Follow these simply rules to become an accepted member of the Python
community.
1. Bash rantingrick and Xah Lee every chance you get.
2. Bash people who bash rick or xah because their basing made rick's
or xah's words pass through your
I found this solution.
Python: Convert String Date to Date Object
http://slaptijack.com/programming/python-convert-string-date-to-date-object/
On Aug 13, 3:14 pm, MrPink wrote:
> Is this the correct way to convert a String into a Date?
> I only have dates and no time.
>
> import time, datetime
>
On Aug 12, 4:06 pm, Seebs wrote:
> On 2011-08-12, Chris Angelico wrote:
>
> > Why is left-to-right inherently more logical than
> > multiplication-before-addition?
>
> I'd say it's certainly "more Pythonic in a vacuum".
> Multiplication-before-addition, and all the related rules, require
> you to
On Aug 12, 7:39 pm, Seebs wrote:
> Consider the hypothetical array syntax:
>
> a = [
> 1,
> 2
> b = [
> 3,
> 4
>
> This *bugs* me. It's perfectly legible, and if you define it that way, it's
> unambiguous and everything, but... It b
I'm devleoping a website using the Django framework along with Apache,
and I'm seeing some odd data issues.
During the course of navigating through the website content, a user
will cause the creation of some data records with a limited lifespan.
These data records have a create_dt field which is a
On Aug 12, 7:39 pm, Seebs wrote:
> I was overjoyed when I saw that Ruby would let me write 1_048_576.
I'll have to admit that Ruby has a few very interesting ideas, this
being one of them. We all know how impossible it can be to eyeball
parse a very long number like this. Having the interpretor
On Aug 12, 7:39 pm, Seebs wrote:
> Well, that's the thing.
>
> In a case like:
>
> if foo:
> if bar:
> blah
> blah
>
> I notice that *NOTHING* lines up with "if bar:". And that affects me
> about the way unmatched brackets do.
For me, i be
On Aug 12, 5:03 pm, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> Responding to Rick's standard {EDIT} posts
> is like wrestling with a {EDIT}
> [...]
> Save yourself a lot of aggravation and kill-file him now.
Kindly allow Walter E. Kurtz to shine some light on this situation:
""" Pig after pig, cow after cow, vil
In article
<83822ecb-3643-42c6-a2bf-0187c07d3...@a10g2000yqn.googlegroups.com>,
MrPink wrote:
> Is this the correct way to convert a String into a Date?
> I only have dates and no time.
You have already received a number of good replies, but let me throw out
one more idea. If you ever need t
On Sun, Aug 14, 2011 at 12:55 AM, OKB (not okblacke)
wrote:
> sys.path = sys.path[1:] + ['']
>
> (That is, move the current directory to the end of the search path
> instead of the beginning.)
>
Or, equivalently:
sys.path.append(sys.path.pop(0))
ChrisA
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinf
OKB (not okblacke) wrote:
> But why? That __future__ import is supposed to make
> absolute
> imports the default, so why is "import thetest" importing
> thetest.py instead of the package called thetest? The absolute
> import should make it look in sys.path first and not try to
I'm using Python 2.6.5. I have a directory structure like this:
thetest/
__init__.py
thetest.py
theother.py
__init__.py is an empty file. theother.py contains a function foo().
The package is accessible from sys.path, so that if I open the
interpreter and do "
BTW, here is the Python version I'm using.
Will this make a difference with the solutions you guys provided?
Python 2.6.1 (r261:67515, Jun 24 2010, 21:47:49)
[GCC 4.2.1 (Apple Inc. build 5646)] on darwin
Also, what editor do you guys use?
There are so many to chose from.
On Aug 13, 4:11 pm, Rafa
MrPink wrote:
> I have file of records delimited by spaces.
> I need to import the date string and convert them into date datatypes.
>
> '07/27/2011' 'Event 1 Description'
> '07/28/2011' 'Event 2 Description'
> '07/29/2011' 'Event 3 Description'
>
> I just discovered that my oDate is not an obje
You can use datetime objects:
>>> dt1 = datetime.datetime.strptime('07/27/2011',"%m/%d/%Y")
>>> dt2 =datetime.datetime.strptime('07/28/2011',"%m/%d/%Y")
>>> dt1 == dt2
False
>>> dt1 > dt2
False
>>> dt1 < dt2
True
>>> dt1 - dt2
datetime.timedelta(-1)
On 13/08/11 21:26, MrPink wrote:
I have file
On Sat, Aug 13, 2011 at 12:14 PM, MrPink wrote:
> Is this the correct way to convert a String into a Date?
> I only have dates and no time.
>
> import time, datetime
>
> oDate = time.strptime('07/27/2011', '%m/%d/%Y')
> print oDate
from datetime import datetime
the_date = datetime.strptime('07/27
I have file of records delimited by spaces.
I need to import the date string and convert them into date datatypes.
'07/27/2011' 'Event 1 Description'
'07/28/2011' 'Event 2 Description'
'07/29/2011' 'Event 3 Description'
I just discovered that my oDate is not an object, but a structure and
not a d
Is this the correct way to convert a String into a Date?
I only have dates and no time.
import time, datetime
oDate = time.strptime('07/27/2011', '%m/%d/%Y')
print oDate
Thanks,
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Thanks all for your suggestions, I'll look into them.
See you.
--
F. Delente
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
* f...@slick.airforce-one.org (13 Aug 2011 15:21:01 GMT)
> I want to have dialog boxes (a message with Yes/No/Cancel options,
> possibly with keyboard accels) in python + curses.
Use Python Dialog[1] which is basically a wrapper for dialog boxes
around ncurses.
Thorsten
[1] http://pythondialog.s
On Sat, Aug 13, 2011 at 4:37 PM, Irmen de Jong wrote:
> On 13-8-2011 17:21, f...@slick.airforce-one.org wrote:
>> Hello.
>>
>> I've googled for hints but I didn't find anything, I hope it's not an
>> RTFM question :^)
>>
>> I want to have dialog boxes (a message with Yes/No/Cancel options,
>> poss
On 13-8-2011 17:21, f...@slick.airforce-one.org wrote:
> Hello.
>
> I've googled for hints but I didn't find anything, I hope it's not an
> RTFM question :^)
>
> I want to have dialog boxes (a message with Yes/No/Cancel options,
> possibly with keyboard accels) in python + curses.
>
> Does anyon
Hello.
I've googled for hints but I didn't find anything, I hope it's not an
RTFM question :^)
I want to have dialog boxes (a message with Yes/No/Cancel options,
possibly with keyboard accels) in python + curses.
Does anyone have a pointer to docs about this?
Thanks!
--
F. Delente
--
http://
On Aug 12, 1:35 pm, MRAB wrote:
> On 12/08/2011 18:02, kj wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > *Please* forgive me for asking a Java question in a Python forum.
> > My only excuse for this no-no is that a Python forum is more likely
> > than a Java one to have among its readers those who have had to
> > d
On 01/-10/-28163 02:59 PM, 守株待兔 wrote:
please see my code:
import os
import threading
print threading.currentThread()
print "i am parent ",os.getpid()
ret = os.fork()
print "i am here",os.getpid()
print threading.currentThread()
if ret == 0:
print threading.currentThread()
els
On Saturday, August 13, 2011 2:09:55 AM UTC-7, 守株待兔 wrote:
> please see my code:
> import os
> import threading
> print threading.currentThread()
> print "i am parent ",os.getpid()
> ret = os.fork()
> print "i am here",os.getpid()
> print threading.currentThread()
> if ret == 0:
>
On Aug 13, 3:00 am, Ben Finney wrote:
> Ben Finney writes:
> > What is the process if the OP, or someone to whom the OP delegates
> > authority, wants to [contribute their work to the Python
> > documentation]?
>
> The answer is partly at http://docs.python.org/documenting/>:
>
> If you’re in
On Aug 13, 11:09 am, "守株待兔" <1248283...@qq.com> wrote:
> please see my code:
> import os
> import threading
> print threading.currentThread()
> print "i am parent ",os.getpid()
> ret = os.fork()
> print "i am here",os.getpid()
> print threading.currentThread()
> if ret == 0:
> p
please see my code:
import os
import threading
print threading.currentThread()
print "i am parent ",os.getpid()
ret = os.fork()
print "i am here",os.getpid()
print threading.currentThread()
if ret == 0:
print threading.currentThread()
else:
os.wait()
print thre
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