May I ask a dumb question here? It isn't clear to me what to do with
these patches. For most of them there is something like, "Committed
as r54386 and r54387". I'm familiar with updating the editor Ulipad
to the latest revision, using software such as TortoiseSVN and RapidSVN.
Is that what is mea
John Nagle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Execution model: dynamic stack-type interpreter.
Erm, the iterator protocol makes the above a little more complicated.
> Biggest headache is finding out what doesn't work in the libraries.
Good observation.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/lis
Alex Martelli wrote:
> Dennis Lee Bieber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>>>need to catch up quickly and master Python programming.How do you
>>
>>Mastery and quickly are opposing terms Took me 15 years on a job
>>using FORTRAN 77 and I still wouldn't have called myself a master. (I'm
>>more of a
Hi there,
Using Python, I'm auto-generating an HTML file that contains:
, where XXX is XML data (encoded
somehow).
Articles regarding unicode are making my head spin! Is there a way to
encode XML file contents to a hexadecimal string that could be decoded
on a PHP server?
I have an XML file that
Hello, I'm trying to exclude files from a list using the following code:
for item in dirs:if item.find('Software') > -1:dirs.remove(item)
elif item.find('Images') > -1:dirs.remove(item)
let's supose dirs = ['C:\Images', 'C:\Images\2006', 'C:\Images\2007',
'C:\Music', 'C
Steven D'Aprano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> or even
>
> len(filter(lambda t, y=y: y>t, x))
How about
min(i for i,t in enumerate(x) if t >= y)
or
max(i for i,t in enumerate(x) if t <= y)
Those are actually pretty direct.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Steven D'Aprano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> (1) It's wrong. That always returns the length of the list. Perhaps you
> meant something like this?
> len(["anything will do" for t in x if y > t])
Yeah, that's what I meant.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Fri, 16 Mar 2007 18:17:08 -0800, Paul Rubin wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>> Or with a generator comprehension
>> n = sum ( y>x[i] for i in range(len(x)) ) - 1
>>
>> But there has to be a cleaner way, as the first approach is unwieldy
>> and does not adapt to changing list lengths, and
Robin Becker wrote:
> John Nagle wrote:
>
>> Try:
>>
>> db=MySQLdb.connect(host='appx',db='sc_0',user='user',passwd='secret',
>> use_unicode=True, charset = "utf8")
>>
>> The distinction is that "use_unicode" tells Python to convert to Unicode,
>> but Python doesn't know the MySQL table ty
I'm trying to use a script that I originally wrote on a Mac Classic
machine and have moved to a Windows XP machine.
I can open the script and edit the thing, but when I try to run it in
I get:
Exception in Tkinter callback
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:\Python25\lib\lib-tk\Tkinter.p
On Thu, 15 Mar 2007 04:33:01 +, Paulo da Silva wrote:
> I would like to implement something like this:
>
> class C1:
> def __init__(self,xxx):
> if ... :
> self.foo = foo
> self.bar = bar
> else:
>
Patch / Bug Summary
___
Patches : 342 open (-38) / 3712 closed (+54) / 4054 total (+16)
Bugs: 951 open (-14) / 6588 closed (+33) / 7539 total (+19)
RFE : 257 open (-15) / 266 closed (+13) / 523 total ( -2)
New / Reopened Patches
__
ftp.pytho
Dennis Lee Bieber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > need to catch up quickly and master Python programming.How do you
>
> Mastery and quickly are opposing terms Took me 15 years on a job
> using FORTRAN 77 and I still wouldn't have called myself a master. (I'm
> more of a JoAT)
My favorite "Stars!
Hi,
Quick question. I am running python on windows xp. i want to import my own module "mymod". However, when I try to import it i get the error message "ImportError: no module named mymod".
"mymod" is located in a directory that is part of the computer's "path" env variable. Imports fine if 'my
Jason,
On 3/16/07, Jason Tishler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The following is a WAG...
>
> Does the MySQL Python module contain shared extension modules (i.e.,
> DLLs)? If so, are they executable? If not, then make them so (i.e.,
> chmod +x).
I did:
% unzip MySQL_foo_bar.eggs
% chmod +x M
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> Or with a generator comprehension
> n = sum ( y>x[i] for i in range(len(x)) ) - 1
>
> But there has to be a cleaner way, as the first approach is unwieldy
> and does not adapt to changing list lengths, and the second is not
> obvious to a casual reader of the code.
H
On Fri, Mar 16, 2007 at 09:27:21AM EST, BartlebyScrivener wrote:
> On Mar 16, 8:39 am, "Paul McGuire" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > Wow, are you still reading? Quit wasting time and go download a
> > Python dist and get started already!
> >
>
> I think you should extract that and spend twent
Paulo da Silva escreveu:
> Paulo da Silva escreveu:
>> Alex Martelli escreveu:
>>> Paulo da Silva <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>>
>>> E.g.:
>>>
>>> class C1(object):
>>> def __new__(cls, xxx):
>>> if xxx: return type.__new__(cls, xxx)
>>> else: return C1.load(xxx)
>>>
Paul McGuire wrote:
> I always assumed that super, being added to
> the language later, represented some form of improvement, but this may
> not be 100% correct.
It's not -- super is not a replacement for explicit
inherited method calls. It does something different,
and has different use cases.
I
HMS Surprise wrote:
> Seems to me that one should be able to put the names of several
> functions in a list and then have the list executed. But it seems the
> output of the functions is hidden, only their return value is visible.
> Is this because the list execution is another scope?
>
> Thanx,
>
hey bud this is ryan kaskel just wanted tuch base we have the same name little
disapointed i did not come up on my google searchryan kaskel
balt mdsearch parkville high school lacrosse--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi,
Can Python Script can have different extensions like .sh etc Or Is .py
is mandatory to be present as the extension for the Python Script.
We have an application where the script was initially written in shell
script with extension .sh. Now we are migrating this script to be run in
both U
On Mar 16, 2:53 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> or go tohttp://pythonmac.org/packages/
> and you have python 2.5 or python 2.4.4 with readline support
The download instructions seem to steer Mac users to version 2.4.4
because it has more modules available. What is the consensus on that?
--
http:
I'm trying to use epydoc (3.0beta1) to generate documentation for some
packages I've installed as eggs. When I run the epydoc command
"epydoc.py -v -o sqlalchemy sqlalchemy" in completes without error,
but the resulting documentation is just a stub.
Everything
All Functions
sqlalchemy.global_
Hi!
Your code run OK for me.
But, if you want "time-lag" (sorry for my english) execution, you can
try this:
def a():
print "this is a"
def b():
print "this is b"
lst = [a, b]
[f() for f in lst]
--
@-salutations
Michel Claveau
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/py
On 3/16/07, jim-on-linux <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Below, the first select produces results but,
> after closing then re-opening the database the
> select produces an empty list. Anyone know the
> reason ??
When you first open a connection, you implicitly begin a transaction.
You need to call
Then after defining clientsock, write a print statement as "print
clientsock", see what it will print, None or a object?
Sönmez
ANIL KARADAĞ wrote:
> ok , arranged block.but program give error global name 'clientsock' is not
> defined " ,..
>
> 2007/3/17, Sönmez Kartal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>>
>
from John Clark
use con.commit()
Thanks John,
this works
jim-on-linux
On Friday 16 March 2007 17:55, jim-on-linux wrote:
> Python help,
>
> I just started working with SQLite3 and ran
> into this problem.
>
> Below, the first select produces results but,
> after closing then re-opening the
On Mar 16, 5:10 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Mar 16, 3:51 pm, Shane Geiger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > lines = open('/tmp/foo.py',
> > "r").read().splitlines()
>
> > previous_line =
> > ''
>
> > for line in
> > lines:
>
> > if "foo" in
> > line:
>
> > print "found foo in t
On Mar 16, 3:59 pm, "7stud" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> lst = [a, b]
>
> The () symbol causes the named function to execute, and a function
> call in the code is always replaced by the function's return value.
Try this:
--
def a():
print "this is a"
def b():
print "this is b
John Nagle wrote:
> Try:
>
> db=MySQLdb.connect(host='appx',db='sc_0',user='user',passwd='secret',
> use_unicode=True, charset = "utf8")
>
> The distinction is that "use_unicode" tells Python to convert to Unicode,
> but Python doesn't know the MySQL table type. 'charset="utf8"' tells
>
lst = [a, b]
The () symbol causes the named function to execute, and a function
call in the code is always replaced by the function's return value.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Python help,
I just started working with SQLite3 and ran into
this problem.
Below, the first select produces results but,
after closing then re-opening the database the
select produces an empty list. Anyone know the
reason ??
The table seems to be empty.
import sqlite3
con = sqlite3.c
Seems to me that one should be able to put the names of several
functions in a list and then have the list executed. But it seems the
output of the functions is hidden, only their return value is visible.
Is this because the list execution is another scope?
Thanx,
jh
~~~
On 3/16/07, Qilong Ren <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have a question. I need to do some text processing. I need to read from a
> file line by line. If some line is met with some condition, the previous
> line needs some modification. How to get the info of the previous line?
I would do something
On Mar 16, 3:51 pm, Shane Geiger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> lines = open('/tmp/foo.py',
> "r").read().splitlines()
>
>
> previous_line =
> ''
On Mar 16, 3:51 pm, Shane Geiger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> lines = open('/tmp/foo.py',
> "r").read().splitlines()
>
> previous_line =
> ''
>
> for line in
> lines:
>
> if "foo" in
> line:
>
> print "found foo in the current line. The previous line is: "
> +
> previous_line
>
>
Hi, Shane,
Thanks for fast reply.
What I used is :
for line in open(FILE):
I don't want to store all lines in a list because sometimes the file is very
large. We need to store the value of the previous line in a variable. Is that
right?
Thanks,Qilong
- Original Message
lines = open('/tmp/foo.py',
"r").read().splitlines()
previous_line =
''
Or like this:
x = [0, 100, 200, 1000]
y = 435
for n, i in enumerate(x):
if y < i:
n = n - 1
break
x.insert(n + 1, y)
If you decide to stick with
n = sum ( y>x[i] for i in range(len(x)) ) - 1
Replace it with:
On Friday 16 March 2007 12:41, Clement wrote:
> Can a object sharable by two different python programs... If so can you
> please explain... because my project needs two programs to access nearly
> 45GB file Symentaniously...
What kind of information is that? Can you put it into a database?
Chris
Hi,all
I am new to this list. And I am glade I am here.
I have a question. I need to do some text processing. I need to read from a
file line by line. If some line is met with some condition, the previous line
needs some modification. How to get the info of the previous line?
Thanks!
Qilong
On Mar 16, 11:20 am, "Matimus" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> You might look at the bisect module (part of the standard
> distribution).
Here is an example:
>>> from bisect import insort
>>> x = [0,100,200,1000]
>>> insort(x,10)
>>> x
[0, 10, 100, 200, 1000]
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/list
Paulo da Silva escreveu:
> Alex Martelli escreveu:
>> Paulo da Silva <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>> E.g.:
>>
>> class C1(object):
>> def __new__(cls, xxx):
>> if xxx: return type.__new__(cls, xxx)
>> else: return C1.load(xxx)
>> @staticmethod
>> def load(xxx):
How about:
---
x = [0, 100, 200, 1000]
y = -1
inserted = False
for i in range(len(x)):
if(y <= x[i]):
x.insert(i, y)
inserted = True
break
if(not inserted): x.append(y)
print x
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listin
hi, i made a program in python but received global name error. the program
code;
serverhost = '127.0.0.1'
serverport = 2000
BUFSIZ = 1024
addr = (serverhost,serverport)
if str(sys.argv).find("-s") == -1:
cs = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM,0) # create a TCP socket
cs.c
My attempt uses a different approach: create two sorted arrays, n^2
elements each; and then iterate over them looking for matching
elements (only one pass is required). I managed to get 58,2250612857 s
on my 1,7 MHz machine. It requires numpy for decent performance,
though.
import numpy
import tim
I'm getting the following trace in python 2.5:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "./template_unittest.py", line 36, in
zencc.start_browser(machines.zones[0].devices.get_primary_servers()[0])
File "/home/bean/code/automation/nrm-qa/trunk/brimstone/lib/zcc.py", line
221, in start_browse
On Mar 16, 2:32 pm, "Paul McGuire" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mar 16, 12:59 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>
>
> > I have an ordered list e.g. x = [0, 100, 200, 1000], and given any
> > positive integer y, I want to determine its appropriate position in
> > the list (i.e the point at which I w
Thanks a lot for the help guys, I'm at work right now and I will go
over your suggestions one by one this weekend. Being more alert now,
taking a look at the examples you posted, I now see how to approach
this problem. The thing with python that I'm starting to realize is
that there are a million
Thanks a lot for the help guys, I'm at work right now and I will go
over your suggestions one by one this weekend. Being more alert now,
taking a look at the examples you posted, I now see how to approach
this problem. The thing with python that I'm starting to realize is
that there are a million
Try:
db=MySQLdb.connect(host='appx',db='sc_0',user='user',passwd='secret',
use_unicode=True, charset = "utf8")
The distinction is that "use_unicode" tells Python to convert to Unicode,
but Python doesn't know the MySQL table type. 'charset="utf8"' tells
MySQL to do the conversion to
On Mar 16, 12:59 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I have an ordered list e.g. x = [0, 100, 200, 1000], and given any
> positive integer y, I want to determine its appropriate position in
> the list (i.e the point at which I would have to insert it in order to
> keep the list sorted. I can clearly do
It's not big, but it's there. Just attaching to a MySQL
database with MySQLdb, then closing the connection without
doing anything results in some collectable garbage:
gc: collectable
gc: collectable
gc: collectable
gc: collectable
gc: collectable
(Python 2.4, MySQL 5, Windows 2000)
(For te
Hi,
I can't find any documentation on the profile() function. But it
might take a function reference as an argument and not the string you
are feeding it. For instance:
profile(t.printworld)
Note the difference between:
t.printworld
t.printworld()
The latter executes the function and then re
Does anybody know of a good way to display Encapsulated Postscript
images in a GUI? I'm currently using wx, but would be perfectly
willing to switch to another binding to keep the program from becoming
hackish.
Thanks!
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi all, my Python (2.4) program crashed after a couple days of running
(this'll be a pain to debug, I know). I think it just...stopped
running. My log files didn't show any (unusual) exceptions (I use the
logging module to files and stdout/stderr piped to files). I have a
feeling that the python in
On Mar 16, 12:42 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hello everyone!
> i have the following test code:
> class temp:
> def __init__(self):
> self.hello = "hello world!"
> def printworld(self):
> print(self.hello)
> t = temp()
>
> and i tried to call profile('t.printworld()')
>
>
On Mar 16, 12:59 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I have an ordered list e.g. x = [0, 100, 200, 1000], and given any
> positive integer y, I want to determine its appropriate position in
> the list (i.e the point at which I would have to insert it in order to
> keep the list sorted. I can clearly do
Hi John,
I don't think eggs are a flop, however the pain they are trying to
solve is generally pretty minor in the Python world vs what we often
see with other languages. We're starting to see some push to move
more 3rd party libraries and frameworks to eggs (ie: Turbogears) and
as the developer
John Nagle wrote:
> Were Python "eggs" a flop, or what?
No.
> We need to have one packager that everyone agrees on.
> Otherwise, installs become a mess, and then you have to have
> installers that handle multiple packagers.
Eggs and Squisher are complementary tools. Squisher is good fo
You might look at the bisect module (part of the standard
distribution).
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I have an ordered list e.g. x = [0, 100, 200, 1000], and given any
positive integer y, I want to determine its appropriate position in
the list (i.e the point at which I would have to insert it in order to
keep the list sorted. I can clearly do this with a series of if
statements:
if yx[i] for i i
Hello everyone!
i have the following test code:
class temp:
def __init__(self):
self.hello = "hello world!"
def printworld(self):
print(self.hello)
t = temp()
and i tried to call profile('t.printworld()')
but i received the following error:
Traceback (most recent call last
Hi!
I work for a company located in Barcelona, Spain, and we are
looking for an on-site introductory Python training. The
audience would consist of about 10 developers with Java
background. The training should be taught in Spanish.
Does anyone knows of a company or individual that could
deliver
Rocky Zhou wrote:
> I wonder is there any way to make the wrapper program can wrap options
> && arguments for the the subprocess/command the wrapper will
> execute? by getopt or optparse module?
[snip]
> I need this because I now have finished a fs_backup script written in
> python, it will execu
Paul McGuire <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>On Mar 13, 2:16 am, Steven D'Aprano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>wrote:
>> I'd be interested in hearing people's stories of Eureka moments in Python,
>> moments where you suddenly realise that some task which seemed like it
>> would be hard work was easy with Python
Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
> On 16 Mar 2007 04:41:38 -0700, "Gerald" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> declaimed
> the following in comp.lang.python:
>
>> Hi ,Im a BSc4 Maths/Computer Science student.Unfortunately my
>> curriculum did not include Python programming yet I see many vacancies
>> for Python develope
Thanks for posting. I continued to read and realized the instantiation
was not a function call soon after I posted. Oh well...
Still unsure about the best way to break up the large #start - #end
section. I appreciate your answers and try to digest them more fully.
Then maybe I will have a better i
yep, thanx a lot ;)
2007/3/15, hg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Paul Rubin wrote:
> tlslite
cool !
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
--
Pınar "pinguar" Yanardağ
http://pinguar.org
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Mar 16, 9:38 am, "7stud" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> -
> import os
>
> filepath = "./change_files"
>
> li = os.listdir(filepath)
> for name in li:
> fullpath = filepath + "/" + name
> if os.path.isfile(fullpath):
> infile = open(fullpath, 'r')
>
>
Were Python "eggs" a flop, or what?
We need to have one packager that everyone agrees on.
Otherwise, installs become a mess, and then you have to have
installers that handle multiple packagers.
John Nagle
Gary Duzan wrote:
> In article <[EMAIL PR
Steven Bethard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > According to a post by Raymond Hettinger it's faster to use that
> > iterator instead of `int`.
> Yep. It's because the .next() method takes no arguments, while int()
> takes varargs because you can do:: ...
Heh, good point. Might be worth putting a
I am seeing different outcomes from simple requests against a common database
when run from a freebsd machine and a win32 box.
The test script is
###
import MySQLdb, sys
print sys.version
print MySQLdb.__version__
db=MySQLdb.connect(host='appx',db='sc_0',user='user',passwd='s
The general idiom for altering lines in a file is to open the original
file and write the alterations to a temp file. After you are done
writing to the temp file, delete the original file, and change the
temp file name to the original file name.
If instead you were to read the whole file into a va
Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch wrote:
> In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Paul Rubin wrote:
>
>> "n00m" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>> h = collections.defaultdict(itertools.repeat(0).next)
>> Something wrong with
>>h = collections.defaultdict(int)
>> ?
>
> According to a post by Raymond Hettinger it's
I want to sendmessages to a upnp device ,and listen to it's
notify messages. Can I do that with Python. Can you help me and
send an example?
Thanks
Ozan
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Mar 16, 4:08 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Alex Martelli) wrote:
> Bert Heymans <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi!
>
> > I'm using iTerm on the mac the keymapping isn't right. On Linux and
> > Windows it's really nice to be able to hit up to get the previous
> > command. Does anyone know a way to get t
Ben Finney napisał(a):
>> I'd be interested in hearing people's stories of Eureka moments in
>> Python, moments where you suddenly realise that some task which
>> seemed like it would be hard work was easy with Python.
>
> I don't recall the exact context, but Python was the language that
> intro
Whats this got to do with python?
On Jan 19, 9:34 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Coz we have fools in the govt, the downfall of the US has only been
> accelerated !!
> The are morons who staged 9/11 controlled demolition to kill americans
> to start their idiotic war.
>
> Date: Sat, 21 Oct 2006 1
Gerald wrote:
> Hi ,Im a BSc4 Maths/Computer Science student.Unfortunately my
> curriculum did not include Python programming yet I see many vacancies
> for Python developers.I studied programming Pascal,C++ and Delphi.So I
> need to catch up quickly and master Python programming.How do you
> sugge
try google: "python apack" found several
in general, always google first; python has so many devotees that someone
has generally solved most problems already.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Behalf Of priya kale
Sent: Thursday, March 15, 2007 11:33 PM
Larry,
It's been a while since I coded something in VB or Delphi because I'm mostly
turn on Python ;)
so please excuse me any mistakes I can make 8I don't have neither VB or
Delphi installed on this computer)
For Delphi to use an OLE/COM Object it requires a TypeLibrary that explains
how to acc
Paul McGuire schrieb:
> What does Python have that C++ doesn't?
> - The biggie: dynamic typing (sometimes called "duck typing").
> Dynamic typing is a huge simplifier for development:
> . no variable declarations
> . no method type signatures
> . no interface definitions needed
> . no templ
HMS Surprise a écrit :
> Greetings,
>
> First I will admit I am new to Python but have experience with C++ and
> some Tcl/Tk. I am starting to use a tool called MaxQ that uses
> jython. I have been studying Rossum's tutorial but still am unclear on
> importing,
What's your problem here ?
> the
On Mar 16, 8:39 am, "Paul McGuire" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Wow, are you still reading? Quit wasting time and go download a
> Python dist and get started already!
>
I think you should extract that and spend twenty minutes tidying it up
and then publish it to the Python for Programmers page
On Mar 16, 8:39 am, "Paul McGuire" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[...]
> Stop thinking about *how* to start and *just start*. Python is pretty
Indeed. Of all the fortune cookies I've eaten over the years, I've
saved (and taped to my monitor) only one fortune. It reads:
Begin...the rest is easy.
Thanks for your fast reply. I'm fine with your "%7.03f" solution. (negatives
are
not significant)
Alexander Eisenhuth schrieb:
> Hello alltogether,
>
> is it possible to format stings with fixed width of let's say 7
> character. T need a floating point with 3 chars before dot, padded with
>
On Fri, 2007-03-16 at 04:04 -0700, Yury wrote:
> I am new to python and programming generally, but someday it is time
> to start :)
> I am writing a python module in C and have a question about multibyte
> character strings in python<=>C.
> I want a C function which takes a string as argument from
Steve Holden wrote:
> Alexander Eisenhuth wrote:
>> Hello alltogether,
>>
>> is it possible to format stings with fixed width of let's say 7 character. T
>> need a floating point with 3 chars before dot, padded with ' ' and 3 chars
>> after
>> dot, padded with '0'.
>>
>> Followingh is my approac
On Mar 13, 2:16 am, Steven D'Aprano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> I'd be interested in hearing people's stories of Eureka moments in Python,
> moments where you suddenly realise that some task which seemed like it
> would be hard work was easy with Python.
>
The day I wrote a CORBA method intercept
On Mar 16, 6:41 am, "Gerald" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi ,Im a BSc4 Maths/Computer Science student.Unfortunately my
> curriculum did not include Python programming yet I see many vacancies
> for Python developers.I studied programming Pascal,C++ and Delphi.So I
> need to catch up quickly and ma
On Mar 16, 6:41 am, "Gerald" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi ,Im a BSc4 Maths/Computer Science student.Unfortunately my
> curriculum did not include Python programming yet I see many vacancies
> for Python developers.I studied programming Pascal,C++ and Delphi.So I
> need to catch up quickly and ma
Jon Clements a écrit :
> Hi Group,
>
> If I have a CSV reader that's passed to a function, is it possible for
> that function to retrieve a reference to the "fileobj" like object
> that was passed to the reader's __init__? For instance, if it's using
> an actual file object, then depending on the
On 16 Mar, 13:20, Alexander Eisenhuth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Hello alltogether,
>
> is it possible to format stings with fixed width of let's say 7 character. T
> need a floating point with 3 chars before dot, padded with ' ' and 3 chars
> after
> dot, padded with '0'.
>
> Followingh is my a
Greetings,
First I will admit I am new to Python but have experience with C++ and
some Tcl/Tk. I am starting to use a tool called MaxQ that uses
jython. I have been studying Rossum's tutorial but still am unclear on
importing, the use of self, and calling functions with their own name
in quotes.
Alexander Eisenhuth wrote:
> Hello alltogether,
>
> is it possible to format stings with fixed width of let's say 7 character. T
> need a floating point with 3 chars before dot, padded with ' ' and 3 chars
> after
> dot, padded with '0'.
>
> Followingh is my approach
> >>> f = 21.1
> >>> s =
Gerald a écrit :
> Hi ,Im a BSc4 Maths/Computer Science student.Unfortunately my
> curriculum did not include Python programming yet I see many vacancies
> for Python developers.I studied programming Pascal,C++ and Delphi.So I
> need to catch up quickly and master Python programming.How do you
> su
n00m wrote:
> 62.5030784639
Maybe this one could save a few seconds, it works best when there are
multiple occurrences of the same value.
A.
from time import time
def freq(L):
D = {}
for x in L:
D[x] = D.get(x,0)+1
return D
def test():
t = time()
f = fil
In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Gerald wrote:
> Can you recommend websites that feature a gentle introduction to Python?
If you already know programming in general, `Dive Into Python`_ might be a
good starting point. And of course the tutorial in the Python
documentation.
_Dive Into Python: http://www.
1 - 100 of 125 matches
Mail list logo