On Nov 2, 11:50 pm, Terry Reedy wrote:
> On 11/2/2011 7:06 PM, Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
>
> > On Wed, 2 Nov 2011 14:13:34 -0700 (PDT), Matt
> > declaimed the following in gmane.comp.python.general:
>
> >> I have a few hundred .csv files, and to each file, I want to
> >> manipulate the data, then s
You probably want wx.EVT_LEFT_DCLICK, see the ListCtrl demo in the wx demo.
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Hello eveyone:
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Radhika Bauerle.
Leapship, Inc.
ra...@leapship.com
408.355.8462
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http:
Hi All,
PyDev 2.2.4 has been released
Details on PyDev: http://pydev.org
Details on its development: http://pydev.blogspot.com
Release Highlights:
---
**Cython**
* Cython is now supported in PyDev (.pyx files may be opened with
the PyDev editor).
**Globals To
On 11/2/2011 7:06 PM, Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
On Wed, 2 Nov 2011 14:13:34 -0700 (PDT), Matt
declaimed the following in gmane.comp.python.general:
I have a few hundred .csv files, and to each file, I want to
manipulate the data, then save back to the original file.
That is dangerous. Better t
On 11/02/11 16:13, Matt wrote:
Hi All,
I am trying to do a really simple file operation, yet, it befuddles me...
I have a few hundred .csv files, and to each file, I want to manipulate the
data, then save back to the original file. The code below will open up the
files, and do the proper mani
Hi All,
I am trying to do a really simple file operation, yet, it befuddles me...
I have a few hundred .csv files, and to each file, I want to manipulate the
data, then save back to the original file. The code below will open up the
files, and do the proper manipulations-- but I can't seem to
On 11/02/2011 03:31 PM, Catherine Moroney wrote:
Hello,
I'm working on an application that as part of its processing, needs to
copy 50 Meg binary files from one NFS mounted disk to another.
The simple-minded approach of shutil.copyfile is very slow, and I'm
guessing that this is due to the d
Hello,
I'm working on an application that as part of its processing, needs to
copy 50 Meg binary files from one NFS mounted disk to another.
The simple-minded approach of shutil.copyfile is very slow, and I'm
guessing that this is due to the default 16K buffer size. Using
shtil.copyfileobj
Ho trovato questo script in una directory dove sono conservati molti
demo per python non era funzionante,sono riuscito a capirne le
finalità e così l'ho reso funzionante.
Esamina un file di testo e analizza il carattere di fine riga. le
possibilità dipendono dal sistema operativo usato. Nei file di
On Wed, 2 Nov 2011 08:08:48 -0700 (PDT), Miki Tebeka
wrote:
>wx.FileDialog shows files and directories. If you need the user to pick one,
>this is the standard way. Otherwise, if you need custom view on the file
>system then probably list control is the right way to go. Again, the demo has
>a
On 11/02/2011 04:06 PM, Chris Kaynor wrote:
If you can at least upgrade to Python 2.6, another option, if you
don't mind losing the byte code caching all together (it may worsen
load times, however probably not significantly), you can set
PYTHONDONTWRITEBYTECODE to prevent the writing of .pyc fil
If you can at least upgrade to Python 2.6, another option, if you
don't mind losing the byte code caching all together (it may worsen
load times, however probably not significantly), you can set
PYTHONDONTWRITEBYTECODE to prevent the writing of .pyc files.
Alternatively, again in 2.6+, you can also
On 11/02/2011 03:03 PM, Peter Otten wrote:
Switch to Python3.2 ;)
Yes I saw that and it would be great, unfortunately we're stuck with
Python 2.5 :O
for some more time.
Anyway now the code that does it is a recursive thing ilke
def _clean_orphaned_pycs(self, directory, simulate=False):
"
Il 01/11/2011 19.37, tres.bai...@gmail.com ha scritto:
I'm no SQLAlchemy expert, but I have used the Table and Column attribute
objects from the model object to solve a similar problem in the past. You can
use the following syntax to do it:
[col.name for col in Country.__table__.columns._all
Il 01/11/2011 19.37, tres.bai...@gmail.com ha scritto:
Sorry for the repost, if it does in fact repost.
I'm no SQLAlchemy expert, but I have used the Table and Column attribute
objects from the model object to solve a similar problem in the past. You can
use the following syntax to do it:
[c
wx.FileDialog shows files and directories. If you need the user to pick one,
this is the standard way. Otherwise, if you need custom view on the file system
then probably list control is the right way to go. Again, the demo has a
working example with sortable list control.
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Andrea Crotti wrote:
> In our current setup, the script in charge to run our applications also
> scan all the directories and if it finds any "pyc" file without the
> corresponding
> module, it removes it.
>
> This was done because when you rename something, the old "pyc" remains
> there and can
extraspecialbitter wrote:
I'm still trying to write that seemingly simple Python script to print
out network interfaces (as found in the "ifconfig -a" command) and
their speed ("ethtool "). The idea is to loop for each
interface and
print out its speed. I'm looping correctly, but have some issu
In our current setup, the script in charge to run our applications also
scan all the directories and if it finds any "pyc" file without the
corresponding
module, it removes it.
This was done because when you rename something, the old "pyc" remains
there and can cause problems.
Is it the only w
On Nov 1, 7:35 pm, Ian Kelly wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 1, 2011 at 5:19 PM, Miki Tebeka wrote:
> > In my box, there are some spaces (tabs?) before "Speed". IMO
> > re.search("Speed", line) will be a more robust.
>
> Or simply:
>
> if "Speed" in line:
>
> There is no need for a regular expression here.
Gnarlodious wrote:
Initializing a list of objects with one value:
class Order:
def __init__(self, ratio):
self.ratio=ratio
def __call__(self):
return self.ratio
ratio=[1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
Orders=[Order(x) for x in ratio]
But now I want to __init__ with 3 values:
class Order:
def __init__(s
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