With the assistance of this group I am understanding unicode encoding
issues much better; especially when handling special characters that are
outside of the ASCII range. I've got my application working perfectly now
:-)
However, I am still confused as to why I can only use one specific encoding.
If you try to expand any of the paths in the Path Browser (by clicking the +
sign) then it not only closes the Path Browser but it also closes all other
windows that were opened in IDLE, including the IDLE interpreter itself.
I did a Google search and it doesn't look like this been reported. If t
If you try to expand any of the paths in the Path Browser (by clicking the
+ sign) then it not only closes the Path Browser but it also closes all
other windows that were opened in IDLE, including the IDLE interpreter
itself.
A Google search doesn't look like this been reported. If this is truly a
On Wednesday, October 3, 2012 5:40:12 PM UTC+1, Daniel Klein wrote:
> Thank you Steven! That was PRECISELY what I was looking for.
(And kwpolska!)
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Thank you Steven! That was PRECISELY what I was looking for.
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Hi!
I've got import scripts for a bunch of csv files into an sqlite database. I
have one csv file per language. I don't write directly to the sqlite db; this
is a django app and I'm creating items in my django models.
My script (scripts, unfortunately) work just fine, but it feels beyond stupi
The windows box is my development box, it's not where the script will be
running in the end. It'll be running on a Linux box where I don't have root so
python setup.py install isn't an option (to my understanding).
So what happened is that 7zip didn't unzip the .tar.gz2 properly, but it does
fi
Thanks for the link to the PEP. I should search through PEPs first
next time :)
Okay, I understand Guido's reasoning and yield the point. I typed up
the specific example in which I came across this problem and, while
doing so, realized there's a much better way of approaching the
problem, so thank
Hey,
I did a little searching and couldn't really find much recent on this.
The only thing I found was this:
http://groups.google.com/group/comp.lang.python/browse_thread/thread/a696624c92b91181/5b7479fdc3362b83?lnk=gst&q=break+named+loop#5b7479fdc3362b83
Basically I'm wondering if there are any
Are there any guidelines for upgrading from 2.5 to 2.6?
Do you have to uninstall 2.5, or does the installer do that for you?
I have wxPython, mod_python and Django installed. Will these have to
reinstalled/reconfigured for 2.6?
Platform: Windows XP Pro SP3
Daniel Klein
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http
On Mon, 18 Aug 2008 09:16:13 -0700 (PDT), Aaron Scott
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I have mod_python running on my server, but when I chance a Python
>file on the server, Apache needs to be restarted in order to have the
>changes take effect. I assume this is so mod_python can run
>persistently, bu
On Sat, 9 Aug 2008 04:31:38 -0700 (PDT), Will Rocisky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>I want my 76.1 to be rounded to decimal 80 and 74.9 to decimal 70.
>How can I achieve that?
>>> for n in (74.9, 76.1):
print int((n+5)/10)*10
70
80
Dan
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with a similar python script...
import sys
sys.stdout.write('process started...\n')
r = sys.stdin.readline()
sys.stdout.write(r + '\n')
s = sys.stdin.readline()
sys.stdout.write(s + '\n')
I called this 'p3.py'. When I plug this into the 'p2.py' script I get
nothing, it just hangs. So maybe there is something else I am missing.
I normally don't do things this way cos there are os size limits to what you
can send/recv, so I use my own protocol (similar to netstrings) for
communication.
Daniel Klein
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ternatively, you can use std.write() and stdout.read() (without
universal_newlines) but this means you need to create your own IPC protocol
(like netstrings).
Hope this helps,
Daniel Klein
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ed of the
availability of new issues automatically, yet I received no such
notification.
Daniel Klein
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provides an easier interface imo, eg:
process = subprocess.Popen('tool.exe', stdin=subprocess.PIPE,
stdout=subprocess.PIPE, universal_newlines=true)
(self.outstream, self.instream) = (process.stdout, process.stdin)
Daniel Klein
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On Wed, 28 Feb 2007 22:03:13 +0100, Bruno Desthuilliers
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Daniel Klein a écrit :
>> The arguments for TransitionError must be a tuple,
>
>Err...
>
>> eg:
>>
>> msg = "Going to error state %d from state %d" % (self.cu
On Wed, 28 Feb 2007 13:48:54 -0500 (EST), "Steven W. Orr"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>When I run it I get this:
>
>884 > ./t_fsm.py
>Traceback (most recent call last):
> File "./t_fsm.py", line 3, in ?
> from fsm import *
> File "/home/boston/VIASAT/sorr/py/fsm/fsm.py", line 76
> raise
On 18 Feb 2007 04:24:47 -0800, "Fuzzyman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>On Feb 17, 8:33 pm, deelan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Harlin Seritt wrote:
>> > Hi,
>>
>> > How does one get the name of a class from within the class code? I
>> > tried something like this as a guess:
>>
>> > self.__name__
>
[I'm having some difficulty contacting 'real' MoinMoin support
channels so I am posting this question here. Hope that's ok.]
I have a pressing need to get a wiki up and running in a fairly short
timeframe. I did some investigations and the Python MoinMoin wiki
seemed to be the best choice for me b
Is it fair game to ask questions about MoinMoin here?
If not, can someone recommend a resource please?
Dan
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On 26 Jan 2007 21:33:47 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>hi
>can someone explain strip() for these :
>[code]
x='www.example.com'
x.strip('cmowz.')
>'example'
>[/code]
>
>when i did this:
>[code]
x = 'abcd,words.words'
x.strip(',.')
>'abcd,words.words'
>[/code]
>
>it does not st
Does anyone know if the Zeus IDE is compatible with Python 2.5?
I sent an email to Zeus a couple days ago but have not heard anything.
Thanks,
Dan
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On 18 Jan 2007 18:54:59 -0800, "Rickard Lindberg"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I see two potential problems with the non regex solutions.
>
>1) Consider a line: "foo (bar)". When you split it you will only get
>two strings, as split by default only splits the string on white space
>characters. Thus
On Thu, 11 Jan 2007 18:11:06 +0100, Bjoern Schliessmann
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Demel, Jeff wrote:
>
>> Does anyone know if there's a plan in the works for a new edition
>> of Learning Python? The current edition (2nd) is a few years old
>> and looks like it only covers Python 2.3.
>
>IIRC, d
#return list.__new__(cls, alist)
I don't really notice any behavioral difference. Is there in fact any
difference in using one over the other? Performance? Side effects? ???
I am using Python version 2.5.
Thanks,
Daniel Klein
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On 8 Jan 2007 10:59:23 -0800, "Thomas Nelson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>O'reilly has a book called Programming Python that covers much of the
>standard library and how to use it for complex tasks. It may be out of
>date by now, though.
Programming Python (by Mark Lutz) is now in it's 3rd edi
On 1 Jan 2007 11:33:42 -0800, "Ramdas" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>How do I add users using Python scripts on a Linux machine?
>
>Someone has a script?
This should be as easy as something like:
os.system("/usr/sbin/useradd -m -d /home/newuser -s /bin/ksh")
Dan
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On 28 Dec 2006 08:40:02 -0800, "jonathan.beckett"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Hi all,
>
>Question 2...
>What is the correct way of looping through a list object in a class via
>a method of it?
Without peeking at any of the other responses, here is what I came up
with. I hope it helps...
class G
On 27 Dec 2006 09:16:53 -0800, "hubritic" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>I am trying to set off commands on Windows 2003 from python.
>Specifically, I am trying to use diskpart with a script file (pointed
>to with path).
>
>cmd = ["diskpart", "/s", path]
>p = Popen(cmd, shell
On 14 Dec 2006 22:47:23 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>hi,
>how can i skip printing the last line using loops (for /while)
>
>eg
>
>for line in open("file):
> print line.
>
>I want to skip printing last line of the file.thanks
while True:
line1 = myfile.readline()
if not line1: brea
tList) == "":
>
>and
>if type(artistList) == "list":
>
>but nothing..
Try it this way...
>>> artistList = []
>>> isinstance(artistList, list)
True
>>> if isinstance(artistList, list):
print "I'm a list."
I'm a list.
>>>
Daniel Klein
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Thanks /F, that was it.
Dan
On Sat, 18 Nov 2006 15:03:30 +0100, Fredrik Lundh
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[snip]
>p.stdin is the *other* process' stdin. if you want to read things it
>prints, read from p.stdout instead.
>
>> print fin.readline()
>> fin.close()
>
>
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size=-1, stdin=PIPE, stdout=PIPE,
universal_newlines=True)
fin = p.stdin
print fin.readline()
fin.close()
When this is run, I get no output :
C:\>python c:\python\sp.py
C:\>
As you can see, I get no exception.
I've tried various combinations of the Popen arguments with no joy.
The platform
I have a few Python programs that use popen2, and they work quite
nicely and dependably, so I don't really have any reason to change
them to use the new subprocess module...unless of course there any
future plans to deprecate popen2.
Is this something I will have to plan for ?
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