On Thu, Jul 19, 2018 at 4:41 PM, Gregory Ewing
wrote:
> Stefan Ram wrote:
>>
>> »assistshop«,
>
>
> Is that a word?
>
> (Google doesn't seem to think so -- it asks me whether
> I meant "assist shop". Although it does offer to translate
> it into Czech...)
>
Into or from?? I'm thoroughly confuse
Stefan Ram wrote:
»assistshop«,
Is that a word?
(Google doesn't seem to think so -- it asks me whether
I meant "assist shop". Although it does offer to translate
it into Czech...)
--
Greg
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Stefan Ram wrote:
Gregory Ewing writes:
That's debatable. I've never thought of it that way and I'm
fairly certain I don't pronounce it that way. My tongue does
not do the same thing when I say "ch" as it does when I
say "tsh".
archives ˈɑɚ kɑɪvz (n)
bachelor ˈbæʧ lɚ (n)
machine məˈ
On Wed, 18 Jul 2018 18:43:18 -0400, no@none.invalid wrote:
>On Wed, 18 Jul 2018 17:16:21 -0400, no@none.invalid wrote:
>
>>This is a chart I made using BASIC back in the 90s when I could still
>>do math and programming.
>>I would like to have a new print out of this chart but I no longer can
>>fig
Has anyone put together a straight-forward example of using asyncio
with readline? For example, suppose you have a command line program
that accepts control commands via readline, while accepting socket
connections to do its actual work. I can do that in a threaded way
fairly easily (spin off a thr
On Wed, 18 Jul 2018 17:16:21 -0400, no@none.invalid wrote:
>This is a chart I made using BASIC back in the 90s when I could still
>do math and programming.
>I would like to have a new print out of this chart but I no longer can
>figure out programming or math.
>Anyone care to figure out the patter
On Wed, Jul 18, 2018 at 7:59 PM, MRAB wrote:
> On 2018-07-18 22:40, Larry Martell wrote:
>>
>> On Tue, Jul 17, 2018 at 11:43 AM, Neil Cerutti wrote:
>>>
>>> On 2018-07-16, Larry Martell wrote:
I had some code that did this:
meas_regex = '_M\d+_'
meas_re = re.compile(meas
On 2018-07-18 22:40, Larry Martell wrote:
On Tue, Jul 17, 2018 at 11:43 AM, Neil Cerutti wrote:
On 2018-07-16, Larry Martell wrote:
I had some code that did this:
meas_regex = '_M\d+_'
meas_re = re.compile(meas_regex)
if meas_re.search(filename):
stuff1()
else:
stuff2()
I then had
On Wed, 18 Jul 2018 17:16:21 -0400, no@none.invalid wrote:
[snip]
> Anyone care to figure out the pattern and make a new copy of the
> chart?
>
> https://imgur.com/a/thF6U43
I've only looked at infantry and carrier, but those two seem to be
fairly well approximated by y = a + 1/(b*x + c), for a,
On Wed, 18 Jul 2018 18:43:18 -0400, no@none.invalid wrote:
>On Wed, 18 Jul 2018 17:16:21 -0400, no@none.invalid wrote:
>
>>This is a chart I made using BASIC back in the 90s when I could still
>>do math and programming.
>>I would like to have a new print out of this chart but I no longer can
>>fig
On 18Jul2018 17:40, Larry Martell wrote:
On Tue, Jul 17, 2018 at 11:43 AM, Neil Cerutti wrote:
On 2018-07-16, Larry Martell wrote:
I had some code that did this:
meas_regex = '_M\d+_'
meas_re = re.compile(meas_regex)
if meas_re.search(filename):
stuff1()
else:
stuff2()
I then had
On 19/07/18 00:06, Ian Kelly wrote:
> Rather than go to the effort of reverse-engineering the chart, I
> wonder if it would be simpler to just run OCR over it and dump it into
> a spreadsheet.
Really the easiest and quickest way to make a new printout of this
single page is to simply copy it by ha
Rather than go to the effort of reverse-engineering the chart, I
wonder if it would be simpler to just run OCR over it and dump it into
a spreadsheet.
On Wed, Jul 18, 2018 at 4:01 PM Thomas Jollans wrote:
>
> On 18/07/18 23:43, Chris Angelico wrote:
> > On Thu, Jul 19, 2018 at 7:16 AM, wrote:
>
On 18/07/18 23:43, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 19, 2018 at 7:16 AM, wrote:
>> This is a chart I made using BASIC back in the 90s when I could still
>> do math and programming.
>> I would like to have a new print out of this chart but I no longer can
>> figure out programming or math.
>> A
On Thu, Jul 19, 2018 at 7:16 AM, wrote:
> This is a chart I made using BASIC back in the 90s when I could still
> do math and programming.
> I would like to have a new print out of this chart but I no longer can
> figure out programming or math.
> Anyone care to figure out the pattern and make a
On Tue, Jul 17, 2018 at 11:43 AM, Neil Cerutti wrote:
> On 2018-07-16, Larry Martell wrote:
>> I had some code that did this:
>>
>> meas_regex = '_M\d+_'
>> meas_re = re.compile(meas_regex)
>>
>> if meas_re.search(filename):
>> stuff1()
>> else:
>> stuff2()
>>
>> I then had to change it t
This is a chart I made using BASIC back in the 90s when I could still
do math and programming.
I would like to have a new print out of this chart but I no longer can
figure out programming or math.
Anyone care to figure out the pattern and make a new copy of the
chart?
https://imgur.com/a/thF6U43
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Hi Paul,
you have a version mismatch in subject and text.
Cheers,
Pete
On Mittwoch, 18. Juli 2018 05:19:27 Paul Kehrer wrote:
> PyCA cryptography 2.2.2 has been released to PyPI. cryptography includes
> both high level recipes and low level interfaces to common cryptographic
> algorithms such as
On 2018-07-18 02:47, S Lea wrote:
> What do you use, Gene?
> It seems most business program run on Windows.
Many of us here use Linux. Some just rather like it and could use any
OS, while for others, software they rely on for work might only work
properly, or work better, on Linux. (This might be
We are very pleased to have Smarkets as Keystone Sponsor for
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MRAB wrote:
"ch" usually represents 2 phonemes, basically the sounds of "t" followed
by "sh";
That's debatable. I've never thought of it that way and I'm
fairly certain I don't pronounce it that way. My tongue does
not do the same thing when I say "ch" as it does when I
say "tsh".
--
Greg
--
h
On 18-07-18 10:07, Marko Rauhamaa wrote:
>> Sure there were some surprises or gotcha's, but the result was still
>> better than doing it in python2 and they were easier to deal with than
>> in python2.
> BTW, in those needs, even Python2 has Unicode strings and unicodedata at
> your disposal.
Sure
Antoon Pardon :
> On 17-07-18 14:22, Marko Rauhamaa wrote:
>> If you assume that NFC normalizes every letter to a single codepoint
>> (and carefully use NFC everywhere), you are right. But equally likely
>> you may inadvertently be setting yourself up for a surprise.
>
> You are moving the goal po
On 17-07-18 14:22, Marko Rauhamaa wrote:
> Antoon Pardon :
>
>> On 17-07-18 10:27, Marko Rauhamaa wrote:
>>> Also, Python2's strings do as good a job at delivering codepoints as
>>> Python3.
>> No they don't. The programs that I work on, need to be able to treat
>> at least german, french, dutch an
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