better than an index.
See the current thread in python-dev[1], which proposes a new method,
str.partition(). I believe that Raymond Hettinger has shown that almost
all uses of str.find() can be more clearly be represented with his
pro
[EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit :
> Merci Pierre,
>
> Yes I agree and plan to move more to C/C++ and releasing the GIL when
> entering C/C++.
>
> I also need to understand my original question re GIL and rescheduling.
> I fear that lock/unlock too often is also causing delays due to context
> switching
> bin = {}
> for start, end, AS, full in heard:
>week = int((start-startDate)/aWeek)
>counters = bin.setdefault(week, [0, 0])
>if full:
> counters[0] += 1
>else:
> counters[1] += 1
yes! thanks!
> Using an idea you used earlier, you coul
"jog" wrote:
> I want to get text out of some nodes of a huge xml file (1,5 GB). The
> architecture of the xml file is something like this
> I want to combine the text out of page:title and page:revision:text for
> every single page element. One by one I want to index these combined
> texts (so f
On 29 Aug 2005 08:17:04 -0700
"jog" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I want to get text out of some nodes of a huge xml file (1,5 GB). The
> architecture of the xml file is something like this
> [structure snipped]
> I want to combine the text out of page:title and page:revision:text
> for every single
Robert Kern wrote:
> If you find suitable
> FORTRAN or C code that implements a particular "robust" algorithm, it
> can probably wrapped for scipy relatively easily.
An alternative would be to call R (a free statistical package) from
Python, using something like the R/SPlus - Python Interface a
Hi,
I'd advocate for using SAX, as DOM related methods implies loading the
complete XML content in memory whereas SAX grab things on the fly.
SAX method should therefore be faster and less memory consuming...
By the way, if your goal is to just "combine the text out of page:title
and page:revisio
Why on earth was this cross-posted to comp.lang.c.? Followups set.
On Mon, 29 Aug 2005 12:26:11 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>In comp.lang.perl.misc Mike Meyer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>>> In comp.lang.perl.misc John Bokma <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Chris Head
Merci Pierre,
Yes I agree and plan to move more to C/C++ and releasing the GIL when
entering C/C++.
I also need to understand my original question re GIL and rescheduling.
I fear that lock/unlock too often is also causing delays due to context
switching.
BTW do you have any hints/comments on SWI
[EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit :
> Hi all,
>
> Wondering if a GIL lock/unlock causes a re-schedule/contect swap when
> embedding Python in a multi-threaded C/C++ app on Unix ?
>
> If so, do I have any control or influence on this re-scheduling ?
>
> The app suffers from serious performance degradatio
Randy Bush wrote:
> Steven Bethard wrote:
>> It would probably help if you explained what the real problem is
>> you're trying to solve.
>
> actually, that code fragment was meant to do that. it's pretty much
> what i needed to do at that point, just the variable names made
> simple.
Yeah, I gat
basically, what I'm looking to do is use python as a bridge between C
and Common Lisp to create a virtual city that contains Artificial life.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
this code
h=httplib.HTTPConnection('euronext.com')
h.request('GET',
'http://www.euronext.com/home/0,3766,1732,00.html')
fails with this message
File "httplib.py", line 532, in connect
socket.SOCK_STREAM):
socket.gaierror: (-2, 'Name or service not known')
what am i doi
John Bokma wrote:
> "T Beck" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> >
[snip]
> > alongside of it. The internet is a free-flowing evolving place... to
> > try to protect one little segment like usenet from ever evolving is
> > just ensuring it's slow death, IMHO.
>
> And if so, who cares? As long as peopl
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> import csv
> temp1 = []
> temp2 = []
> reader = csv.reader(file(r"py_monsters.csv"))
> for rec in reader:
> temp1.append(rec)
> for i in temp1[1:]:
> temp2.append((i[0],dict(zip(temp1[0][1:],i[1:]
> monsters = dict(temp2)
I would tend to write this as:
i
Has anyone done or worked on a port of Python to the Treo?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Iain King wrote:
> Robert Kern wrote:
>>You have silly users.
>
> You mean you don't? Damn. Can I have some of yours?
No, you may not. Mine! All mine!
--
Robert Kern
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
"In the fields of hell where the grass grows high
Are the graves of dreams allowed to die."
-- Richard H
Adam Tomjack wrote:
> I'd write it like this:
>
>bin = {}
>for start, end, AS, full in heard:
> week = int((start-startDate)/aWeek)
> counters = bin.setdefault(week, [0, 0])
> if full:
> counters[0] += 1
> else:
> counters[1] += 1
>
>for week,
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