Tzury Bar Yochay wrote:
>
>added to ~/.ssh/authorized_keys the command="my_parder" parameter
>which point to a python script file named 'my_parser' and located in /
>usr/local/bin (file was chmoded as 777)
>
>in that script file '/usr/local/bin/my_parser' I got the following
>lines:
>
>#!/usr/bin
sys.exit() raise SystemExit() exception which could be caught and if not
caught, terminate only the current thread. If your program is multi-threaded
and you want to terminate the process, i.e all threads, immediately then use
os._exit(1)
On Tue, Dec 16, 2008 at 7:52 AM, Miki wrote:
> Hello,
>
>
jams...@googlemail.com wrote:
[...]
> The program is multithreaded to speed up the processing...there are
> input and output Queues.
It's not the major point here, but are you aware of Python's GIL?
> Now, each domain entry is an class object containing various bits of
> info. Each domain class
Hi,
I'm attempting to learn how to convert MsSQl Transact-SQL to postgres pgsql.
So far my readings have led me to finding a parser. I'm looking for a
tutorial on how to get it done. I did find a commercial product but they
want over $10,000 us. This way beyond my means. Therefore, I need to ge
goat...@gmail.com wrote:
Guys thanks to point it out.
Yes, it's a race problem. I tried sleep long enough, then I can
connect to the socket. I should add code to try to connect to the
socket for a given time out.
As Roy noted, that's "the cheesy way". Are the kind of programmers who
accept che
On Dec 16, 3:45 am, "Giampaolo Rodola'" wrote:
> Hi,
> in a module of mine (ftpserver.py) I'd want to add a (boolean) global
> variable named "use_gmt_times" to decide whether the server has to
> return times in GMT or localtime but I'm not sure if it is a good idea
> because of the "ethical" doub
On Dec 15, 11:00 pm, ru...@yahoo.com wrote:
> #my_module
> class Config: pass
> config = Config()
>
> def func1(state):
> config.A = 1
> def func2(state)
> config.A = 2
> def func3(state)
> print config.A
That of course should have been:
def func1(config):
config.A = 1
def func2(c
On Dec 16, 1:48 am, Torsten Mohr wrote:
> Hi,
>
> i found some examples when googling for the subject but nothing really
> matched.
>
> Is there a standard module available that lets me parse a syntax like "C"
> with numbers, operators, braces, variables and function calls?
>
> I'd like to use thi
On Dec 15, 7:45 pm, "Giampaolo Rodola'" wrote:
> in a module of mine (ftpserver.py) I'd want to add a (boolean) global
> variable named "use_gmt_times" to decide whether the server has to
> return times in GMT or localtime but I'm not sure if it is a good idea
> because of the "ethical" doubts I'm
On Tue, Dec 16, 2008 at 3:30 PM, wrote:
> Guys thanks to point it out.
> Yes, it's a race problem. I tried sleep long enough, then I can
> connect to the socket. I should add code to try to connect to the
> socket for a given time out.
This is where event-driven approaches
become really useful :
Guys thanks to point it out.
Yes, it's a race problem. I tried sleep long enough, then I can
connect to the socket. I should add code to try to connect to the
socket for a given time out.
Roy Smith wrote:
> In article
> <6d3291c3-4e12-4bdd-884a-21f15f38d...@a12g2000pro.googlegroups.com>,
> goat..
On Dec 15, 1:28 pm, Arnaud Delobelle wrote:
> Reckoner writes:
> > Hi,
>
> > I have lists of the following type:
>
> > [1,2,3,[5,6]]
>
> > and I want to produce the following strings from this as
>
> > '0-1-2-3-5'
> > '0-1-2-3-6'
>
> > That was easy enough. The problem is that these can be nested.
In article
<6d3291c3-4e12-4bdd-884a-21f15f38d...@a12g2000pro.googlegroups.com>,
goat...@gmail.com wrote:
> In my python code I use subprocess.Popen to run and external program
> who will listen to a TCP port. And I also create a socket to connect
> to the TCP port that the external program is li
On Fri, 12 Dec 2008, bearophileh...@lycos.com wrote:
> In the next years people that use low-level languages like C may need
> to invent a new language fitter for multi-core CPUs, able to be used
> on GPUs too (see the OpenCL), less error-prone than C, able to use the
> CPU vector instructions eff
goat...@gmail.com wrote:
In my python code I use subprocess.Popen to run and external program
who will listen to a TCP port. And I also create a socket to connect
to the TCP port that the external program is listening.
I will get 'Connection refused, errno=111' when I try to socket.connect
().
On Tue, Dec 16, 2008 at 12:49 PM, wrote:
> I'm writing a project management system, and I need the ability to
> accept a directory name and move its contents to another directory.
> Can someone give me a code sample that will handle this? I can't find
> any "copying" functions in os or os.path.
On Tue, Dec 16, 2008 at 12:45 PM, Giampaolo Rodola' wrote:
> Hi,
> in a module of mine (ftpserver.py) I'd want to add a (boolean) global
> variable named "use_gmt_times" to decide whether the server has to
> return times in GMT or localtime but I'm not sure if it is a good idea
> because of the "e
I'm writing a project management system, and I need the ability to
accept a directory name and move its contents to another directory.
Can someone give me a code sample that will handle this? I can't find
any "copying" functions in os or os.path.
Regards,
LeafStorm
--
http://mail.python.org/mailma
Hi all,
Here is my problem, see if any one else met this before
In my python code I use subprocess.Popen to run and external program
who will listen to a TCP port. And I also create a socket to connect
to the TCP port that the external program is listening.
I will get 'Connection refused, errno=11
Hi,
in a module of mine (ftpserver.py) I'd want to add a (boolean) global
variable named "use_gmt_times" to decide whether the server has to
return times in GMT or localtime but I'm not sure if it is a good idea
because of the "ethical" doubts I'm gonna write below.
In first place I've never liked
Hello,
> How can I return a non-zero status result from the script? Just do a
> return 1? at the end?
raise SystemExit(1)
HTH,
--
Miki
http://pythonwise.blogspot.com
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
> Is there a standard module available that lets me parse a syntax like "C"
> with numbers, operators, braces, variables and function calls?
There is a C compiler implemented with PLY somewhere.
> I'd like to use this to parse an own kind of configuration language
> and preferred would be just sta
On Mon, Dec 15, 2008 at 3:48 PM, Torsten Mohr wrote:
> Hi,
>
> i found some examples when googling for the subject but nothing really
> matched.
>
> Is there a standard module available that lets me parse a syntax like "C"
> with numbers, operators, braces, variables and function calls?
>
> I'd li
On Mon, Dec 15, 2008 at 12:24 PM, Kirk Strauser wrote:
> At 2008-12-15T20:03:14Z, "Chris Rebert" writes:
>
>> You just need a recursive list-flattening function. There are many
>> recipes for these. Here's mine:
>
> flattened = flatten([1,2,3,[5,6,[10, 11]],7,[9,[1, 2, 3, 4, 5 ]]])
> flat
Scott David Daniels:
> If you want to keep the original's method, but do it in a more Pythonic
> way, I would suggest:
>
> def deNone4(alist):
> j = 0
> for val in alist:
> if val is not None:
> alist[j] = val
> j += 1
>
> In most languages, I'll do something like this
>
> xmlWriter.BeginElement("parent");
> xmlWriter.BeginElement("child");
> --xml.Writer.Characters("subtext");
> xmlWriter.EndElement();
> xmlWriter.EndElement();
>
> Where the dashes are indentation (since some newsgroup handlers d
Rahul> Has anyone tried installing Python on Compute Node Linux (on a
Rahul> cray)? I was having trouble getting it running. I see that CNL
Rahul> does not support dynamic libraries but I am not sure what the
Rahul> best way then is to get Python running.
In the Modules directory
> .strip() returns a copy of the string without leading and ending
whitespaces (inlcuding newlines, tabs etc).
Ahh. I had removed it because it didn't seem to do anything, but I've
readded it.
And I understand your dictionary stuff correctly now, I think, and I
worked it in. Currently, I have:
Is it easy_install able? I got:
sudo easy_install -U openopt
Searching for openopt
Reading http://pypi.python.org/simple/openopt/
Couldn't find index page for 'openopt' (maybe misspelled?)
Scanning index of all packages (this may take a while)
Reading http://pypi.python.org/simple/
Reading http:/
> I noted, also, than, in some cases, Python26.dll is not copied in
> %WINDIR%\system32
> After that, external softs don't find the DLL.
Right. Only in "for all users" installations, python26.dll is put into
system32. In a "just for me" installation, the user is not expected to
have permissions to
En Sun, 14 Dec 2008 06:03:26 -0200, greg
escribió:
Gabriel Genellina wrote:
(Pipes don't work the same as sockets, although unix-like systems try
hard to hide the differences...)
BSD-based unixes implement pipes using socketpair(), so
pipes actually *are* sockets (or at least they used to
On Tue, Dec 16, 2008 at 9:48 AM, Torsten Mohr wrote:
> Hi,
>
> i found some examples when googling for the subject but nothing really
> matched.
>
> Is there a standard module available that lets me parse a syntax like "C"
> with numbers, operators, braces, variables and function calls?
Try pypar
Hi!
I noted, also, than, in some cases, Python26.dll is not copied in
%WINDIR%\system32
After that, external softs don't find the DLL.
But it's a detail, because it's easy to copy the DLL with install
scripts.
@-salutations
--
Michel Claveau
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pytho
Hi,
i found some examples when googling for the subject but nothing really
matched.
Is there a standard module available that lets me parse a syntax like "C"
with numbers, operators, braces, variables and function calls?
I'd like to use this to parse an own kind of configuration language
and pre
Hi!
Thank you very much for your answer. I appreciate many to receive an
answer of somebody as you.
But I, always, install Python 2.6.1 "for all users" (and, on Vista, UAC
is always deactivated).
After some tests, the problem seems a bit more complex: call the
Python-COM-servers run OK, fr
Arnaud Delobelle:
> Here is a not thought out solution:
>...
I was waiting to answer because so far I have found a bad-looking
solution only. Seeing there's only your solution, I show mine too. It
seems similar to your one.
def xflatten(seq):
if isinstance(seq, list):
stack = [iter(se
>> Try installing Python 2.6.1 "for all users".
>
> Could you clarify why that's needed?
I didn't say it's needed. I said that he should try that, perhaps it
helps.
> One thing we noticed (I'm not sure has this been yet submitted to
> bugs.python.org yet) was that installing packages created wit
2008/12/15 "Martin v. Löwis" :
>> I am very disappointed. Help me, please.
>
> Try installing Python 2.6.1 "for all users".
Could you clarify why that's needed? Link to a relevant bug report or
something similar is enough. We've got some weird problems installing
Python packages (win32.exe) on Wi
feba a écrit :
Alright! This is feeling more like it.
#!/usr/bin/python
#Py3k, UTF-8
import random
(snip)
def youwin(game):
if game['pnum'] == 1:
print("CONGRATULATIONS! IT TOOK YOU %s GUESSES" % game
['gcount'])
else:
if game['player'] == game['player1']:
On Mon, 15 Dec 2008 11:53:40 -0800, Carl Banks wrote:
>
> (...For that matter, if the rule had been, "Never augment your words
> spelling with an apostrophe", it would have really simplified
> things)
Th next dae, wee aul wil bee speling liek this
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/
Spent a bit more time looking over suggestions and working out some
annoyances.
import random
def customrange(game, lowunsafe=True):
game['defrang'] = False #Keeps setup from changing range to
defaults
while lowunsafe: #makes sure that the low number is positive
picklow = int(inp
Hi all,
OpenOpt 0.21, free optimization framework (license: BSD) with some own
solvers and connections to tens of 3rd party ones, has been released.
All details here:
http://openopt.blogspot.com/2008/12/openopt-release-021.html
Regards, OpenOpt developers.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listi
Kirk Strauser wrote:
At 2008-12-15T19:06:16Z, Reckoner writes:
The problem is that I don't know ahead of time how many lists there are or
how deep they go. In other words, you could have:
Recursion is your friend.
Write a function to unpack one "sublist" and call itself again with the new
l
Joe Strout a écrit :
On Dec 15, 2008, at 6:46 AM, Krishnakant wrote:
in this case, I get a problem when there is ' in any of the values
during insert or update.
That's because ' is the SQL string literal delimiter. But any
SQL-compliant database allows you to "escape" an apostrophe within a
Joel Hedlund wrote:
> I would very much like an explanation to this that does not involve
> threads, because I haven't made any that I'm aware of. I can't even
> understand how this could happen. How do I even debug this?
>
It could happen quite easily if the hash value of the object has chang
On Mon, 2008-12-15 at 02:11 +, Lie Ryan wrote:
> On Fri, 12 Dec 2008 22:55:20 +, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
>
> > On Fri, 12 Dec 2008 21:18:36 +, Lie Ryan wrote:
> >> Personally, I'd prefer VB's version:
> >> foo IsNot bar
> >>
> >> or in pseudo-python
> >> foo isnot bar
> >>
> >> since
Has anyone tried installing Python on Compute Node Linux (on a cray)? I was
having trouble getting it running. I see that CNL does not support dynamic
libraries but I am not sure what the best way then is to get Python
running.
Any tips?
--
Rahul
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pyt
I'm having a very hard time explaining why this snippet *sometimes*
raises KeyError:
snippet:
print type(self.pool)
for frag in self.pool.keys():
if frag is fragment_info:
print "the fragment_info *is* in the pool", hash(frag),
hash(fragment_info), hash(frag) == hash(fragment_info)
yinon...@gmail.com wrote:
On Dec 14, 8:07 pm, Brian Allen Vanderburg II
wrote:
Hi,
The interface of extract_tb is:
traceback.extract_tb(tb, limit=None)
try to play with the 'limit' argument
Good luck,
Yinon
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I have, but the limit
> I am very disappointed. Help me, please.
Try installing Python 2.6.1 "for all users".
Regards,
Martin
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Mon, 15 Dec 2008 12:27:12 -0800, cmdrrickhun...@yaho.com wrote:
> On Dec 15, 11:10 am, Terry Reedy wrote:
>> > In general, I'm using indentation to show logical flow through code.
>>
>> That, of course, is what Python does.
>>
> Python does NOT use indentation to show logical flow. It uses it
silverburgh.me...@gmail.com wrote in news:74b53da4-bf07-431b-898b-
49977f7a6...@r36g2000prf.googlegroups.com in comp.lang.python:
> Hi
>
> How can I return a non-zero status result from the script? Just do a
> return 1? at the end?
>
>>> import sys
>>> help( sys.exit )
Help on built-in function
On Mon, 15 Dec 2008 13:12:08 -0800, silverburgh.me...@gmail.com wrote:
> How can I return a non-zero status result from the script? Just do a
> return 1? at the end?
``sys.exit(42)``
Ciao,
Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Tim Chase wrote:
> When you get the second page, are you getting the same content
> back that you get if you do a search in your favorite browser?
>
> Using just
>
>content = urllib.urlopen(url2).read()
>'Error' in content # True
>'Friedrich' in content # False
>
> However, when you
Reckoner writes:
> Hi,
>
> I have lists of the following type:
>
> [1,2,3,[5,6]]
>
> and I want to produce the following strings from this as
>
> '0-1-2-3-5'
> '0-1-2-3-6'
>
> That was easy enough. The problem is that these can be nested. For
> example:
>
> [1,2,3,[5,6],[7,8,9]]
>
> which should
I added the ability to select your own range. It takes two new
modules:
def customrange(game, lowunsafe=True):
game['defrang'] = False #Keeps setup from changing range to
defaults
while lowunsafe: #makes sure that the low number is positive
picklow = int(input("PLEASE PICK THE LOW
Hi
How can I return a non-zero status result from the script? Just do a
return 1? at the end?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Just because its such an interesting problem, I'll take a stab at it.
It can be proven that you cannot sort an arbitrarily large set of
numbers, given no extra information, faster than O(n log n). It is
provable using information theory. However, if your teacher is giving
you evil problems, ther
I'm able to grab the problem webpage via Python just fine, albeit with
a bit of a delay. So, don't know what your exact problem is, maybe
your connection?
When you get the second page, are you getting the same content
back that you get if you do a search in your favorite browser?
Using just
I believe WxTimerEvent is handled using the event queue, which isn't
going to do what you want. An event which goes through the queue does
not get processed until you return to the queue.
What you want to do is actually a rather difficult task to do
generically. Should the task be interrupted im
At 2008-12-15T20:03:14Z, "Chris Rebert" writes:
> You just need a recursive list-flattening function. There are many
> recipes for these. Here's mine:
flattened = flatten([1,2,3,[5,6,[10, 11]],7,[9,[1, 2, 3, 4, 5 ]]])
flattened
> [1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 10, 11, 7, 9, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
'-'.jo
On Dec 15, 11:10 am, Terry Reedy wrote:
> > In general, I'm using indentation to show logical flow through code.
>
> That, of course, is what Python does.
>
Python does NOT use indentation to show logical flow. It uses it to
show syntactical flow. The XML writer is the perfect example of a
case
Netbeans added a python plugin to its plugin repository.
Do you tried it? What do you think about this plugin?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
At 2008-12-15T19:06:16Z, Reckoner writes:
> The problem is that I don't know ahead of time how many lists there are or
> how deep they go. In other words, you could have:
Recursion is your friend.
Write a function to unpack one "sublist" and call itself again with the new
list. For instance, s
On Mon, Dec 15, 2008 at 11:55 AM, Antoni Mont wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> My apologises if this is not the appropriate group.
>
> I'd like to access a web site from a python script. That page, in fact,
> is a form of main page. With a browser (Firefox, for instance) I can do
> it without problem: I open
Hi all,
I have written a simple multithreaded profiler using decorators. Below
is how it works:
1) Iterate all modules in sys.modules and iterate each function/ class
methods inside them, means all of them including built-in methods.
2) Decorate the methods and functions to a global function.
3)
On Mon, Dec 15, 2008 at 11:06 AM, Reckoner wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have lists of the following type:
>
> [1,2,3,[5,6]]
>
> and I want to produce the following strings from this as
>
> '0-1-2-3-5'
> '0-1-2-3-6'
>
> That was easy enough. The problem is that these can be nested. For
> example:
>
> [1,2,3,
Hi all,
My apologises if this is not the appropriate group.
I'd like to access a web site from a python script. That page, in fact,
is a form of main page. With a browser (Firefox, for instance) I can do
it without problem: I open the main web whose url is:
'http://www.mcu.es/webISBN/tituloSimpl
On Dec 15, 1:55 am, Ben Finney
wrote:
> James Stroud writes:
> > Ben Finney wrote:
> > > James Stroud writes:
>
> > >> Yes. I think it was the British who decided that the apostrophe
> > >> rule for "it" would be reversed from normal usage relative to
> > >> just about every other noun.
>
> It a
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Fri, 12 Dec 2008 19:02:24 -0500, Terry Reedy wrote:
...
Tim Chase wrote:
If you want to literally remove None objects from a list(or
mutable sequence)
def deNone(alist):
n=len(alist)
i=j=0
while i < n:
if alist[i] is not None:
alist[j] = alist
Scott David Daniels wrote:
noydb wrote:
I have the code below, which unzips a zipfile containing only one
file. Once it is unzipped, I want to rename the file based on a user
provided name. But I get this (WindowsError: [Error 32] The process
cannot access the file because it is being used by
Hi,
I have lists of the following type:
[1,2,3,[5,6]]
and I want to produce the following strings from this as
'0-1-2-3-5'
'0-1-2-3-6'
That was easy enough. The problem is that these can be nested. For
example:
[1,2,3,[5,6],[7,8,9]]
which should produce
'0-1-2-3-5-7'
'0-1-2-3-5-8'
'0-1-2-3-
noydb wrote:
I have the code below, which unzips a zipfile containing only one
file. Once it is unzipped, I want to rename the file based on a user
provided name. But I get this (WindowsError: [Error 32] The process
cannot access the file because it is being used by another process)
error, whic
Trying to follow a technique found at bzr I did the following
added to ~/.ssh/authorized_keys the command="my_parder" parameter
which point to a python script file named 'my_parser' and located in /
usr/local/bin (file was chmoded as 777)
in that script file '/usr/local/bin/my_parser' I got the
Dan Upton wrote:
And if n is small and sparse (ie, k > n) , O(k*n) for radix sort could
be worse than O(n^2). You could also ask why people make such a big
deal about quicksort over mergesort, since mergesort has a guaranteed
O(n log n) time whereas quicksort can be O(n^2) on pathological cases
Alright! This is feeling more like it.
#!/usr/bin/python
#Py3k, UTF-8
import random
def setup(game, minr=1, maxr=99):
#minr, maxr make minimum and maximum. Can be adjusted.
game['minr'], game['maxr'] = minr, maxr
game['gcount'] = 0 #Reset guess count
game['target'] = random.randin
cmdrrickhun...@yaho.com wrote:
I've been trying to search through the years of Python talk to find an
answer to this, but my Googlefu is weak.
In most languages, I'll do something like this
xmlWriter.BeginElement("parent");
xmlWriter.BeginElement("child");
--xml.Writer.Characters("s
I don't seem to be able to figure out how to get the exit values of
commands executed with pexpect reliably. Here's first with regular shell:
hei...@ubuntu:~$ true; echo $?
0
Let's try with pexpect. Below is the program:
---CLIP---
import sys, pexpect
cmd = "true"
print 'cmd=', cmd
child = pe
Hi steve.
you are right.
Thanks for all you who helped to understand how to and *not* to pass
queries through psycopg2 which is a module based on python dbapi.
the following query worked.
cursor.execute("insert into vendors values(%s,%s)", lstParams)
lstParams contained all the values and yes one h
Hi,
Wingware has released version 3.1.6 of Wing IDE, a bugfix release for all
three product levels of Wing IDE.
*Release Highlights*
This release includes the following:
* Added previously missing support for x64 Python on Windows
* Avoid auto-starting batch searches when a project is opened
*
On 15 Gru, 18:14, MRAB wrote:
> cmdrrickhun...@yaho.com wrote:
> > I've been trying to search through the years of Python talk to find an
> > answer to this, but my Googlefu is weak.
>
> > In most languages, I'll do something like this
>
> > xmlWriter.BeginElement("parent");
> > xmlWriter.Begi
Lamonte Harris wrote:
> I had this problem too. If you've upgraded to python 2.6 you need to
> use the new sytnax "format
>
> queryString = "insert into venders
> values('{0}','{1}','{2}'".format(field1,field2,field3)
>
Will all readers of this thread kindly regard this as an example of how
*not
Analog Kid wrote:
> Hi All:
> I am new to regular expressions in general, and not just re in python.
> So, apologies if you find my question stupid :) I need some help with
> forming a regex. Here is my scenario ...
> I have strings coming in from a list, each of which I want to check
> against a r
cmdrrickhun...@yaho.com wrote:
I've been trying to search through the years of Python talk to find an
answer to this, but my Googlefu is weak.
In most languages, I'll do something like this
xmlWriter.BeginElement("parent");
xmlWriter.BeginElement("child");
--xml.Writer.Characters("s
On Nov 27, 9:56 pm, "Hendrik van Rooyen" wrote:
> "Steven D'Aprano"
>
> >GUI designer. You write a program to let the user create code by clicking
> >buttons, dragging objects, drawing lines, etc. The GUI designer may use
> >classes, but the purpose of those classes is to generate source code.
>
Tim Chase wrote:
> Steve Holden wrote:
>> This led to a schism between the British and the
>> newly-independent Americans, who responded by taking the "u"
>> out of colour, valour, and aluminium.
>
> Darn Americans and their alminim ;-)
>
> Next thing you know, they'll be putting an I in TEAM
On Dec 14, 4:23 am, "James Mills"
wrote:
> On Sun, Dec 14, 2008 at 3:47 PM, Henson wrote:
> > In my own bot, using the latestxmpppy, I've been printing everything
> > going to the message handler to the screen. I've yet to see a
> > 'subscribe' string. Has this changed?
>
> No this hasn't chang
Brian Allen Vanderburg II wrote:
I've looked at traceback module but I can't find how to limit traceback
from the most recent call if it is possible. I see that extract_tb has
a limit parameter, but it limits from the start and not the end.
Currently I've made my own traceback code to do this
Hey everybody,
I'm plotting graphs with 2 y-axes, which I created using
ax_left = pylab.subplot(111)
ax_right = pylab.twinx()
Then I switch the sides of the ticks:
ax_left.yaxis.tick_right()
ax_right.yaxis.tick_left()
This works, the ticks are on the opposite sides (left axis ticks are on
the
bieff...@gmail.com wrote:
Python has in its standard library a timer class which actually is
implemented as a thread (I think) ...
however, when using a GUI package, I think it is better to use gui-
specific functions for event-driven programming,
to make sure that your code do not mess with GUI
I've been trying to search through the years of Python talk to find an
answer to this, but my Googlefu is weak.
In most languages, I'll do something like this
xmlWriter.BeginElement("parent");
xmlWriter.BeginElement("child");
--xml.Writer.Characters("subtext");
xmlWriter.EndElemen
On Mon, Dec 15, 2008 at 11:05 AM, wrote:
>> Non-comparison sorts are a useful technique, but it's changing the
>> problem, and they are only useful in very limited circumstances. There's
>> a good reason that most sort routines are based on O(n*log n) comparison
>> sorts instead of O(n) bucket so
Tim Chase wrote:
Steve Holden wrote:
This led to a schism between the British and the
newly-independent Americans, who responded by taking the "u"
out of colour, valour, and aluminium.
Darn Americans and their alminim ;-)
Next thing you know, they'll be putting an I in TEAM.[1]
-tkc
On 15 Dic, 16:21, Ross wrote:
> I'm porting some ugly javascript managed stuff to have an equivalent
> behaviour in a standalone app. It uses events that arrive from a server,
> and various small images. In this standalone version, the data is local
> in a file and the images in a local directory
Steve Holden wrote:
Ben Finney wrote:
James Stroud writes:
Ben Finney wrote:
James Stroud writes:
Yes. I think it was the British who decided that the
apostrophe rule for "it" would be reversed from normal usage
relative to just about every other noun.
It also seems an indefensible claim
Steve Holden wrote:
This led to a schism between the British and the
newly-independent Americans, who responded by taking the "u"
out of colour, valour, and aluminium.
Darn Americans and their alminim ;-)
Next thing you know, they'll be putting an I in TEAM.[1]
-tkc
[1] http://www.quo
On Dec 15, 11:05 am, prueba...@latinmail.com wrote:
> > Non-comparison sorts are a useful technique, but it's changing the
> > problem, and they are only useful in very limited circumstances. There's
> > a good reason that most sort routines are based on O(n*log n) comparison
> > sorts instead of O
On 2008-12-14, Peter Otten <__pete...@web.de> wrote:
> Grant Edwards wrote:
>
>> Short circuit evaluation of booleans is very common (and has
>> been for decades), so I don't know why people would expect
>> something else.
>
> Visual Basic ;)
I should have known...
--
Grant Edwards
> Non-comparison sorts are a useful technique, but it's changing the
> problem, and they are only useful in very limited circumstances. There's
> a good reason that most sort routines are based on O(n*log n) comparison
> sorts instead of O(n) bucket sorts or radix sorts.
>
This is an assumption tha
On Mon, Dec 15, 2008 at 8:13 AM, wrote:
> On Mon, 15 Dec 2008 at 23:01, James Mills wrote:
>
>> On Mon, Dec 15, 2008 at 10:51 PM, Lamonte Harris
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Every time I start cmd on windows it requires me to "set
>>> path=%path%;C:\python26" why? I'm getting annoyed...
>>>
>>
>> "cmd" has
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