On 7/27/2010 12:30 PM, MRAB wrote:
Kevin Ar18 wrote:
I'm not sure my previous message went through (I wasn't subscribe), so
I'm gonna try again.
The multiprocessing module has 4 methods for sharing data between
processes:
Queues
Pipes
Shared Memory Map
Server Process
Which of these use shared
On 07/26/10 22:42, quoth Tim Chase:
> On 07/26/10 21:26, Steven W. Orr wrote:
>> Please! Never export anything from your .bashrc unless you
>> really know what you're doing. Almost all exports should be
>> done in your .bash_profile
>
> Could you elaborate on your reasoning why (or why-not)? I've
I know the library reference webpage for re.MatchObject is at
http://docs.python.org/library/re.html#re.MatchObject
But I don't find such a help page in python help(). Does anybody know
how to get it in help()?
>>> help(re.MatchObject)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "", line 1, in
Att
The Miracle and Challenge of the Quran
------
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m3A8R...layer_embedded
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m3A8R...layer_embedded
-
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 07/26/2010 11:58 PM, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
> In message , francogrex wrote:
>
>> By the way Peter Norvig is not biased, he works for Google research and is
>> a supporter of programming in any language, especially in Python.
>
> Bias doesn’t
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 07/27/2010 04:07 AM, whitey wrote:
> hi all. am totally new to python and was wondering if there are any
> newsgroups that are there specifically for beginners. i have bought a
> book for $2 called "learn to program using python" by alan gauld.
>
On 7/27/10 4:07 AM, whitey wrote:
hi all. am totally new to python and was wondering if there are any
newsgroups that are there specifically for beginners. i have bought a
book for $2 called "learn to program using python" by alan gauld.
starting to read it but it was written in 2001. presuming t
On 07/25/2010 11:02 AM, francogrex wrote:
> Terry Reedy wrote:
>> As other have said, mostly, but I would change the following...
>
> Thanks for all those who replied. I know these are not all the features but
> some of them and again this is not a comparison but a little taste of what
> python
On Tue, Jul 27, 2010 at 4:12 PM, Timothy W. Grove wrote:
> I am using the following code to hide the console window when launching a
> subprocess under Windows.
>
> startupinfo = subprocess.STARTUPINFO()
> startupinfo.dwFlags |= subprocess.STARTF_USESHOWWINDOW
> startupinfo.wShow
I am using the following code to hide the console window when launching
a subprocess under Windows.
startupinfo = subprocess.STARTUPINFO()
startupinfo.dwFlags |= subprocess.STARTF_USESHOWWINDOW
startupinfo.wShowWindow = subprocess.SW_HIDE
self.mplayer = Popen(args,
kBob wrote:
On Jul 27, 4:23 pm, MRAB wrote:
kBob wrote:
I created a script to access weather satellite imagery fron NOAA's
ADDS.
It worked fine until recently with Python 2.6.
The company changed the Internet LAN connections to "Accept Automatic
settings" and "Use automatic configuration s
On Jul 27, 4:23 pm, MRAB wrote:
> kBob wrote:
>
> > I created a script to access weather satellite imagery fron NOAA's
> > ADDS.
>
> > It worked fine until recently with Python 2.6.
>
> > The company changed the Internet LAN connections to "Accept Automatic
> > settings" and "Use automatic conf
In article <0a4c9b21-6eff-461a-b15c-415d1408d...@semanchuk.com>,
Philip Semanchuk wrote:
[...]
> Thanks to all who replied on this topic. A little more background --
> these binaries are just a convenience for our users and we don't have
> to cover every possible permutation of Python, only t
kBob wrote:
I created a script to access weather satellite imagery fron NOAA's
ADDS.
It worked fine until recently with Python 2.6.
The company changed the Internet LAN connections to "Accept Automatic
settings" and "Use automatic configuration script"
How do you get urllib.urlopen to use
On Tue, 27 Jul 2010 11:07:09 GMT, whitey wrote:
hi all. am totally new to python and was wondering if there are any
newsgroups that are there specifically for beginners.
Yes, Python Tutor list is specifically aimed for beginners. You can
access it by subscribing to either tu...@python.org or
On Jul 26, 2010, at 5:19 PM, Ned Deily wrote:
In article ,
Christian Heimes wrote:
[Philip Semanchuk wrote:]
Specifically, I'm concerned with binaries created by SWIG for a C++
library that our project uses. We'd like to ship precompiled
binaries
for Linux, OS X and Windows for Python 2.5
I created a script to access weather satellite imagery fron NOAA's
ADDS.
It worked fine until recently with Python 2.6.
The company changed the Internet LAN connections to "Accept Automatic
settings" and "Use automatic configuration script"
How do you get urllib.urlopen to use the the "aut
In article <20100727204532.r7gmz.27213.r...@cdptpa-web20-z02>,
wrote:
> Just curious if anyone could shed some light on this? I'm using
> tkinter, but I can't seem to get certain unicode characters to
> show in the label for Python 3.
>
> In my test, the label and button will contain the sa
On 2010-07-27, John Nagle wrote:
> On 7/27/2010 7:44 AM, Bruno Desthuilliers wrote:
>> Grant Edwards a écrit :
>>> On 2010-07-27, Bruno Desthuilliers
>>> wrote:
Daniel Fetchinson a ?crit :
>> (snip)
> Why was clearing a terminal left out?
>
What you're talking about is a shell,
On Jul 27, 8:36 am, Tim Golden wrote:
> On 27/07/2010 15:58, Brian Curtin wrote:
>
> > On Tue, Jul 27, 2010 at 09:36, wrote:
>
> >> Windows: How can I detect whether a Python app/script is running in
> >> console/GUI mode? By app I mean a script compiled to an exe via py2exe or
> >> similar.
>
>
John Nagle writes:
> On 7/26/2010 4:19 PM, Justin Smith wrote:
>> Seeking industry expert candidates
>>
>> I’m Justin Smith, Director of Tech Recruiting at Express Seattle. I
>> am currently seeking candidates to fill Tech Positions for multiple A-
>> List Clients:
>
>Spammer detected.
But
Just curious if anyone could shed some light on this? I'm using
tkinter, but I can't seem to get certain unicode characters to
show in the label for Python 3.
In my test, the label and button will contain the same 3
characters - a Greek Alpha, a Greek Omega with a circumflex and
soft breath
Kevin Ar18 wrote:
I'm not sure my previous message went through (I wasn't subscribe), so I'm
gonna try again.
The multiprocessing module has 4 methods for sharing data between processes:
Queues
Pipes
Shared Memory Map
Server Process
Which of these use shared memory?
I understand that the 3r
I'm not sure my previous message went through (I wasn't subscribe), so I'm
gonna try again.
The multiprocessing module has 4 methods for sharing data between processes:
Queues
Pipes
Shared Memory Map
Server Process
Which of these use shared memory?
I understand that the 3rd (Shared Memory Ma
On 7/26/2010 4:19 PM, Justin Smith wrote:
Seeking industry expert candidates
I’m Justin Smith, Director of Tech Recruiting at Express Seattle. I
am currently seeking candidates to fill Tech Positions for multiple A-
List Clients:
Spammer detected.
Injection-Info: r27g2000yqb.googlegroup
Thanks a tonne..That code works perfectly and also shows me how to
think of using queue and threads in my python programs
Hari
On Jul 27, 1:26 pm, MRAB wrote:
> harijay wrote:
> > I want to quickly bzip2 compress several hundred gigabytes of data
> > using my 8 core , 16 GB ram workstation.
> >
I have a small problem: I can't get pyodbc to connect to a PostgreSQL
database. All it does is spit out a malformed error message. When I run
this:
==
import pyodbc
dsn = pyodbc.dataSources()
print "Data sources:%s" % dsn
conn = pyodbc.connect(ds
On 7/27/2010 12:58 PM, Daniel Fetchinson wrote:
After getting the technicalities out of the way, maybe I should have asked:
Is it only me or others would find a platform independent python API
to clear the terminal useful?
One problem is, Where would you put it? The OS module is for system
c
see if this helps
http://svn.pythonmac.org/py2app/py2app/trunk/doc/index.html
On Tue, Jul 27, 2010 at 11:06 PM, ata.jaf wrote:
> Hi,
> I'm looking for a suitable tutorial for "py2app". I googled it but
> couldn't find anything.
> Can you help me please?
> Thanks
> Ata
> --
> http://mail.python.
Hi,
I'm looking for a suitable tutorial for "py2app". I googled it but
couldn't find anything.
Can you help me please?
Thanks
Ata
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Robert Kern wrote:
On 7/26/10 5:16 PM, Michael Hoffman wrote:
I have been using Jason Orendorff's path.py module for a long time. It
is very
useful. The only problem is that Python 2.6 deprecates the md5 module it
imports, so I (and others using my software) now get this warning
whenever they
On 7/27/2010 12:17 AM, Bruno Desthuilliers wrote:
destructor
Python has no real destructor. You can implement a __del__ method that
will _eventually_ be called before the instance gets garbage-collected,
but you'd rather not rely on it. Also, implementing this method will
prevent cycle detecti
harijay wrote:
I want to quickly bzip2 compress several hundred gigabytes of data
using my 8 core , 16 GB ram workstation.
Currently I am using a simple python script to compress a whole
directory tree using bzip2 and a system call coupled to an os.walk
call.
I see that the bzip2 only uses a sin
On 2010-07-27, Daniel Fetchinson wrote:
> After getting the technicalities out of the way, maybe I should have asked:
>
> Is it only me or others would find a platform independent python API
> to clear the terminal useful?
I write a lot of command-line programs, and I can't remember the last
tim
Bruno Desthuilliers wrote:
Bruno Desthuilliers a écrit :
Ethan Furman a écrit :
Bruno Desthuilliers wrote:
Duncan Booth a écrit :
(snip)
Or you could create the default as a class attribute
from the OP:
"""
I have a class (FuncDesigner oofun) that has no attribute "size", but
it is overlo
On 7/27/2010 7:44 AM, Bruno Desthuilliers wrote:
Grant Edwards a écrit :
On 2010-07-27, Bruno Desthuilliers
wrote:
Daniel Fetchinson a ?crit :
(snip)
Why was clearing a terminal left out?
What you're talking about is a shell, not a terminal (a terminal is a
physical device).
No, what he'
>>> Hi folks,
>>>
>>> If I'm only interested in linux and windows I know I can do
>>>
>>>
>>> import os
>>> import platform
>>>
>>> if platform.system( ) == 'Linux':
>>> clear = 'clear'
>>> else:
>>> clear = 'cls'
>>>
>>> os.system( clear )
>>> #
Dan:
I am an instructor at Cal State Fullerton, and we are looking for a
few industry leaders that would be willing to server on an advisory
board for a Python programming class series. If you have a minute to
talk or know of someone who is interested, please give me a call.
Thanks
To
import socket
# timeout in seconds
timeout = 10
socket.setdefaulttimeout(timeout)
On Tue, Jul 27, 2010 at 10:09 PM, Dirk Nachbar wrote:
> Thanks, I don't think it's redirecting, how can I increase the timeout?
>
>
> On 27 July 2010 16:56, Nitin Pawar wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> Check if the webpage
Thanks, I don't think it's redirecting, how can I increase the timeout?
On 27 July 2010 16:56, Nitin Pawar wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Check if the webpage you are trying to access is redirecting the page to
> some other page?
> or the timeout is too less for the request to finish
>
>
> Thanks,
> Nitin
>
>
Hi,
Check if the webpage you are trying to access is redirecting the page to
some other page?
or the timeout is too less for the request to finish
Thanks,
Nitin
On Tue, Jul 27, 2010 at 7:30 PM, dirknbr wrote:
> I am running urllib2.request and get this response when I do the read.
> Any ideas
mo reina writes:
> i mainly did it because i'm always scanning through my pdf files,
> books, or the net for some coding example of solution that i'd already
> seen before, and it just seemed logical to have something where you
> could just put the content in, give it a title and tags, and just l
On 7/27/2010 7:36 AM pyt...@bdurham.com said...
Windows: How can I detect whether a Python app/script is running
in console/GUI mode? By app I mean a script compiled to an exe
via py2exe or similar.
Once you've got an exe, you'll need to know the name you're looking for.
There are several ut
On 27/07/2010 15:58, Brian Curtin wrote:
On Tue, Jul 27, 2010 at 09:36, wrote:
Windows: How can I detect whether a Python app/script is running in
console/GUI mode? By app I mean a script compiled to an exe via py2exe or
similar.
Thank you,
Malcolm
I don't remember much about py2exe, but y
I want to quickly bzip2 compress several hundred gigabytes of data
using my 8 core , 16 GB ram workstation.
Currently I am using a simple python script to compress a whole
directory tree using bzip2 and a system call coupled to an os.walk
call.
I see that the bzip2 only uses a single cpu while the
> Starting with Python 2.7 and 3.2 you can do this:
>
sysconfig.get_config_var("Py_DEBUG")
> 1
>
> (returns None if the var doesn't exist)
IIRC sysconfig.get_config_var() still depends on parsing the pyconfig.h
file. This won't work on Windows because we are using project and config
setting
On Tue, Jul 27, 2010 at 09:59, wrote:
> Brian,
>
> Under Python 2.6.4 (Windows), "io.open is open" returns False. Retrieving
> help() on io.open and open() reinforces that these are 2 different
> implementations of open.
>
> My use case is reading and writing UTF-8 text files with universal newl
Brian,
> As an FYI, the builtin open() uses io.open() on at least 3.1
(maybe also 3.0, don't know). I don't know your use cases or >
what you get or don't get from any of those options, but the
future is io.open.
>
> >>> io.open is open
> True
Under Python 2.6.4 (Windows), "io.open is open" retur
On Tue, Jul 27, 2010 at 09:36, wrote:
> Windows: How can I detect whether a Python app/script is running in
> console/GUI mode? By app I mean a script compiled to an exe via py2exe or
> similar.
>
> Thank you,
> Malcolm
>
I don't remember much about py2exe, but you could check if
``os.path.split
On Tue, 27 Jul 2010 10:33:06 -0400
pyt...@bdurham.com wrote:
> What is the best practice way to open files in Python 2.6+
>
> It looks like there are at least 3 different ways to open files:
> - built-in open()
> - io.open()
> - codecs.open()
> It seems like io.open() combines the best of the buil
On Tue, Jul 27, 2010 at 09:33, wrote:
> What is the best practice way to open files in Python 2.6+
>
> It looks like there are at least 3 different ways to open files:
> - built-in open()
> - io.open()
> - codecs.open()
>
> It seems like io.open() combines the best of the built-in open() and the
On Jul 27, 2:06 pm, Peter Otten <__pete...@web.de> wrote:
> mo reina wrote:
> > On 27 Lug, 10:23, Peter Otten <__pete...@web.de> wrote:
> >> mo reina wrote:
> >> > i've written a tool in python where you enter a title, content, then
> >> > tags, and the entry is then saved in a pickle file. it was
On Tue, 27 Jul 2010 16:02:23 +0200, Bruno Desthuilliers
wrote:
> Daniel Fetchinson a écrit :
>> Hi folks,
>>
>> If I'm only interested in linux and windows I know I can do
>>
>>
>> import os
>> import platform
>>
>> if platform.system( ) == 'Linux':
>> clear
Grant Edwards a écrit :
On 2010-07-27, Bruno Desthuilliers
wrote:
Daniel Fetchinson a ?crit :
(snip)
Why was clearing a terminal left out?
What you're talking about is a shell, not a terminal (a terminal is a
physical device).
No, what he's talking about is clearing a terminal (or a term
On Tue, Jul 27, 2010 at 09:06, John Reid wrote:
> Can I check in the interpreter if I am running a debug version of python? I
> don't mean if __debug__ is set, I want to know if python was compiled in
> debug mode.
>
> Thanks,
> John.
Starting with Python 2.7 and 3.2 you can do this:
>>> syscon
Windows: How can I detect whether a Python app/script is running
in console/GUI mode? By app I mean a script compiled to an exe
via py2exe or similar.
Thank you,
Malcolm
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 2010-07-27, Bruno Desthuilliers
wrote:
> Daniel Fetchinson a ?crit :
>> Hi folks,
>>
>> If I'm only interested in linux and windows I know I can do
>>
>>
>> import os
>> import platform
>>
>> if platform.system( ) == 'Linux':
>> clear = 'clear'
>> else:
What is the best practice way to open files in Python 2.6+
It looks like there are at least 3 different ways to open files:
- built-in open()
- io.open()
- codecs.open()
It seems like io.open() combines the best of the built-in open()
and the codecs open(). Am I missing any obvious drawbacks to
us
"gerardob" wrote in message
news:29276755.p...@talk.nabble.com...
I am trying to read an xml using minidom from python library xml.dom
This is the xml file:
-
AB
100
2
--
This is the python code:
> Can I check in the interpreter if I am running a debug version of
> python? I don't mean if __debug__ is set, I want to know if python was
> compiled in debug mode.
Python has multiple flavors of debug builds. hasattr(sys,
"gettotalrefcount") is only available if Py_REF_DEBUG is enabled. This
On 2010-07-27, gerardob wrote:
>
> I am trying to read an xml using minidom from python library xml.dom
>
> This is the xml file:
> -
>
>
>
> AB
> 100
>
> 2
>
>
Can I check in the interpreter if I am running a debug version of
python? I don't mean if __debug__ is set, I want to know if python was
compiled in debug mode.
Thanks,
John.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Daniel Fetchinson a écrit :
Hi folks,
If I'm only interested in linux and windows I know I can do
import os
import platform
if platform.system( ) == 'Linux':
clear = 'clear'
else:
clear = 'cls'
os.system( clear )
or so
I am running urllib2.request and get this response when I do the read.
Any ideas what causes this?
return response.read()
File "C:\Python26\lib\socket.py", line 329, in read
data = self._sock.recv(rbufsize)
File "C:\Python26\lib\httplib.py", line 518, in read
return self._read_chunked(
I am trying to read an xml using minidom from python library xml.dom
This is the xml file:
-
AB
100
2
---
On 19 Jul, 13:18, dhruvbird wrote:
> Hello,
> I have a list of integers: x = [ 0, 1, 2, 1, 1, 0, 0, 2, 3 ]
> And would like to compute the cumulative sum of all the integers
> from index zero into another array. So for the array above, I should
> get: [ 0, 1, 3, 4, 5, 5, 5, 7, 10 ]
> What is
whitey wrote:
hi all. am totally new to python and was wondering if there are any
newsgroups that are there specifically for beginners. i have bought a
book for $2 called "learn to program using python" by alan gauld.
starting to read it but it was written in 2001. presuming that the
commands
On Jul 27, 9:06 am, Stefan Behnel wrote:
> kak...@gmail.com, 27.07.2010 14:43:
>
>
>
> > On Jul 27, 8:41 am, Stefan Behnel wrote:
> >> kak...@gmail.com, 27.07.2010 14:26:
>
> >>> On Jul 27, 8:14 am, Stefan Behnel wrote:
> kak...@gmail.com, 27.07.2010 13:58:
>
> > On Jul 27, 6:30 am, Stefa
kak...@gmail.com, 27.07.2010 14:43:
On Jul 27, 8:41 am, Stefan Behnel wrote:
kak...@gmail.com, 27.07.2010 14:26:
On Jul 27, 8:14 am, Stefan Behnel wrote:
kak...@gmail.com, 27.07.2010 13:58:
On Jul 27, 6:30 am, Stefan Behnel wrote:
kak...@gmail.com, 27.07.2010 12:17:
I receive the follo
Hi folks,
If I'm only interested in linux and windows I know I can do
import os
import platform
if platform.system( ) == 'Linux':
clear = 'clear'
else:
clear = 'cls'
os.system( clear )
or something equivalent using os.na
On Jul 27, 8:41 am, Stefan Behnel wrote:
> kak...@gmail.com, 27.07.2010 14:26:
>
>
>
> > On Jul 27, 8:14 am, Stefan Behnel wrote:
> >> kak...@gmail.com, 27.07.2010 13:58:
>
> >>> On Jul 27, 6:30 am, Stefan Behnel wrote:
> kak...@gmail.com, 27.07.2010 12:17:
>
> > I receive the following d
kak...@gmail.com, 27.07.2010 14:26:
On Jul 27, 8:14 am, Stefan Behnel wrote:
kak...@gmail.com, 27.07.2010 13:58:
On Jul 27, 6:30 am, Stefan Behnel wrote:
kak...@gmail.com, 27.07.2010 12:17:
I receive the following different Xml Messages from a socket:
From a bare socket? TCP? UDP? Or
On Jul 27, 8:14 am, Stefan Behnel wrote:
> kak...@gmail.com, 27.07.2010 13:58:
>
>
>
> > On Jul 27, 6:30 am, Stefan Behnel wrote:
> >> kak...@gmail.com, 27.07.2010 12:17:
>
> >>> I receive the following different Xml Messages from a socket:
>
> >> From a bare socket? TCP? UDP? Or what else?
>
>
kak...@gmail.com, 27.07.2010 13:58:
On Jul 27, 6:30 am, Stefan Behnel wrote:
kak...@gmail.com, 27.07.2010 12:17:
I receive the following different Xml Messages from a socket:
From a bare socket? TCP? UDP? Or what else?
Which is the best way to make a distinction between them so that ever
mo reina wrote:
> On 27 Lug, 10:23, Peter Otten <__pete...@web.de> wrote:
>> mo reina wrote:
>> > i've written a tool in python where you enter a title, content, then
>> > tags, and the entry is then saved in a pickle file. it was mainly
>> > designed for copy-paste functionality (you spot a piece
On Jul 27, 6:30 am, Stefan Behnel wrote:
> kak...@gmail.com, 27.07.2010 12:17:
>
> > I receive the following different Xml Messages from a socket:
>
> From a bare socket? TCP? UDP? Or what else?
>
> > Which is the best way to make a distinction between them so that every
> > time my app receives
..
repeatable,identical PDFs with same timestamp info (for regression testing)
I suggest that you edit that file or add
from reportlab import rl_config
rl_config.invariant = True
to your code.
Peter
WOW!! You are good!
Your suggested solution works perfectly.
Given your expertise I
In article ,
Stephen Hansen wrote:
> PEP8 is a style guide. Parts of style guides are rational judgements and
> decisions based on experience and can certainly be "explained" or
> justified, but parts are just... personal taste. Style is part rational
> thought and part intuition, and in the lat
On Jul 27, 9:07 pm, whitey wrote:
> hi all. am totally new to python and was wondering if there are any
> newsgroups that are there specifically for beginners. i have bought a
> book for $2 called "learn to program using python" by alan gauld.
> starting to read it but it was written in 2001. pres
geremy condra, 27.07.2010 12:54:
On Wed, Jul 21, 2010 at 8:17 AM, John Nagle wrote:
On 7/19/2010 9:56 AM, dhruvbird wrote:
On Jul 19, 9:12 pm, Brian Victor wrote:
dhruvbird wrote:
Having offered this, I don't recall ever seeing reduce used in real
python code, and explicit iteration is a
hi all. am totally new to python and was wondering if there are any
newsgroups that are there specifically for beginners. i have bought a
book for $2 called "learn to program using python" by alan gauld.
starting to read it but it was written in 2001. presuming that the
commands and info would
On Wed, Jul 21, 2010 at 8:17 AM, John Nagle wrote:
> On 7/19/2010 9:56 AM, dhruvbird wrote:
>>
>> On Jul 19, 9:12 pm, Brian Victor wrote:
>>>
>>> dhruvbird wrote:
>
>>> Having offered this, I don't recall ever seeing reduce used in real
>>> python code, and explicit iteration is almost always pre
kak...@gmail.com, 27.07.2010 12:17:
I receive the following different Xml Messages from a socket:
From a bare socket? TCP? UDP? Or what else?
Which is the best way to make a distinction between them so that every
time my app receives the one or the other, parse them correctly?
Use an appli
On 27 Lug, 10:23, Peter Otten <__pete...@web.de> wrote:
> mo reina wrote:
> > i've written a tool in python where you enter a title, content, then
> > tags, and the entry is then saved in a pickle file. it was mainly
> > designed for copy-paste functionality (you spot a piece of code you
> > like o
On Mon, 26 Jul 2010 21:42:24 -0500, Tim Chase wrote:
>> Please! Never export anything from your .bashrc unless you
>> really know what you're doing. Almost all exports should be
>> done in your .bash_profile
>
> Could you elaborate on your reasoning why (or why-not)? I've
> found that my .bash_
Hello,
I receive the following different Xml Messages from a socket:
http://test.com/pt";>
5a62ded
101
Angie
online
Some IP
http://test.com/pt";>
Server server-1 is going down for rede
On Jul 22, 12:56 pm, Thomas Jollans wrote:
> On 07/21/2010 03:38 PM, kak...@gmail.com wrote:
>
>
>
> > On Jul 21, 9:04 am, "kak...@gmail.com" wrote:
> >> On Jul 21, 8:58 am, Stefan Behnel wrote:
>
> >>> kak...@gmail.com, 21.07.2010 14:36:
>
> From the subject of my message it's clear that i
rlevesque wrote:
> On Jul 24, 1:34 pm, Peter Otten <__pete...@web.de> wrote:
>> rlevesque wrote:
>> > Unfortunately there is an other pair of values that does not match and
>> > it is not obvious to me how to exclude it (as is done with the " /
>> > CreationDate" pair).
>> > and the pdf document i
mo reina wrote:
> i've written a tool in python where you enter a title, content, then
> tags, and the entry is then saved in a pickle file. it was mainly
> designed for copy-paste functionality (you spot a piece of code you
> like on the net, copy it, and paste it into the program), not really
>
Bruno Desthuilliers a écrit :
Ethan Furman a écrit :
Bruno Desthuilliers wrote:
Duncan Booth a écrit :
(snip)
Or you could create the default as a class attribute
from the OP:
"""
I have a class (FuncDesigner oofun) that has no attribute "size", but
it is overloaded in __getattr__, so if s
Ethan Furman a écrit :
Bruno Desthuilliers wrote:
Duncan Booth a écrit :
(snip)
Or you could create the default as a class attribute
from the OP:
"""
I have a class (FuncDesigner oofun) that has no attribute "size", but
it is overloaded in __getattr__, so if someone invokes
"myObject.size",
Peng Yu a écrit :
Hi
I'm still kind of confused about the terminology on classes in python.
Could you please let me know what the equivalent terms for the
following C++ terms?
C++ and Python having very different semantics and object models,
there's not necessarily a straight one to one mapp
In message , francogrex wrote:
> By the way Peter Norvig is not biased, he works for Google research and is
> a supporter of programming in any language, especially in Python.
Bias doesn’t have to be a conscious thing.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
In message , Roy Smith wrote:
> Consider, for example, a write on a TCP connection. You are sitting in
> a select(), when the other side closes the connection. The select()
> should return, and the write should then immediately fail.
Remember that select can return 3 different sets of file obje
94 matches
Mail list logo