eryk sun writes:
> On Wed, May 11, 2016 at 10:39 PM, Paul Smith wrote:
>> Hi all. I have a locally-built version of Python (2.7.11) that I'm
>> copying around to different systems, running all different versions of
>> GNU/Linux.
> ...
>> What I'd like to do is have a way of setting the library pa
On Wednesday, May 11, 2016 at 1:22:09 PM UTC-4, DFS wrote:
> Have:
> p1 = ['Now', 'the', 'for', 'good']
> p2 = ['is', 'time', 'all', 'men']
>
> want
> [('Now','is','the','time'), ('for','all','good','men')]
>
> This works:
>
> p = []
> for i in xrange(0,len(p1),2):
> p.insert(i,(p1[i],p2[i
On Wed, May 11, 2016 at 10:39 PM, Paul Smith wrote:
> Hi all. I have a locally-built version of Python (2.7.11) that I'm
> copying around to different systems, running all different versions of
> GNU/Linux.
...
> What I'd like to do is have a way of setting the library path that
> Python uses whe
On 2016-05-11 12:39, Ned Batchelder wrote:
> The docs have discussed it in a few different ways over the years.
>
> Python 3.0 and 3.1 said:
>
> 3.2 said:
>
> 3.3 and up say:
I've picked up on the "% formatting not going away, .format() more
flexible" vibe but had missed the evolution in the do
On Thu, May 12, 2016 at 5:39 AM, Ned Batchelder wrote:
> On Tuesday, May 10, 2016 at 8:16:43 PM UTC-4, Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn wrote:
>> DFS wrote:
>>
>> > On 5/8/2016 8:44 PM, Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn wrote:
>> >> With the “%” string operator (deprecated),
>> >
>> > according to who?
>>
>> TFM
On Wednesday, May 11, 2016 at 5:30:48 PM UTC-4, sohca...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Wednesday, May 11, 2016 at 12:14:43 PM UTC-7, Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn
> wrote:
> > sohcahto...@gmail.com wrote:
> >
> > > I don't blame people for not wanting to use their real name on the
> > > Internet, especially
Hi all. I have a locally-built version of Python (2.7.11) that I'm
copying around to different systems, running all different versions of
GNU/Linux. Because I need this to work across systems I'm bundling
important .so's with my Python installation (libcrypto, libssl,
libreadline, libgmp) which a
On Wednesday, May 11, 2016 at 12:14:43 PM UTC-7, Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn
wrote:
> sohcahto...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> > I don't blame people for not wanting to use their real name on the
> > Internet, especially if you're a woman. There are a lot of crazy people
> > out there that will find out w
On Tuesday, May 10, 2016 at 8:16:43 PM UTC-4, Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn wrote:
> DFS wrote:
>
> > On 5/8/2016 8:44 PM, Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn wrote:
> >> With the “%” string operator (deprecated),
> >
> > according to who?
>
> TFM.
>
It's easy to be confused on this point. Early on in the
On Tuesday, May 10, 2016 at 11:17:33 PM UTC-4, Arshpreet Singh wrote:
> Thanks for the information, I just applied for program but I got one mail
> about license and expiration.
>
>
> This software license expires on October 29, 2016.
>
>
> I am not able to understand that can anyone put some
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Many thanks for the quick reply. I must admit I was surprised not to find any
note about this anywhere in the docs (or indeed anywhere online); it seems like
something that people would have run into before. I've added a request to the
documentation tracker to have a note added to help people wh
On Wed, May 11, 2016 at 7:52 PM, wrote:
> In other words, I get different results for the same expression (2/3) in the
> program and on the pdb prompt, which makes debugging tricky. I cannot figure
> out how to persuade pdb to actually load the division module. Is there an
> approved way? Norm
On 10/05/2016 20:03, DFS wrote:
"There should be one-- and preferably only one --obvious way to do it."
https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0020/
"Explicit is better than implicit."
What is your use case and scenario? :-)
Maybe it's better to write a function to automatise this so that if
i
Hi folks,
I've been trying to use pdb to debug a Python 2.7 program and this has really
stumped me.
When debugging a program that uses
from __future__ import division
in Python 2.7, it would be useful to be able to have the same behaviour at the
pdb prompt. However, it looks like pdb d
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