There are lots of Web Frameworks.
https://wiki.python.org/moin/WebFrameworks
lists some of them.
I wouldn't place too much faith in the classification of some as
'Popular' and others as 'Regarded as Less Popular' -- I keep getting
the itch to put a wikipedia style footnote (by whom) -- in my cor
Thank you, Chris!
Good input.
I was a computer software consulting for 20 years, ending in 1987, whrn I
changed my career to life coaching (which I have now done happily for 28
years). So now I going back to learn a new language freshly (much
different than COBOL and BASIC!). I am working on a lo
On Sun, Aug 9, 2015 at 2:08 PM, Dwight GoldWinde wrote:
> I am both new to Python and I haven’t even touched Django yet.
>
> I understand I that I need Django or something like it to develop my
> website.
>
> From what I have read, Python and Django somewhat go together.
>
> Is that true?
>
> Or i
I am both new to Python and I haven¹t even touched Django yet.
I understand I that I need Django or something like it to develop my
website.
>From what I have read, Python and Django somewhat go together.
Is that true?
Or is there another development platform better for someone like me than
Dja
On Sat, Aug 8, 2015, at 13:59, Laurent Pointal wrote:
> > Level?
>
> Graduate (post-Bac in france)
Yours or your students?
> > 1. Are you
> > grade school (1=12)?
>
> (sorry, I dont know correspondance in france)
Grade 12 refers to 17-18 year old students, each grade is one year.
> > undergra
Marko Rauhamaa :
> Steven D'Aprano :
>
>> The contemporary standard approach is from Zermelo-Fraenkel set
>> theory: define 0 as the empty set, and the successor to n as the
>> union of n and the set containing n:
>>
>> 0 = {} (the empty set)
>> n + 1 = n ∪ {n}
>
> That definition barely captures
Terry Reedy wrote:
> There have been discussions, such as today on Idle-sig , about who uses
> Idle and who we should design it for. If you use Idle in any way, or
> know of or teach classes using Idle, please answer as many of the
> questions below as you are willing, and as are appropriate
I t
Tried this on a different debian unstable system.
lac@fido:~$ lsb_release -a
No LSB modules are available.
Distributor ID:Debian
Description: Debian GNU/Linux unstable (sid)
Release: unstable
Codename: sid
lac@fido:~$
Same 3 errors. (So it is not just me.)
Laura
-
Ok, I moved to debian unstable (stretch/sid)
lac@smartwheels:~$ lsb_release -a
LSB Version:
core-2.0-amd64:core-2.0-noarch:core-3.0-amd64:core-3.0-noarch:core-3.1-amd64:core-3.1-noarch:core-3.2-amd64:core-3.2-noarch:core-4.0-amd64:core-4.0-noarch:core-4.1-amd64:core-4.1-noarch:security-4.0-amd
On Saturday 8 Aug 2015 11:17 CEST, Laura Creighton wrote:
> In a message of Sat, 08 Aug 2015 10:41:39 +0200, Cecil Westerhof
> writes:
>> On openSUSE I see python-matplotlib updated very often. Sometimes
>> more as once a week. It is also not very small (almost 40 MB). Is
>> there a reason for th
On Aug 8, 2015 10:46, "Cecil Westerhof" wrote:
>
> On openSUSE I see python-matplotlib updated very often. Sometimes more
> as once a week. It is also not very small (almost 40 MB). Is there a
> reason for this, or is there a problem at SUSE?
I assume you are using tumbleweed and/or devel:langua
In a message of Sat, 08 Aug 2015 10:41:39 +0200, Cecil Westerhof writes:
>On openSUSE I see python-matplotlib updated very often. Sometimes more
>as once a week. It is also not very small (almost 40 MB). Is there a
>reason for this, or is there a problem at SUSE?
>
>--
>Cecil Westerhof
>Senior Sof
On 08Aug2015 18:17, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Sat, Aug 8, 2015 at 6:11 PM, Cameron Simpson wrote:
From:
https://docs.python.org/3/library/signal.html#execution-of-python-signal-handlers
we have:
A Python signal handler does not get executed inside the low-level (C)
signal handler. Instead
On openSUSE I see python-matplotlib updated very often. Sometimes more
as once a week. It is also not very small (almost 40 MB). Is there a
reason for this, or is there a problem at SUSE?
--
Cecil Westerhof
Senior Software Engineer
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/cecilwesterhof
--
https://m
On Sat, Aug 8, 2015 at 6:11 PM, Cameron Simpson wrote:
> From:
>
>
> https://docs.python.org/3/library/signal.html#execution-of-python-signal-handlers
>
> we have:
>
> A Python signal handler does not get executed inside the low-level (C)
> signal handler. Instead, the low-level signal handler s
On 08Aug2015 17:08, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Sat, Aug 8, 2015 at 4:56 PM, Ian Kelly wrote:
On Fri, Aug 7, 2015 at 8:44 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
The exception isn't happening inside sock.accept(), as I explained. So
you can't catch it there.
Where does the exception happen then? Your expla
Laura Creighton wrote:
>>This leads me to believe that your tests and the tkinter shared library
>>may not match. Does
>>
>>$ python3 -c 'import _tkinter; print(_tkinter)'
>>>dynload/_tkinter.cpython-34m-x86_64-linux-gnu.so'>
>>
>>show something suspicious?
>
> lac@smartwheels:~$ python3 -c 'impo
On Sat, Aug 8, 2015 at 4:56 PM, Ian Kelly wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 7, 2015 at 8:44 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
>> The exception isn't happening inside sock.accept(), as I explained. So
>> you can't catch it there.
>
> Where does the exception happen then? Your explanation only covered
> why the blockin
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