module obj is instance of types.ModuleType, which is instance of
'type', where class obj is instance of 'type'. even only at this
point, they're diff in to many ways. there are so many things to do
when you truly want module to replace class, as pointed by 2 posts
above
i'm also a beginner, so i c
On Jul 5, 2:35 pm, Antoine Pitrou wrote:
> > a FileHandler works as expected, the log file being UTF-8 encoded.
>
> Ouch. Implicit encoding sounds like a bad behaviour.
UTF-8 is only used as a fallback in an exception handler, you can use
any supported encoding using the encoding= keyword argumen
Martineau writes:
> Some clarification. I meant installed 2.7 on top of 2.6.x. Doing so
> would have interfered with the currently installed version because I
> always install Python in the same directory, one named just "Python",
> to minimize the number of changes I have to make to to other par
On 7/5/2010 9:00 PM, Philip Semanchuk wrote:
On Jul 5, 2010, at 6:41 PM, Chris Rebert wrote:
On Mon, Jul 5, 2010 at 3:38 PM, Philip Semanchuk
I ported two pure C extensions from 2 to 3 and was even able to keep a
single C codebase. I'd be willing to contribute my experiences to a
document
s
On Monday 05 July 2010 21:10:51 kedra marbun wrote:
> On Jul 5, 3:42 pm, Bruno Desthuilliers
> 42.desthuilli...@websiteburo.invalid> wrote:
> > kedra marbun a écrit :
> > > i'm confused which part that doesn't make sense?
> > > this is my 2nd attempt to py, the 1st was on april this year, it was
On Mon, 05 Jul 2010 21:12:47 -0700, kedra marbun wrote:
> On Jul 5, 7:49 am, Gregory Ewing wrote:
>> kedra marbun wrote:
>> > now, i'm asking another favor, what about the 2nd point in my 1st
>> > post?
>>
>> Your original post has dropped off my newsscope, so you'll have to
>> remind me what the
On 7/5/2010 3:19 PM, John Nagle wrote:
I'm working on street address parsing again, and I'm trying to deal
with some of the harder cases.
The approach below works for the cases given. The "Or" operator ("^")
supports backtracking, but "Optional()" apparently does not.
direction = Combine
On Jul 5, 4:05 am, Tobiah wrote:
> foo.py:
>
> import bar
> bar.show_importer()
>
> output:
>
> 'foo' or 'foo.py' or 'path/to/foo' etc.
>
> Possible?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Tobiah
if what you mean by 'importer' is the one that really cause py to load
the mod, then why not dynamically set it?
foo.py
---
On Jul 5, 6:29 am, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On Sun, 04 Jul 2010 21:05:56 +, Tobiah wrote:
> > foo.py:
>
> > import bar
> > bar.show_importer()
>
> > output:
>
> > 'foo' or 'foo.py' or 'path/to/foo' etc.
>
> > Possible?
>
> I don't think so. Your question isn't even well-defined. Given three
>
On Jul 5, 7:49 am, Gregory Ewing wrote:
> kedra marbun wrote:
> > now, i'm asking another favor, what about the 2nd point in my 1st post?
>
> Your original post has dropped off my newsscope, so
> you'll have to remind me what the 2nd point was.
>
> --
> Greg
it's like 'name', it's about info that
On Jul 5, 3:42 pm, Bruno Desthuilliers wrote:
> kedra marbun a écrit :
>
>
>
> > i'm confused which part that doesn't make sense?
> > this is my 2nd attempt to py, the 1st was on april this year, it was
> > just a month, i'm afraid i haven't got the fundamentals right yet. so
> > i'm gonna lay out
> Benjamin (or anyone else), do you know where I can get the Compiled
> Windows Help file -- python27.chm -- for this release?
I have now put that file separately on the release page.
Regards,
Martin
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Jul 5, 5:53 pm, David Robinow wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 5, 2010 at 8:15 PM, Steven
> D'Aprano wrote:
> > On Mon, 05 Jul 2010 12:59:00 -0700, Martineau wrote:
>
> >> I'd like to view the contents of the help file without actually
> >> installing the release which would wipe out any currently install
On Jul 5, 1:31 pm, Alexander Kapps wrote:
> Martineau wrote:
> > Perhaps it's hidden somewhere, but I couldn't find the .chm help file
> > in the python-2.7.msi file using 7-zip, nor saw anything that looked
> > like a Doc folder embedded within it -- so I doubt installing it on a
> > Windows mach
On Mon, Jul 5, 2010 at 4:56 PM, Massimo Di Pierro
wrote:
> Markmin is a wiki markup language
> implemented in less than 100 lines of code (one file, no dependencies)
> easy to read
> secure
> support table, ul, ol, code
> support html5 video and audio elements
> can align images and resize them
>
andrew cooke wrote:
On Jul 5, 8:56 pm, MRAB wrote:
andrew cooke wrote:
What am I missing this time? :o(
Nothing. It's a bug. :-(
Sweet :o)
Thanks - do you want me to raise an issue or will you?
You found it. You can have the pleasure.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-lis
On Jul 5, 8:56 pm, MRAB wrote:
> andrew cooke wrote:
> > What am I missing this time? :o(
> Nothing. It's a bug. :-(
Sweet :o)
Thanks - do you want me to raise an issue or will you?
Cheers,
Andrew
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Jul 5, 2010, at 6:41 PM, Chris Rebert wrote:
On Mon, Jul 5, 2010 at 3:38 PM, Philip Semanchuk
wrote:
On Jul 5, 2010, at 4:30 PM, D'Arcy J.M. Cain wrote:
On Mon, 05 Jul 2010 14:42:13 -0400
Terry Reedy wrote:
Good start. Now what is blocking those four?
Lack of developer interest/time/ab
andrew cooke wrote:
As ever, I guess it's most likely I've misunderstood something, but in
Python 2.6 lookback seems to actually be lookahead. All the following
tests pass:
from re import compile
assert compile('(a)b(?<=(?(2)x|c))(c)').match('abc')
assert not compile('(
On Mon, Jul 5, 2010 at 8:15 PM, Steven D'Aprano
wrote:
> On Mon, 05 Jul 2010 12:59:00 -0700, Martineau wrote:
>
>> I'd like to view the contents of the help file without actually
>> installing the release which would wipe out any currently installed
>> version (I'm one of those rare people who act
John Nagle wrote:
> On 7/4/2010 6:36 PM, Philip Semanchuk wrote:
>> hi Tim,
>> This seems more likely to be a MySQLdb problem than a Python one.
Have
>> you considered asking in the MySQLdb forums?
>>
>> On Jul 4, 2010, at 7:46 PM, Tim Johnson wrote:
>>
>>> Using python 2.6.4 on slackware 13.1
>>
On Mon, 05 Jul 2010 14:32:13 -0500, Tim Chase wrote:
> On 07/05/2010 02:50 AM, Gregor Horvath wrote:
>> Am Sun, 04 Jul 2010 18:51:54 -0500
>> schrieb Tim Chase:
>>
>>> I think it's the same venting of frustration that caused veteran VB6
>>> developers to start calling VB.Net "Visual Fred" -- the l
On Mon, 05 Jul 2010 12:59:00 -0700, Martineau wrote:
> I'd like to view the contents of the help file without actually
> installing the release which would wipe out any currently installed
> version (I'm one of those rare people who actually reads manuals
> *before* using or installing most things
As ever, I guess it's most likely I've misunderstood something, but in
Python 2.6 lookback seems to actually be lookahead. All the following
tests pass:
from re import compile
assert compile('(a)b(?<=(?(2)x|c))(c)').match('abc')
assert not compile('(a)b(?<=(?(2)b|x))(c)'
On 07/05/2010 11:07 AM, Anthra Norell wrote:
I try to use "new.new.classobj (name, baseclass, dict)" and have no clue
what the "dict" of the current name space is.
Are you sure that's what you really want to know? The
'dict' argument to classobj() defines the attributes
that you want the new c
Hi all,
I have a serious problem I haven't solved yet, hope one of you can
help me. The first thing is, I embedded Python into my app and I
execute several scripts in this environment.
The problem is, the scripts don't import modules from their relative
path. I guess this is related to the sys.pa
On Mon, Jul 5, 2010 at 3:38 PM, Philip Semanchuk wrote:
> On Jul 5, 2010, at 4:30 PM, D'Arcy J.M. Cain wrote:
>> On Mon, 05 Jul 2010 14:42:13 -0400
>> Terry Reedy wrote:
>>> Good start. Now what is blocking those four?
>>> Lack of developer interest/time/ability?
>>> or something else that they n
On Jul 5, 2010, at 4:30 PM, D'Arcy J.M. Cain wrote:
On Mon, 05 Jul 2010 14:42:13 -0400
Terry Reedy wrote:
Good start. Now what is blocking those four?
Lack of developer interest/time/ability?
or something else that they need?
How about a basic how-to document? I maintain PyGreSQL and would
On 7/5/2010 12:35 PM, Kevin Walzer wrote:
On 7/5/10 2:56 AM, John Nagle wrote:
* PyCrypto
* PyOpenSSL
These, and Mark Pilgrim's feedparser, need to be 3.x compatible before I
can think about Python 3.x.
There's been an attempt to port "feedparser" to 3.0, but
that needed a port of Beaut
I'm working on street address parsing again, and I'm trying to deal
with some of the harder cases.
Here's a subparser, intended to take in things like "N MAIN" and
"SOUTH", and break out the "directional" from street name.
Directionals = ['southeast', 'northeast', 'north', 'northwest',
Has anyone had success using the netflix api with Netflix.py?
Especially getting access?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Jul 1, 12:42 am, Nobody wrote:
> On Wed, 30 Jun 2010 21:12:12 -0700, m wrote:
> > If I add the line:
> > for l in line: print ord(l),'\t',l
> > after the first readline, I get the following:
>
> > 27
> > 91 [
> > 48 0
> > 48 0
> > 109 m
> > 27
Am 05.07.2010 22:30, schrieb D'Arcy J.M. Cain:
> On Mon, 05 Jul 2010 14:42:13 -0400
> Terry Reedy wrote:
>> Good start. Now what is blocking those four?
>> Lack of developer interest/time/ability?
>> or something else that they need?
>
> How about a basic how-to document? I maintain PyGreSQL and
> > Ouch. Implicit encoding sounds like a bad behaviour.
Looking at the FileHandler source (
http://svn.python.org/view/python/trunk/Lib/logging/__init__.py?view=markup
) : the utf-8 encoding is a fallback. But *FileHandler family let you
specify the encoding you want, so that's OK I think.
But S
On Jul 5, 2:33 pm, Terry Reedy wrote:
> On 7/4/2010 9:20 PM, CM wrote:
>
> > On Jul 4, 7:14 pm, Terry Reedy wrote:
>
> > I think there's a good point to Python 3 put-downs (if I take put-down
> > to mean generally reasonable criticism, which is what I've read here
> > recently, and not trolling).
Martineau wrote:
Perhaps it's hidden somewhere, but I couldn't find the .chm help file
in the python-2.7.msi file using 7-zip, nor saw anything that looked
like a Doc folder embedded within it -- so I doubt installing it on a
Windows machine would work any better.
I don't know much about the .
On Mon, 05 Jul 2010 14:42:13 -0400
Terry Reedy wrote:
> Good start. Now what is blocking those four?
> Lack of developer interest/time/ability?
> or something else that they need?
How about a basic how-to document? I maintain PyGreSQL and would like
to move it to 3.x right now but I don't even k
On Jul 5, 1:12 am, Benjamin Kaplan wrote:
> On Sun, Jul 4, 2010 at 7:58 PM, John Machin wrote:
> > On Jul 5, 12:27 pm, Martineau wrote:
> >> On Jul 4, 8:34 am, Benjamin Peterson wrote:
>
> >> > On behalf of the Python development team, I'm jocund to announce the
> >> > second
> >> > release ca
On Jul 5, 7:12 pm, jmfauth wrote:
> BTW, if I understand correctly the module tokenize import
> the module token. So your example becomes:
>
> >>> from cStringIO import StringIO
> >>> import tokenize
> >>> for tok in tokenize.generate_tokens(StringIO("print9.0").readline):
>
> print tokeni
On 7/5/10 2:56 AM, John Nagle wrote:
* PyCrypto
* PyOpenSSL
These, and Mark Pilgrim's feedparser, need to be 3.x compatible before I
can think about Python 3.x.
--
Kevin Walzer
Code by Kevin
http://www.codebykevin.com
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 07/05/2010 02:50 AM, Gregor Horvath wrote:
Am Sun, 04 Jul 2010 18:51:54 -0500
schrieb Tim Chase:
I think it's the same venting of frustration that caused veteran
VB6 developers to start calling VB.Net "Visual Fred" -- the
language was too different and too non-backwards-compatible.
VB6 ->
http://www.kavalec.com/thisisislam.swf
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 7/5/2010 6:04 AM, David Cournapeau wrote:
On Mon, Jul 5, 2010 at 12:44 PM, Terry Reedy wrote:
[snip]
I think numpy will work for 3.1 as well
If numpy were released today for 3.1 (or even anytime before 3.2), that
would be great. It would let those waiting for it that it is real and
tha
On 7/5/2010 11:02 AM Tim Harig said...
Automating GUI applications requires interal
access to the program through some kind of interface and, ideally, decent
documention of the interface, something that is missing from many, if
not most, GUIs. Anything else relies on ugly and, generally fragile
On 7/5/2010 2:56 AM, John Nagle wrote:
On 7/4/2010 10:44 PM, Terry Reedy wrote:
I you have any other ideas about other top blockers, please share them.
The Twisted team has a list of what they need:
"http://stackoverflow.com/questions/172306/how-are-you-planning-on-handling-the-migration-to
On 7/4/2010 9:20 PM, CM wrote:
On Jul 4, 7:14 pm, Terry Reedy wrote:
I think there's a good point to Python 3 put-downs (if I take put-down
to mean generally reasonable criticism, which is what I've read here
recently, and not trolling). And that is simply to register
dissent.
But dissent
Thank you all for the discussion and the explanations.
> Mark Dickinson
I toyed a littled bit this afternoon and I wrote a colouriser
(British spelling?) with the tokenize module. It is quite
simple and easy.
BTW, if I understand correctly the module tokenize import
the module token. So your exa
On 7/5/2010 6:40 AM, Ben Sizer wrote:
Admittedly, it's three clicks away from the library docs on docs.python.org.
http://effbot.org/zone/element.htm#xml-namespaces
Hopefully someone will see fit to roll this important documentation
into docs.python.org before the next release... oops, too la
On 2010-07-05, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
> In message , Rhodri James wrote:
>> Classic Unix programming is a matter of stringing a bunch of tools
>> together with pipes to get the output you want. This isn't a great
>> paradigm for GUIs (not without tweaking that hasn't really been done), but
>>
On Jul 1, 9:39 am, John Doe wrote:
> Is there a way to increase the line selection gutter width? It
> seems to be only one pixel wide. In other words... When I single
> click on the left side of the line, in order to automatically
> select the line, the pointer must be in a precise single pixel
>
"Thomas Jollans" wrote in message
news:mailman.265.1278342154.1673.python-l...@python.org...
> On 07/05/2010 04:35 PM, Bill Davy wrote:
>> I am struggling :-(
>
> smile!
>
>>
>> I have used SWIG to build a module called SHIP. So I have a directory
>> containing SHIP.py and _SHIP.pyd, as follows:
Tim wrote:
> Csv is a very common format for publishing data as a form of primitive
> integration. It's an annoyingly brittle approach, so I'd like to
> ensure that I capture errors as soon as possible, so that I can get
> the upstream processes fixed, or at worst put in some correction
> mechanis
Antoine Pitrou wrote:
On Mon, 5 Jul 2010 06:17:38 -0700 (PDT)
norbert wrote:
a FileHandler works as expected, the log file being UTF-8 encoded.
Ouch. Implicit encoding sounds like a bad behaviour.
Yes indeed, hence my question on python-dev...
Chris
--
Simplistix - Content Management, Bat
Hullo
Csv is a very common format for publishing data as a form of primitive
integration. It's an annoyingly brittle approach, so I'd like to
ensure that I capture errors as soon as possible, so that I can get
the upstream processes fixed, or at worst put in some correction
mechanisms and avoid get
http://www.veteranstoday.com/2010/06/16/jim-w-dean-faked-israeli-flotilla-v=
ideos-provide-opening-to-expose-israeli-expionage-here/
JIM W. DEAN: FAKED ISRAELI FLOTILLA VIDEOS PROVIDE OPENING TO EXPOSE
ISRAELI EXPIONAGE HERE
June 16, 2010 posted by Gordon Duff =B7 20 Comments
Share
Faked Israel
On 07/05/2010 04:35 PM, Bill Davy wrote:
> I am struggling :-(
smile!
>
> I have used SWIG to build a module called SHIP. So I have a directory
> containing SHIP.py and _SHIP.pyd, as follows:
>
> [ ...]
>
> Python appears to find H:\Viper\HostPC\V1\SHIP\Release\_SHIP.pyd but for
> some reas
Sorry, I mean "1.1.1.1\\sharedfolder"
Seems os.chmod(), os.access() and os.makedirs() all have this problem when
the path is a remote path.
2010/7/5 Thomas Jollans
> On 07/05/2010 04:19 PM, 朱重八 wrote:
> > Hi all,
> > I want to use os.chmod or os.access to check the permission of a
> > f
On 7/5/2010 7:45 AM, Ritchy lelis wrote:
from pylab import*
Vref = arange(1, 20, 0.02)
Vi = arange(1, 10,0.1)
for i in Vref:
for n in Vi:
if n> i/4:
V0 = 2*n-i
elif (-i/4)<= n and n<= i/4:
V0 = 2*n
elif Vi< -i/4:
I am struggling :-(
I have used SWIG to build a module called SHIP. So I have a directory
containing SHIP.py and _SHIP.pyd, as follows:
H:\Viper\HostPC\V1\SHIP\Release>dir
Volume in drive H has no label.
Volume Serial Number is B83B-76F2
Directory of H:\Viper\HostPC\V1\SHIP\Release
On 07/05/2010 04:19 PM, 朱重八 wrote:
> Hi all,
> I want to use os.chmod or os.access to check the permission of a
> folder on remote Windows computer:
> os.chmod("\\1.1.1.1\sharedfolder", stat.S_IWRITE)
> or
> os.access("\\1.1.1.1\sharedfolder", os.W_OK)
That won't work:
>>> print("\\1.1.1.1\sh
Hi all,
I want to use os.chmod or os.access to check the permission of a folder
on remote Windows computer:
os.chmod("\\1.1.1.1\sharedfolder", stat.S_IWRITE)
or
os.access("\\1.1.1.1\sharedfolder", os.W_OK)
I saved this python file as a.pyw, run it with pythonw.exe a.pyw, then a
black console w
In article ,
Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
> On Sun, 04 Jul 2010 20:05:03 -0400, Roy Smith declaimed
> the following in gmane.comp.python.general:
>
> > In article ,
> > Tim Chase wrote:
> >
> > > I've often wondered if changing the name of the language (such as
> > > "Adder", "Served", "Dwarf"
On Mon, 5 Jul 2010 06:17:38 -0700 (PDT)
norbert wrote:
>
> a FileHandler works as expected, the log file being UTF-8 encoded.
Ouch. Implicit encoding sounds like a bad behaviour.
> The
> SMTPHandler is the only logger I know with this problem, maybe
> connected to SMTPLib implementation ?
I su
Chris Rebert wrote:
On Mon, Jul 5, 2010 at 2:07 AM, Anthra Norell wrote:
I try to use "new.new.classobj (name, baseclass, dict)" and have no clue
Slight tangent:
Note that both the `new` module and old-style classes (which are what
`classobj` produces) are deprecated.
To produce new-s
On 5 juil, 14:32, Chris Withers wrote:
> norbert wrote:
> > Your package has the same unicode problem :
> > import logging,logging.handlers
> > from mailinglogger.MailingLogger import MailingLogger
> > mailingLogger = MailingLogger(mailhost=('smtp.example.com',
> > 25),fromaddr='t...@example.com',
Ritchy lelis wrote:
hello guys..
I'm new at python programming and i'm having some problems with a
script that i have been developing for my final project of my
graduation.
I have a script that is supposed to make a plot of a
"Residuo" (waveform) witch is an output of a ADC ( Analogic To Digita
norbert wrote:
Your package has the same unicode problem :
import logging,logging.handlers
from mailinglogger.MailingLogger import MailingLogger
mailingLogger = MailingLogger(mailhost=('smtp.example.com',
25),fromaddr='t...@example.com',toaddrs=('t...@example.com',))
LOG = logging.getLogger()
LOG
Thomas Jollans wrote:
On 07/05/2010 11:07 AM, Anthra Norell wrote:
I try to use "new.new.classobj (name, baseclass, dict)" and have no clue
what the "dict" of the current name space is. I can name dicts of
imported modules, because their name exists in the current name space.
If, for instan
On 5 juil, 13:17, Chris Withers wrote:
> try MailingLogger:
>
> If you have unicode problems with that, I'd be interested in fixing them!
Your package has the same unicode problem :
import logging,logging.handlers
from mailinglogger.MailingLogger import MailingLogger
mailingLogger = MailingLogger
hello guys..
I'm new at python programming and i'm having some problems with a
script that i have been developing for my final project of my
graduation.
I have a script that is supposed to make a plot of a
"Residuo" (waveform) witch is an output of a ADC ( Analogic To Digital
Converter) for the f
norbert wrote:
I want to send error messages with SMTPHandler logging. But
SMTPHandler does not seem to be unicode aware. Is there something
doable without playing with sys.setdefaultencoding ?
try MailingLogger:
http://www.simplistix.co.uk/software/python/mailinglogger
If you have unicode pr
> On behalf of Twisted Matrix Laboratories, I am honored to announce the
> release of Twisted 10.1.0.
>
> Highlights include:
>
> * Deferreds now support cancellation
>
> * A new "endpoint" interface which can abstractly describe stream
> transport endpoints such as TCP and SSL
>
> * inotify sup
On Jul 4, 7:33 am, Stefan Behnel wrote:
> BenSizer, 04.07.2010 00:32:
>
> > On Jul 3, 11:12 pm,BenSizer wrote:
>
> >> >>> for el in root.getiterator():
>
> >> ... print el
> >> [much output snipped]
> >> http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a at d871e8>
> >> http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a at d8728
Thanks Antoine! :) You were right. It was the wrong thread...uhmm...
Bye! :)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hello,
I want to send error messages with SMTPHandler logging. But
SMTPHandler does not seem to be unicode aware. Is there something
doable without playing with sys.setdefaultencoding ?
import logging,logging.handlers
smtpHandler =
logging.handlers.SMTPHandler(mailhost=("smtp.example.com",25),
fr
On Mon, Jul 5, 2010 at 12:44 PM, Terry Reedy wrote:
> On 7/4/2010 7:58 PM, John Nagle wrote:
>
>> The "incompatible with all extension modules I need" part
>> is the problem right now. A good first step would be to
>> identify the top 5 or 10 modules that are blocking a move to
>> Python 3 by majo
On Mon, Jul 5, 2010 at 2:07 AM, Anthra Norell wrote:
> I try to use "new.new.classobj (name, baseclass, dict)" and have no clue
Slight tangent:
Note that both the `new` module and old-style classes (which are what
`classobj` produces) are deprecated.
To produce new-style classes dynamically, use
Detlev Offenbach wrote:
Hi,
I just uploaded eric 5.0.0. This is the first official release. It
is available via the eric web site.
http://eric-ide.python-projects.org/index.html
What is it?
---
eric5 is the Python3 variant of the well know eric4 Python IDE and is
the first developme
On 2 Lip, 22:49, Paul McGuire wrote:
> > Does anyone have any clue what that might be?
> > Why the problem is onGAE(even when run locally), when command line
> > run works just fine (even withrecursionlimitdecreased)?
>
> Can't explain why you see different behavior onGAEvs. local, but it
> is unu
On 07/05/2010 11:07 AM, Anthra Norell wrote:
> I try to use "new.new.classobj (name, baseclass, dict)" and have no clue
> what the "dict" of the current name space is. I can name dicts of
> imported modules, because their name exists in the current name space.
> If, for instance, I import a module
I try to use "new.new.classobj (name, baseclass, dict)" and have no clue
what the "dict" of the current name space is. I can name dicts of
imported modules, because their name exists in the current name space.
If, for instance, I import a module "service" then that module's name
space would be
kedra marbun a écrit :
i'm confused which part that doesn't make sense?
this is my 2nd attempt to py, the 1st was on april this year, it was
just a month, i'm afraid i haven't got the fundamentals right yet. so
i'm gonna lay out how i got to this conclusion, CMIIW
**explanation of feeling (0) on
On Sun, Jul 4, 2010 at 7:58 PM, John Machin wrote:
> On Jul 5, 12:27 pm, Martineau wrote:
>> On Jul 4, 8:34 am, Benjamin Peterson wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> > On behalf of the Python development team, I'm jocund to announce the second
>> > release candidate of Python 2.7.
>>
>> > Python 2.7 will be the
Am Sun, 04 Jul 2010 18:51:54 -0500
schrieb Tim Chase :
> I think it's the same venting of frustration that caused veteran
> VB6 developers to start calling VB.Net "Visual Fred" -- the
> language was too different and too non-backwards-compatible.
>
VB6 -> VB.NET and Python 2 -> 3 is not a vali
On Jul 4, 11:02 pm, John Machin wrote:
> On Jul 5, 1:08 am, Thomas Jollans wrote:
>
> > On 07/04/2010 03:49 PM, jmfauth wrote:
> > > File "", line 1
> > > print9.0
> > > ^
> > > SyntaxError: invalid syntax
>
> > somewhat strange, yes.
>
> There are two tokens, "print9" (a name) a
On Sun, 4 Jul 2010 18:20:38 -0700 (PDT)
CM wrote:
>
> Any online group is an opportunity to register dissent in a way that
> is public, open, immediate, interactive, and will (probably) be
> preserved for historians to check. The fact is, some people have
> gripes with Python 3; they are letting
On Sun, 04 Jul 2010 18:59:03 -0700, John Nagle wrote:
> Denying that there's a problem does not help.
Nobody is denying that there is a problem, but there are plenty of people
denying that there are any solutions.
The folks doing development of CPython are genuinely interested in
constructive
On 7/4/2010 10:44 PM, Terry Reedy wrote:
On 7/4/2010 7:58 PM, John Nagle wrote:
The "incompatible with all extension modules I need" part
is the problem right now. A good first step would be to
identify the top 5 or 10 modules that are blocking a move to
Python 3 by major projects with many use
In message , Rhodri James wrote:
> Classic Unix programming is a matter of stringing a bunch of tools
> together with pipes to get the output you want. This isn't a great
> paradigm for GUIs (not without tweaking that hasn't really been done), but
> then again it was never meant to be.
I’ve neve
In message , Mithrandir wrote:
> I think that Python "could" be a alternative to bash and have some
> advantages, but it's a long way off from being fully implemented.
Would you prefer to do the following sort of thing in Python or Bash?
AudioParms = "-f s16le -ar 48000 -ac 2" # because I
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