Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly

2013-12-02 Thread joe
How would a grapheme library work? Basic cluster combination, or would implementing other algorithms (line break, normalizing to a "canonical" form) be necessary? How do people use grapheme clusters in non-rendering situations? Or here's perhaps here's a better question: does anyone know any non-l

Re: [OT] Managing Google Groups headaches

2013-12-02 Thread Chris Angelico
On Tue, Dec 3, 2013 at 3:27 PM, Grant Edwards wrote: > That said, I'm still pretty happy with Gmail (I use it mostly via > mutt/IMAP rather than the WebUI), and it sure beats the e-mail service > I paid for in the past [it's certainly _way_ better than the Outlook > server they run at work]. The

Re: [OT] Managing Google Groups headaches

2013-12-02 Thread Steven D'Aprano
On Tue, 03 Dec 2013 16:30:05 +1000, alex23 wrote: > On 3/12/2013 11:17 AM, Michael Torrie wrote: >> And Gmail is also becoming less useful to me. I don't want to use >> hangouts; xmpp and google talk worked just fine. But alas that's >> disappearing. > > I really hate Hangouts. If I wanted to u

Re: [OT] Managing Google Groups headaches

2013-12-02 Thread alex23
On 3/12/2013 11:17 AM, Michael Torrie wrote: And Gmail is also becoming less useful to me. I don't want to use hangouts; xmpp and google talk worked just fine. But alas that's disappearing. I really hate Hangouts. If I wanted to use Skype I would be using Skype. I'm also still unable to unde

Re: Code of Conduct, Trolls, and Thankless Jobs [was Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly]

2013-12-02 Thread Steven D'Aprano
On Tue, 03 Dec 2013 04:32:13 +, Grant Edwards wrote: > On 2013-12-03, Roy Smith wrote: > >> "I believe that Pythonistas should commit themselves to achieving the >> goal, before this decade is out, of making Python 3 the default version >> and having everybody be cool with unicode." > > I'm

Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly

2013-12-02 Thread Steven D'Aprano
On Mon, 02 Dec 2013 16:14:13 -0500, Ned Batchelder wrote: > On 12/2/13 3:38 PM, Ethan Furman wrote: >> On 11/29/2013 04:44 PM, Steven D'Aprano wrote: >>> >>> Out of the nine tests, Python 3.3 passes six, with three tests being >>> failures or dubious. If you believe that the native string type sho

Re: Code of Conduct, Trolls, and Thankless Jobs [was Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly]

2013-12-02 Thread Ethan Furman
On 12/02/2013 07:22 PM, Terry Reedy wrote: On 12/2/2013 4:25 PM, Ethan Furman wrote: jmf is certainly a troll No, he is a person who discovered a minor performance regression in the FSR, which we fixed. Unfortunately, he then continued for a year with a strange troll-like anti-FSR crusade. Bu

Re: Code of Conduct, Trolls, and Thankless Jobs [was Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly]

2013-12-02 Thread Grant Edwards
On 2013-12-03, Roy Smith wrote: > "I believe that Pythonistas should commit themselves to achieving the > goal, before this decade is out, of making Python 3 the default version > and having everybody be cool with unicode." I'm cool with Unicode as long as it "just works" without me ever havin

Re: [OT] Managing Google Groups headaches

2013-12-02 Thread Grant Edwards
On 2013-12-03, Michael Torrie wrote: > On 12/02/2013 06:03 AM, Neil Cerutti wrote: >> I wish they'd never bought dejanews. > > I wish Google hadn't bought a lot of things. Seems like they bye up a > lot of cool, nerd-centric apps and companies and then turned them into > apps that do less and do

Re: Code of Conduct, Trolls, and Thankless Jobs

2013-12-02 Thread Terry Reedy
On 12/2/2013 6:11 PM, Ben Finney wrote: This forum doesn't have authorised moderators, At least some PSF mailing lists have 1 or more PSF-authorized moderators (currently 4 for python-list) who pretty thanklessly check the initial posts of new subscribers and posts flagged by the spam detect

Re: [OT] Managing Google Groups headaches

2013-12-02 Thread rusi
On Tuesday, December 3, 2013 8:39:02 AM UTC+5:30, Michael Torrie wrote: > On 12/02/2013 06:43 PM, Roy Smith wrote: > > And this is surprising, why? > > Well back when Google was a young hip company they billed themselves as > a bunch of nerds making stuff for nerds. But yes we should have seen > t

Re: Code of Conduct, Trolls, and Thankless Jobs [was Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly]

2013-12-02 Thread Terry Reedy
On 12/2/2013 4:25 PM, Ethan Furman wrote: jmf is certainly a troll No, he is a person who discovered a minor performance regression in the FSR, which we fixed. Unfortunately, he then continued for a year with a strange troll-like anti-FSR crusade. But his posts in the Unicode handling thread

Re: [OT] Managing Google Groups headaches

2013-12-02 Thread Michael Torrie
On 12/02/2013 06:43 PM, Roy Smith wrote: > In article , > Michael Torrie wrote: > >> I wish Google hadn't bought a lot of things. Seems like they bye up a >> lot of cool, nerd-centric apps and companies and then turned them into >> apps that do less and do it poorly, but in a slick way that app

Pythonista Goals [was Re: Code of Conduct, Trolls, and Thankless Jobs]

2013-12-02 Thread Ethan Furman
On 12/02/2013 05:38 PM, Roy Smith wrote: Mark Lawrence wrote: My fellow Pythonistas, ask not what our language can do for you, ask what you can do for our language. "I believe that Pythonistas should commit themselves to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of making Python 3 the de

Re: [OT] Managing Google Groups headaches

2013-12-02 Thread rusi
On Tuesday, December 3, 2013 7:13:03 AM UTC+5:30, Roy Smith wrote: > Michael Torrie wrote: > > I wish Google hadn't bought a lot of things. Seems like they bye up a > > lot of cool, nerd-centric apps and companies and then turned them into > > apps that do less and do it poorly, but in a slick w

Re: [OT] Managing Google Groups headaches

2013-12-02 Thread Roy Smith
In article , Michael Torrie wrote: > I wish Google hadn't bought a lot of things. Seems like they bye up a > lot of cool, nerd-centric apps and companies and then turned them into > apps that do less and do it poorly, but in a slick way that appeals to > the unwashed masses. And add "social" t

Re: using ffmpeg command line with python's subprocess module

2013-12-02 Thread rusi
On Tuesday, December 3, 2013 6:45:42 AM UTC+5:30, iMath wrote: > so is there any way to create a temporary file by Python here ? http://docs.python.org/2/library/tempfile.html -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Using MFDataset to combine netcdf files in python

2013-12-02 Thread Isaac Won
I am trying to combine netcdf files, but it contifuously shows " File "CBL_plot.py", line 11, in f = MFDataset(fili) File "utils.pyx", line 274, in netCDF4.MFDataset.init (netCDF4.c:3822) IOError: master dataset THref_11:00.nc does not have a aggregation dimension." So, I checked only one netcd

Re: Code of Conduct, Trolls, and Thankless Jobs [was Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly]

2013-12-02 Thread Roy Smith
In article , Mark Lawrence wrote: > My fellow Pythonistas, ask not what our language can do for you, ask > what you can do for our language. "I believe that Pythonistas should commit themselves to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of making Python 3 the default version and havin

Re: using ffmpeg command line with python's subprocess module

2013-12-02 Thread iMath
在 2013年12月3日星期二UTC+8上午5时19分21秒,Ben Finney写道: > Chris Angelico writes: > > > > > On Mon, Dec 2, 2013 at 10:34 PM, iMath wrote: > > > > ffmpeg -f concat -i <(for f in ./*.wav; do echo "file '$f'"; done) -c > > > copy output.wav > > > > ffmpeg -f concat -i <(printf "file '%s'\n" ./*.wav) -c co

Re: [OT] Managing Google Groups headaches

2013-12-02 Thread Michael Torrie
On 12/02/2013 06:03 AM, Neil Cerutti wrote: > I wish they'd never bought dejanews. I wish Google hadn't bought a lot of things. Seems like they bye up a lot of cool, nerd-centric apps and companies and then turned them into apps that do less and do it poorly, but in a slick way that appeals to th

Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly

2013-12-02 Thread Ethan Furman
On 12/02/2013 02:32 PM, Mark Lawrence wrote: ... the other being a pot smoking hippy who ... Please trim your posts. You comment a lot on people sending double-spaced google posts -- not trimming is nearly as bad. The above is a good example of unnecessary name calling. I value your good p

Re: Code of Conduct, Trolls, and Thankless Jobs

2013-12-02 Thread Ben Finney
Mark Lawrence writes: > […] the hypocrisy that continues to be shown gets right up both of my > nostrils, hence I couldn't resist the above, greatly toned down > response. This will surely give an indication of how strongly I feel > on issues such as this. Rules are rules to be applied evenly, no

Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly

2013-12-02 Thread Ben Finney
Ned Batchelder writes: > This is where my knowledge about Unicode gets fuzzy. Isn't it the > case that some grapheme clusters (or whatever the right word is) can't > be normalized down to a single code point? Characters can accept many > accents, for example. That's true, but doesn't affect th

Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly

2013-12-02 Thread Ned Batchelder
On 12/2/13 5:32 PM, Mark Lawrence wrote: On 02/12/2013 22:24, Ned Batchelder wrote: On 12/2/13 4:44 PM, Ned Batchelder wrote: On 12/2/13 3:45 PM, Mark Lawrence wrote: On 02/12/2013 20:26, Terry Reedy wrote: On 12/2/2013 10:45 AM, Mark Lawrence wrote: the worst loser in the world Mark, I c

multiprocessing: child process share changes to global variable

2013-12-02 Thread Alan
In the code below, child processes see changes to global variables caused by other child processes. That is, pool.map is producing a list where the value of ``lst`` is being (non-deterministically) shared across child processes. Standard advice is that, "Processes have independent memory space"

Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly

2013-12-02 Thread Mark Lawrence
On 02/12/2013 22:24, Ned Batchelder wrote: On 12/2/13 4:44 PM, Ned Batchelder wrote: On 12/2/13 3:45 PM, Mark Lawrence wrote: On 02/12/2013 20:26, Terry Reedy wrote: On 12/2/2013 10:45 AM, Mark Lawrence wrote: the worst loser in the world Mark, I consider your continual direct personal att

Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly

2013-12-02 Thread Ned Batchelder
On 12/2/13 4:44 PM, Ned Batchelder wrote: On 12/2/13 3:45 PM, Mark Lawrence wrote: On 02/12/2013 20:26, Terry Reedy wrote: On 12/2/2013 10:45 AM, Mark Lawrence wrote: the worst loser in the world Mark, I consider your continual direct personal attacks on other posters to be a violation of t

Re: Code of Conduct, Trolls, and Thankless Jobs [was Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly]

2013-12-02 Thread Ned Batchelder
On 12/2/13 4:25 PM, Ethan Furman wrote: On 12/02/2013 12:45 PM, Mark Lawrence wrote: On 02/12/2013 20:26, Terry Reedy wrote: On 12/2/2013 10:45 AM, Mark Lawrence wrote: the worst loser in the world Mark, I consider your continual direct personal attacks on other posters to be a violation of

Re: Code of Conduct, Trolls, and Thankless Jobs [was Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly]

2013-12-02 Thread Mark Lawrence
On 02/12/2013 21:25, Ethan Furman wrote: On 12/02/2013 12:45 PM, Mark Lawrence wrote: On 02/12/2013 20:26, Terry Reedy wrote: On 12/2/2013 10:45 AM, Mark Lawrence wrote: the worst loser in the world Mark, I consider your continual direct personal attacks on other posters to be a violation o

Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly

2013-12-02 Thread Ethan Furman
On 12/02/2013 01:23 PM, Chris Angelico wrote: On Tue, Dec 3, 2013 at 8:14 AM, Ned Batchelder wrote: This is where my knowledge about Unicode gets fuzzy. Isn't it the case that some grapheme clusters (or whatever the right word is) can't be normalized down to a single code point? Characters ca

Code of Conduct, Trolls, and Thankless Jobs [was Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly]

2013-12-02 Thread Ethan Furman
On 12/02/2013 12:45 PM, Mark Lawrence wrote: On 02/12/2013 20:26, Terry Reedy wrote: On 12/2/2013 10:45 AM, Mark Lawrence wrote: the worst loser in the world Mark, I consider your continual direct personal attacks on other posters to be a violation of the PSF Code of Conduct, which *does* ap

Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly

2013-12-02 Thread Ned Batchelder
On 12/2/13 3:45 PM, Mark Lawrence wrote: On 02/12/2013 20:26, Terry Reedy wrote: On 12/2/2013 10:45 AM, Mark Lawrence wrote: the worst loser in the world Mark, I consider your continual direct personal attacks on other posters to be a violation of the PSF Code of Conduct, which *does* apply

Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly

2013-12-02 Thread MRAB
On 02/12/2013 21:14, Ned Batchelder wrote: On 12/2/13 3:38 PM, Ethan Furman wrote: On 11/29/2013 04:44 PM, Steven D'Aprano wrote: Out of the nine tests, Python 3.3 passes six, with three tests being failures or dubious. If you believe that the native string type should operate on code-points,

Re: using ffmpeg command line with python's subprocess module

2013-12-02 Thread Chris Angelico
On Tue, Dec 3, 2013 at 8:19 AM, Ben Finney wrote: > Chris Angelico writes: > >> On Mon, Dec 2, 2013 at 10:34 PM, iMath wrote: >> > ffmpeg -f concat -i <(for f in ./*.wav; do echo "file '$f'"; done) -c copy >> > output.wav >> > ffmpeg -f concat -i <(printf "file '%s'\n" ./*.wav) -c copy output.w

Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly

2013-12-02 Thread Chris Angelico
On Tue, Dec 3, 2013 at 8:14 AM, Ned Batchelder wrote: > This is where my knowledge about Unicode gets fuzzy. Isn't it the case that > some grapheme clusters (or whatever the right word is) can't be normalized > down to a single code point? Characters can accept many accents, for > example. You

Re: using ffmpeg command line with python's subprocess module

2013-12-02 Thread Ben Finney
Chris Angelico writes: > On Mon, Dec 2, 2013 at 10:34 PM, iMath wrote: > > ffmpeg -f concat -i <(for f in ./*.wav; do echo "file '$f'"; done) -c copy > > output.wav > > ffmpeg -f concat -i <(printf "file '%s'\n" ./*.wav) -c copy output.wav > > ffmpeg -f concat -i <(find . -name '*.wav' -printf

Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly

2013-12-02 Thread Ned Batchelder
On 12/2/13 3:38 PM, Ethan Furman wrote: On 11/29/2013 04:44 PM, Steven D'Aprano wrote: Out of the nine tests, Python 3.3 passes six, with three tests being failures or dubious. If you believe that the native string type should operate on code-points, then you'll think that Python does the right

Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly

2013-12-02 Thread Ethan Furman
On 11/29/2013 04:44 PM, Steven D'Aprano wrote: Out of the nine tests, Python 3.3 passes six, with three tests being failures or dubious. If you believe that the native string type should operate on code-points, then you'll think that Python does the right thing. I think Python is doing it corr

Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly

2013-12-02 Thread Mark Lawrence
On 02/12/2013 20:26, Terry Reedy wrote: On 12/2/2013 10:45 AM, Mark Lawrence wrote: the worst loser in the world Mark, I consider your continual direct personal attacks on other posters to be a violation of the PSF Code of Conduct, which *does* apply to python-list. Please stop. The attack

Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly

2013-12-02 Thread Terry Reedy
On 12/2/2013 10:45 AM, Mark Lawrence wrote: the worst loser in the world Mark, I consider your continual direct personal attacks on other posters to be a violation of the PSF Code of Conduct, which *does* apply to python-list. Please stop. -- Terry Jan Reedy, one of multiple list moderator

Re: Managing Google Groups headaches

2013-12-02 Thread Mark Lawrence
On 02/12/2013 17:54, Chris Angelico wrote: On Tue, Dec 3, 2013 at 4:48 AM, Mark Lawrence wrote: ¿As this is an international group why not ¡MEAN!? :) ¿Does punctuation nest to any level when you ask, ¿Shouldn't it be ¡MEAN!?? ChrisA Yes. -- Python is the second best programming language

Re: Managing Google Groups headaches

2013-12-02 Thread Chris Angelico
On Tue, Dec 3, 2013 at 4:48 AM, Mark Lawrence wrote: > ¿As this is an international group why not ¡MEAN!? :) ¿Does punctuation nest to any level when you ask, ¿Shouldn't it be ¡MEAN!?? ChrisA -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Managing Google Groups headaches

2013-12-02 Thread Mark Lawrence
On 02/12/2013 17:11, rusi wrote: On Monday, December 2, 2013 7:34:33 PM UTC+5:30, Neil Cerutti wrote: On 2013-12-02, Roy Smith wrote: The current situation does force a lot of technology-focused people, progammers in particular, into a low opinion of Google. The crappy usenet portal is poor ma

Re: I look for a list to convert time zone abbreviation to full time zone in python

2013-12-02 Thread Joel Goldstick
On Mon, Dec 2, 2013 at 11:18 AM, Stéphane Klein wrote: > Hi, > > I would like to convert time zone abbreviation to full time zone in Python. > > I've found this information : > > * > > http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1703546/parsing-date-time-string-with-timezone-abbreviated-name-in-python > >

Re: Managing Google Groups headaches

2013-12-02 Thread rusi
On Monday, December 2, 2013 7:34:33 PM UTC+5:30, Neil Cerutti wrote: > On 2013-12-02, Roy Smith wrote: > >> The current situation does force a lot of technology-focused > >> people, progammers in particular, into a low opinion of Google. > >> The crappy usenet portal is poor marketing. > > > > If

I look for a list to convert time zone abbreviation to full time zone in python

2013-12-02 Thread Stéphane Klein
Hi, I would like to convert time zone abbreviation to full time zone in Python. I've found this information : * http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1703546/parsing-date-time-string-with-timezone-abbreviated-name-in-python I'm currently writing dict with this informations : http://www.timeanddate

Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly

2013-12-02 Thread Ned Batchelder
On 12/2/13 10:45 AM, Mark Lawrence wrote: On 02/12/2013 15:22, Ned Batchelder wrote: On 12/2/13 9:46 AM, Mark Lawrence wrote: On 02/12/2013 12:39, wxjmfa...@gmail.com wrote: My English is far too be perfect, I think I understood it correctly. PS I did not even speak about the FSR. 1) Your

Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly

2013-12-02 Thread Chris Angelico
On Tue, Dec 3, 2013 at 2:45 AM, Mark Lawrence wrote: > He's quite deliberately dragged it up by using p.s. Without doubt he's the > worst loser in the world and I'm *NOT* stopping getting at him. I find his > behaviour, continuously and groundlessly insulting the Python core > developers, quite

Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly

2013-12-02 Thread Mark Lawrence
On 02/12/2013 15:22, Ned Batchelder wrote: On 12/2/13 9:46 AM, Mark Lawrence wrote: On 02/12/2013 12:39, wxjmfa...@gmail.com wrote: My English is far too be perfect, I think I understood it correctly. PS I did not even speak about the FSR. 1) Your English is far from perfect as you clearly

Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly

2013-12-02 Thread Ned Batchelder
On 12/2/13 9:46 AM, Mark Lawrence wrote: On 02/12/2013 12:39, wxjmfa...@gmail.com wrote: My English is far too be perfect, I think I understood it correctly. PS I did not even speak about the FSR. 1) Your English is far from perfect as you clearly do not understand the repeated requests *NO

Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly

2013-12-02 Thread Mark Lawrence
On 02/12/2013 12:39, wxjmfa...@gmail.com wrote: My English is far too be perfect, I think I understood it correctly. PS I did not even speak about the FSR. 1) Your English is far from perfect as you clearly do not understand the repeated requests *NOT* to send us double spaced crap via goog

Re: reporting proxy porting problem

2013-12-02 Thread Robin Becker
On 28/11/2013 22:01, Terry Reedy wrote: .. All the transition guides I have seen recommend first updating 2.x code (and its tests) to work in 2.x with *all* classes being new-style classes. I presume one of the code checker programs will check this for you. To some extent, the upgrad

Re: Getting the Appdata Directory with Python and PEP?

2013-12-02 Thread Kevin Walzer
On 11/26/13, 5:49 PM, Eamonn Rea wrote: Maybe this module is of some use to you: > >https://pypi.python.org/pypi/appdirs > > > >It provides a unified Python API to the various OS specific 'user' directory locations. > > > >Irmen I saw this, but I wanted to do it myself as I stated in the OP:)

Re: Managing Google Groups headaches

2013-12-02 Thread Neil Cerutti
On 2013-12-02, Roy Smith wrote: > In article , > Neil Cerutti wrote: > >> On 2013-11-28, Roy Smith wrote: >> > In article , >> > Alister wrote: >> >> Perhaps the best option is for everybody to bombard Google >> >> with bug reports (preferably typed with extra long lines & >> >> double spaced

Re: Managing Google Groups headaches

2013-12-02 Thread Roy Smith
In article , Neil Cerutti wrote: > On 2013-11-28, Roy Smith wrote: > > In article , > > Alister wrote: > >> Perhaps the best option is for everybody to bombard Google > >> with bug reports (preferably typed with extra long lines & > >> double spaced as that is clearly what they are used to &

Re: Managing Google Groups headaches

2013-12-02 Thread Neil Cerutti
On 2013-11-28, Roy Smith wrote: > In article , > Alister wrote: >> Perhaps the best option is for everybody to bombard Google >> with bug reports (preferably typed with extra long lines & >> double spaced as that is clearly what they are used to & we >> would not want to upset them would we? ) >

Re: Python Unicode handling wins again -- mostly

2013-12-02 Thread wxjmfauth
Le dimanche 1 décembre 2013 21:54:48 UTC+1, Tim Delaney a écrit : > On 2 December 2013 07:15, wrote: > > > 0.11.13 02:44, Steven D'Aprano написав(ла): > > > > (2) If you reverse that string, does it give "lëon"? The implication of > > > this question is that strings should operate on graphem

Re: how to implement a queue-like container with sort function

2013-12-02 Thread Ned Batchelder
On 12/2/13 7:04 AM, Chris Angelico wrote: On Mon, Dec 2, 2013 at 10:58 PM, Ned Batchelder wrote: Yes, a Queue object has a queue attribute: >>> import Queue >>> q = Queue.Queue() >>> q.queue deque([]) But you shouldn't use it. It's part of the implementation of Queue, not

Re: how to implement a queue-like container with sort function

2013-12-02 Thread Chris Angelico
On Mon, Dec 2, 2013 at 10:58 PM, Ned Batchelder wrote: > Yes, a Queue object has a queue attribute: > > >>> import Queue > >>> q = Queue.Queue() > >>> q.queue > deque([]) > > But you shouldn't use it. It's part of the implementation of Queue, not > meant for you to use directly.

Re: how to implement a queue-like container with sort function

2013-12-02 Thread Ned Batchelder
On 12/2/13 6:41 AM, iMath wrote: 在 2013年11月29日星期五UTC+8下午10时57分36秒,Mark Lawrence写道: On 29/11/2013 12:33, iMath wrote: BTW ,the Queue object has an attribute 'queue' ,but I cannot find it described in the DOC ,what it means ? Really? AttributeError: type object 'Queue' has no attrib

Re: how to implement a queue-like container with sort function

2013-12-02 Thread iMath
在 2013年11月29日星期五UTC+8下午10时57分36秒,Mark Lawrence写道: > On 29/11/2013 12:33, iMath wrote: > > > > > > BTW ,the Queue object has an attribute 'queue' ,but I cannot find it > > described in the DOC ,what it means ? > > > > > > > Really? AttributeError: type object 'Queue' has no attribute 'queue'

Re: using ffmpeg command line with python's subprocess module

2013-12-02 Thread Chris Angelico
On Mon, Dec 2, 2013 at 10:34 PM, iMath wrote: > I have few wav files that I can use either of the following command line > mentioned here > https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/How%20to%20concatenate%20%28join,%20merge%29%20media%20files > to concatenate > > > ffmpeg -f concat -i <(for f in ./*.wav; do

using ffmpeg command line with python's subprocess module

2013-12-02 Thread iMath
I have few wav files that I can use either of the following command line mentioned here https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/How%20to%20concatenate%20%28join,%20merge%29%20media%20files to concatenate ffmpeg -f concat -i <(for f in ./*.wav; do echo "file '$f'"; done) -c copy output.wav ffmpeg -f conca

Re: Extending the 'function' built-in class

2013-12-02 Thread G.
Le 02-12-2013, Steven D'Aprano a écrit : > There are plenty of ways to extend functions. Subclassing isn't one of > them. Thank you very mych for your complete answer; I falled back to your last proposal by myself in my attempts; I am happyt to learn about the other ways also. Regards, G. -- h