Wow, lots of things I had never heard of in your posts.
I guess I need to do some homework...
Cantabile
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Thanks everyone for your answers. That's much clearer now.
I see that I was somehow fighting python instead of using it. Lesson
learned (for the time being at least) :)
I'll probably get back with more questions...
Cheers,
Cantabile
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x27;t work. It doesn't find anythin wrong if remove, say msg,
from **md. I thought it should because I believed that this list
comprehension would check that every keyword in required would have a
match in params.keys.
Could you explain why it doesn't work and do you have any idea of how it
could work ?
Thanks in advance :)
Cheers,
Cantabile
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Le Mon, 17 Mar 2008 09:03:07 -0700, joep a écrit :
> An example: looks for all 'junk*.txt' files in current directory and
> replaces in each line the string 'old' by the string 'new'
> Josef
Works like a charm. Many thanks for the example Josef :-)
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Thanks to you all for these answers. I'll try these ideas and post back
comments and results.
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Hi,
I have a class (a gui) with buttons and other controls. A button, for
example, has a callback method, so that writing
b = Button(label, OnClick)
will call the global OnClick method.
Now, if I want the OnClick method to call some of my main class methods,
I need to write:
UI = No
stasz a écrit :
> On Tue, 09 Aug 2005 23:59:26 +0200, cantabile wrote:
>
>
>>stas a écrit :
>>
>>
>>>As a reminder, make sure that you install gettext in the namespace
>>>of your toplevel module.
>
> []
>
>>Noticed something :
stas a écrit :
> As a reminder, make sure that you install gettext in the namespace
> of your toplevel module.
> What I mean is this:
>
> test1.py imports test2.py and test3.py
> test2.py imports test4.py
>
> Now you have to place the gettext.install call in test1.py and
> then the other modules
Ok, I'll try that.
Thanks again Stasz !
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BTW stasz,
Maybe you'll have still some time for the following question. Trying my
luck :))
Suppose I have several units (.py files), say test.py test1.py tets2.py
, test.py being my main file.
I've read I can import gettext and install in the main unit. Then, must
I create .po files for each u
stasz a écrit :
> Your steps seems alright.
> Just a thought; you do start test1.py from a [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> environment do you?
> I mean in a xterm do: export [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> And then start test1.py from there.
>
> Stas
Wht ! Working at last, after three days... It wasn't the LANG par
stasz a écrit :
> On Sun, 07 Aug 2005 21:33:21 +0200, cantabile wrote:
>
>
>>stasz a écrit :
>>
>>>On Sun, 07 Aug 2005 11:09:14 +0200, cantabile wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>>Hi,
>>>>I'm failing to make it work but c
stasz a écrit :
> On Sun, 07 Aug 2005 11:09:14 +0200, cantabile wrote:
>
>
>>Hi,
>>I'm failing to make it work but can't find out what's wrong. Here's what
>>I do :
>
> []
>
>>How come ? What's wrong with what I
Hi,
I'm failing to make it work but can't find out what's wrong. Here's what
I do :
test.py
import gettext
gettext.install('')
msg = _("Message without accented characters")
print msg
Then I do :
xgettext test.py
mv message.po message pot
msginit --> outpu
Robert Kern a écrit :
> It depends. Are those characters encoded as UTF-8? Or, more likely, are
> they encoded as ISO-8859-1?
>
>> Where can I find a pratical explanation about these encodings ?
>
>
> http://www.amk.ca/python/howto/unicode
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Character_encoding
> ht
Hi, being a newbie in Python, I'm a bit lost with the '-*- coding : -*-'
directive.
I'm using an accented characters language. Some of them are correctly
displayed while one doesn't. I've written :
-*- coding: utf-8 -*-
Is this wrong ?
Where can I find a pratical explanation about these encodi
Jon Hewer a écrit :
> Hi
>
> I'm pretty new to Python, and recently been working my way through
> Dive Into Python, and I'm currently writing a really simple rss reader
> purely to get familiarised with the language. I want to move onto
> something a little more challenging, but I'm stuck for ide
Reinout van Schouwen a écrit :
> Hi,
>
> On Wed, 3 Aug 2005, cantabile wrote:
>
>> Hi, I'm trying to write an internationalized app. I'm learning python
>> and read that pygettext would help me, but I found elsewhere it was
>> obsolete (??)
>> So,
Hi, I'm trying to write an internationalized app. I'm learning python
and read that pygettext would help me, but I found elsewhere it was
obsolete (??)
So, what's the correct and up to date tool to i18n python ?
Is there a tutorial somewhere (python docs has nothing really usable :
I'd like at l
Robert Kern a écrit :
> cantabile wrote:
>
>> Hi, I'm trying and updating an .ini file with ConfigParser but each time
>> I call 'write', it appends the whole options another time to the file.
>> For example :
>> Here's the inital ini file
>&g
Hi, I'm trying and updating an .ini file with ConfigParser but each time
I call 'write', it appends the whole options another time to the file.
For example :
Here's the inital ini file
[section1]
foodir: %(dir)s/whatever
dir: foo
Here's my code :
filename = ...
config = ConfigParser.ConfigParser(
Scott David Daniels a écrit :
> cantabile wrote:
>
>> bruno modulix a écrit :
>>
>>> You may want to have a look at the Factory pattern...
>>> ... demo of class Factory ...
>
>
> Taking advantage of Python's dynamic nature, you could simply:
&
bruno modulix a écrit :
> You may want to have a look at the Factory pattern...
>
> # outrageously oversimplified dummy exemple
> class Gui(object):
>def __init__(self, installer):
> self.installer = installer
>
> class PosixGui(Gui):
>pass
>
> class Win32Gui(Gui):
>pass
>
> c
Hi,
I'm trying to write a small installer for a server. But this program
should be able to run in the future under heterogenous environments and
os (at least linux/windows). I mean, the install will be done either in
text mode or curses or gtk or tk, either in debian or windows 2000 and
so on...
Thanks for the answer and help.
Cheers :)
Peter Hansen wrote:
> cantabile wrote:
>
>> Hi, Peter
>> Thanks for the reply. I'll check popen().
>> But you said I should not rely on fdisk... Why ? And should I prefer
>> sfdisk ? Why ?
>
>
> I was under
Hi, Peter
Thanks for the reply. I'll check popen().
But you said I should not rely on fdisk... Why ? And should I prefer
sfdisk ? Why ?
Peter Hansen wrote:
> cantabile wrote:
>
>> Hi, I'd like to get drives and partitions (and their size too) with
>> python under
Hi, Jeff
Great help : this works like a charm. I think I can customize it to read
from sfdisk. Do you agree with Peter Hansen (post below) about fdisk ?
Jeff Epler wrote:
> Using /proc/partitions is probably preferable because any user can read
> it, not just people who can be trusted with read a
Hi, I'd like to get drives and partitions (and their size too) with
python under Linux. So far, I thought of reading /proc/partitions but
maybe i could use fdsik also ?
How would I do that in python ?
Thanks for your help (newbie here :) )
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