On Fri, 13 Apr 2012 10:50:15 -0600
Ian Kelly wrote:
> On Fri, Apr 13, 2012 at 5:11 AM, John O'Hagan wrote:
> > I think you also have to check if a[k] is a dict before making the recursive
> > call, else for example dmerge({'a': 1}, {'a': {'b': 1}}) fails with a
> > TypeError. In that case the th
On Sat, Apr 14, 2012 at 1:44 PM, Evan Driscoll wrote:
> Ha ha, sorry I can't read right now apparently. dict.setdefault does
> exactly what I wanted.
>
> (The name just prompted another interpretation in my mind which doesn't
> work and I got tunnel vision. I'll stop spamming now, and we return to
On 4/13/2012 22:42, Evan Driscoll wrote:
> Though I might as well ask another question... if I have a dict with
> values which are lists, what's a good way to say "append x to the list
> at key k, creating a list if it's not there"? dict.setdefault seems
> potentially promising but the docs are cra
On 4/13/2012 22:33, Evan Driscoll wrote:
> d = {}
> def appender(e):
> d.get(f(e), []).append(e)
> map(appender, l)
Just in case it isn't clear, the above has at least two problems and
won't even come close to working. :-)
Though I might as well ask another question... if I h
I have a function 'f' and a list 'l'. I want a dictionary where the keys
are evaluations of 'f(thing from l)' and the values are lists of stuff
from 'l' that matches. So for instance, if 'f = lambda x: x%3' and
'l=range(9)', then I want { 0: [0,3,6], 1:[1,4,7], 2:[2,5,8]}.
I can do that with an ex
Xah Lee
#1 mailing list troll =D
On Fri, Apr 13, 2012 at 10:35 AM, Xah Lee wrote:
> 〈Emacs Lisp vs Perl: Validate Local File Links〉
> http://xahlee.org/emacs/elisp_vs_perl_validate_links.html
>
> a comparison of 2 scripts.
>
> lots code, so i won't paste plain text version here.
>
> i have so
Hi,
Thanks for the answers. Gibbons' algorithm (from 2006) is a nice way
to generate the digits one after the other. However, it can get slow.
The mpmath approach is very fast, I think I will use that one. In a
script you can get the value of pi as a string with
str(mp.pi)
Best,
Laszlo
On Fri,
Xah Lee writes:
> 〈Emacs Lisp vs Perl: Validate Local File Links〉
> http://xahlee.org/emacs/elisp_vs_perl_validate_links.html
>
> a comparison of 2 scripts.
>
> lots code, so i won't paste plain text version here.
>
> i have some comments at the bottom. Excerpt:
>
> --
>
> «One th
〈Emacs Lisp vs Perl: Validate Local File Links〉
http://xahlee.org/emacs/elisp_vs_perl_validate_links.html
a comparison of 2 scripts.
lots code, so i won't paste plain text version here.
i have some comments at the bottom. Excerpt:
--
«One thing interesting is to compare the app
Ethan Furman wrote:
Okay, so I haven't asked a stupid question in a long time and I'm
suffering withdrawal symptoms... ;)
5 % 0 = ?
Thanks for your replies, much appreciated.
~Ethan~
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Fri, Apr 13, 2012 at 5:11 AM, John O'Hagan wrote:
> I think you also have to check if a[k] is a dict before making the recursive
> call, else for example dmerge({'a': 1}, {'a': {'b': 1}}) fails with a
> TypeError. In that case the third line above should read:
>
> if k in a and isinstance(a[
On 4/13/2012 17:58, Alexander Blinne wrote:
Am 12.04.2012 18:38, schrieb Kiuhnm:
Almost. Since d.values() = [[1,2], [1,2,3], [1,2,3,4]], you need to use
list(zip(*d.values()))
which is equivalent to
list(zip([1,2], [1,2,3], [1,2,3,4]))
Kiuhnm
While this accidently works in this case
Hi All,
I'm pleased to announce the release of xlutils 1.5.2:
http://pypi.python.org/pypi/xlutils/1.5.2
This release features the following changes:
- When using xlutils.copy, the datemode is now copied across from the
source solving date problems with certain files.
- The errorhandler pack
http://porn-extreme.2304310.n4.nabble.com/
http://porn-extreme.2304310.n4.nabble.com/
http://python.6.n6.nabble.com/file/n4879088/1235669432_7bad0b0898e6.jpg
http://porn-extreme.2304310.n4.nabble.com/
http://porn-extreme.2304310.n4.nabble.com/
--
View this message in context:
http://python.6
Alexander Blinne wrote:
> zip(*[x[1] for x in sorted(d.items(), key=lambda y: y[0])])
Why not zip(*[x[1] for x in sorted(d.items())])?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Thursday, April 12, 2012 5:54:47 PM UTC-4, Kiuhnm wrote:
> On 4/12/2012 19:59, John Nagle wrote:
> > On 4/12/2012 10:41 AM, Roy Smith wrote:
> >> Is there a simple way to deep merge two dicts? I'm looking for Perl's
> >> Hash::Merge (http://search.cpan.org/~dmuey/Hash-Merge-0.12/Merge.pm)
> >> i
Am 12.04.2012 18:38, schrieb Kiuhnm:
> Almost. Since d.values() = [[1,2], [1,2,3], [1,2,3,4]], you need to use
> list(zip(*d.values()))
> which is equivalent to
> list(zip([1,2], [1,2,3], [1,2,3,4]))
>
> Kiuhnm
While this accidently works in this case, let me remind you that
d.values() do
Hi,
> -Original Message-
> From: python-list-bounces+eirikur.hjartarson=decode...@python.org
> [mailto:python-list-bounces+eirikur.hjartarson=decode...@python.org] On
> Behalf Of Terry Reedy
> Sent: 13. apríl 2012 14:57
> To: python-list@python.org
> Subject: Re: Subprocess troubles from a
I made a python package that I wrote. I want to be able to install it via `pip
install`. I wrote a setup.py file, and it works when I do `python setup.py
develop|install|register`. The package even shows up on pipy (see it here:
http://pypi.python.org/pypi/django-easydump/), but when I try to in
On 4/13/2012 7:04 AM, Eiríkur Hjartarson wrote:
Hi,
I think I have possibly found a bug in the subprocess module. The
(potential) bug appears when executing a subprocess from a daemon
(after double-forking). This is on RHEL 6.2 with python version
2.6.6.
What happens is you use the new 2.7.3
Dan,
although it's been almost a year since your request, I hope my answer will
help you and anyone who needs.
In order to run properly, IDLE needs that the string returned by
os.path.expanduser("~") is an existent and writable directory, where
IDLE creates the .idlerc configuration file.
--
Dan,
although it's been almost a year since your request, I hope my answer will
help you and anyone who needs.
In order to run properly, IDLE needs that the string returned by
os.path.expanduser("~") is an existent and writable directory, where
IDLE creates the .idlerc configuration file.
--
On 13/04/2012 11:01, Chris Withers wrote:
For a full details, please see the GitHub repository:
https://secure.simplistix.co.uk/svn/xlwt/trunk
Er, that should be:
https://github.com/python-excel/xlwt
cheers,
Chris
--
Simplistix - Content Management, Batch Processing & Python Consulting
Hi All,
I'm pleased to announce the release of xlrd 0.7.7:
http://pypi.python.org/pypi/xlrd/0.7.7
This release features the following changes:
- Google Spreadsheet doesn't write the undefined-contents byte at the
end of a NOTE record. Excel doesn't care. Now xlrd doesn't care either.
- Vers
12.4.2012 18:48, Kiuhnm kirjoitti:
On 4/11/2012 16:01, Antti J Ylikoski wrote:
On 9.4.2012 21:57, Kiuhnm wrote:
Do you have some real or realistic (but easy and self-contained)
examples when you had to define a (multi-statement) function and pass it
to another function?
Thank you.
Kiuhnm
A f
Hi,
Am 13.04.2012 12:51, schrieb Jabba Laci:
I'd like to work with the digits of pi.
Perhaps this solution from 2006 can help you:
http://mail.python.org/pipermail/edu-sig/2006-July/006810.html
Tichodroma
--
XMPP: tichodr...@jabber.ccc.de
IRC: Tichodroma
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/lis
Hi,
I think I have possibly found a bug in the subprocess module. The (potential)
bug appears when executing a subprocess from a daemon (after double-forking).
This is on RHEL 6.2 with python version 2.6.6.
The problem can be demonstrated with the two attached files, both files should
be mad
On Thu, 12 Apr 2012 12:35:21 -0600
Ian Kelly wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 12, 2012 at 11:59 AM, John Nagle wrote:
> > On 4/12/2012 10:41 AM, Roy Smith wrote:
> >>
> >> Is there a simple way to deep merge two dicts? I'm looking for Perl's
> >> Hash::Merge (http://search.cpan.org/~dmuey/Hash-Merge-0.12/M
Hi,
I'd like to work with the digits of pi. I would need high precision,
like 100,000 digits or even more. At the moment I download the
necessary data from the web
(http://newton.ex.ac.uk/research/qsystems/collabs/pi/) and parse it.
I just wonder: is there a more elegant way? I found a Perl soluti
Ethan Furman wrote:
Okay, so I haven't asked a stupid question in a long time and I'm
suffering withdrawal symptoms... ;)
5 % 0 = ?
It seems to me that the answer should be 5: no matter how many times
we add 0 to itself, the remainder of the intermediate step will be 5.
Is there a postulate
Hi All,
I'm pleased to announce the release of xlwt 0.7.4. This release has only
a couple of changes in it:
- Python 2.3 to 2.7 are now the officially supported versions, no Python
3 yet, sorry.
- The datemode in an xlwt Workbook can be set to 1904 by doing
`workbook.dates_1904 = 1` and is
The below code should work:
zip(*d.values())
when you do *d.values() its going to return tuple of elements, which then
further be can be zipped to
achieve your desired result.
Regards,
Shambhu Rajak
Python Lover
-Original Message-
From: tkp...@gmail.com [mailto:tkp...@gmail.com]
Sent
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