On Sat, 2012-07-14 at 20:10 -0700, rantingrickjohn...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Thursday, July 12, 2012 1:53:54 PM UTC-5, Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>
> > The "hit list" is a table of investment titles (stock, funds, bonds)
> > that displays upon entry of a search patter
On Fri, 2012-07-13 at 09:26 +0200, Peter Otten wrote:
> Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>
> > I'm sorry I can't post an intelligible piece that does NOT work. I
> > obviously can't post the whole thing.
>
> How about a pastebin then? Or even bitbucket/github
On Tue, 2012-07-10 at 15:11 -0700, Rick Johnson wrote:
> I've tried to condense your code using the very limited info you have
> provided. I have removed unnecessarily configuring of widgets and
> exaggerated the widget borders to make debugging easier. Read below
> for Q&A.
>
> ## START CONDENSED
On Tue, 2012-07-10 at 18:06 -0700, Rick Johnson wrote:
> Also:
>
> Q3: Why are you explicitly setting the name of your "subFrame" widgets
> instead of allowing Tkinter to assign a unique name?...AND are you
> aware of the conflicts that can arise from such changes[1]?
>
I find custom-named widge
On Mon, 2012-07-09 at 10:49 -0700, Rick Johnson wrote:
> On Jul 9, 12:58 am, Terry Reedy wrote:
> > When posting problem code, you should post a minimal, self-contained
> > example that people can try on other systems and versions. Can you
> > create the problem with one record, which you could gi
On Mon, 2012-07-09 at 10:49 -0700, Rick Johnson wrote:
> On Jul 9, 12:58 am, Terry Reedy wrote:
> > When posting problem code, you should post a minimal, self-contained
> > example that people can try on other systems and versions. Can you
> > create the problem with one record, which you could gi
On Mon, 2012-07-09 at 01:58 -0400, Terry Reedy wrote:
> On 7/8/2012 5:19 PM, Frederic Rentsch wrote:
> > Hi widget wizards,
> >
> > The manual describes the "event" attribute "widget" as "The widget
> > which generated this event. This is a
Hi widget wizards,
The manual describes the "event" attribute "widget" as "The widget
which generated this event. This is a valid Tkinter widget instance, not
a name. This attribute is set for all events."
Ans so it is--has been until on the latest occasion "event.widget" was
not t
On Tue, 2012-06-19 at 19:19 -0700, rantingrickjohn...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Tuesday, June 19, 2012 10:55:48 AM UTC-5, Frederic Rentsch wrote:
> > If I copy your event descriptors into my program, the button-release
> > callback still fails. It works in your code, not in mine. Here
Rick,
Thank you for your thorough discussion. I tried your little program.
Enter and leave work as expected. Pushing mouse buttons call
leave-enter, exactly as it happened with my code. So that seems to be a
default behavior. No big deal. Without the tracing messages it would go
unnoticed. Releas
Hi All,
For most of an afternoon I've had that stuck-in-a-dead-end feeling
probing to no avail all permutations formulating bindings, trying to
make sense of manuals and tutorials. Here are my bindings:
label_frame.bind ('', self.color_selected)
label_frame.bind ('', self.color_selectab
Hi there,
I would like to prepare a bunch of info text widgets to be displayed in
Toplevel windows at the user's command (when ever he needs directions).
I know how to remove and restore widgets without destroying them in
between. The problem with a Toplevel is that it is a master that comes
and g
On Sat, 2012-03-31 at 06:29 -0400, Terry Reedy wrote:
> On 3/31/2012 3:42 AM, Frederic Rentsch wrote:
> > Hi all,
> >
> > Is is a bad idea to develop Tkinter applications in IDLE? I understand
> > that IDLE is itself a Tkinter application, supposedly in a mainloop a
Hi all,
Is is a bad idea to develop Tkinter applications in IDLE? I understand
that IDLE is itself a Tkinter application, supposedly in a mainloop and
mainloops apparently don't nest.
I tried to install a root-destroy-protocol:
def destroy_root ():
print 'Destroying root'
root.de
Hi,
Familiarizing myself with Tkinter I'm stuck trying to fill a Canvas
with an image. I believe the class I need is PhotoImage rather than
BitmapImage. But I have no luck with either. The PhotoImage doc lists
available handlers for writing GIF and PPM files. It doesn't say
anything about r
On Wed, 2011-11-16 at 09:09 -0800, Chris Kaynor wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 16, 2011 at 8:57 AM, Frederic Rentsch
> wrote:
> > Hi all,
> >
> >
> > I'd like to log MySQL errors. If I do:
> >
> >try: (command)
> >except MySQLdb.Operatio
Hi all,
I'd like to log MySQL errors. If I do:
try: (command)
except MySQLdb.OperationalError, e: print e
I may get something like:
(1136, "Column count doesn't match value count at row 1")
If I don't know in advance which error to expect, but on the contrary
want to f
;,'+LF+'),('\r\n','+LF+'),('\n\n','\n\n'),('\r\n\r\n','\r\n\r\n')))
# Pick positively identifiable mark for end of lines in either Unix or MS-DOS.
Single_Space_Mark = Translator (((' +LF+', '
On Fri, 2010-09-03 at 19:58 +0200, Virgil Stokes wrote:
> import urllib2
> import re
>
> def get_SP500_symbolsX ():
> symbols = []
> lsttradestr = re.compile('Last Trade:')
> k = 0
> for page in range(10):
>url = 'http://finance.yahoo.com/q/cp?s=%5EGSPC&c='+str(page)
>
On Fri, 2010-09-03 at 16:48 +0200, Virgil Stokes wrote:
> On 03-Sep-2010 15:45, Frederic Rentsch wrote:
> > On Fri, 2010-09-03 at 13:29 +0200, Virgil Stokes wrote:
> >> A more direct question on accessing stock information from Yahoo.
> >>
> >> Fir
On Fri, 2010-09-03 at 13:29 +0200, Virgil Stokes wrote:
> A more direct question on accessing stock information from Yahoo.
>
> First, use your browser to go to: http://finance.yahoo.com/q/cp?s=%
> 5EGSPC+Components
>
> Now, you see the first 50 rows of a 500 row table of information on
> S&P 50
On Thu, 2010-08-19 at 00:12 +0200, Thomas Jollans wrote:
> On Wednesday 18 August 2010, it occurred to John Nagle to exclaim:
> > On 8/18/2010 11:24 AM, ernest wrote:
> > > Hi,
> > >
> > > In this code:
> > >
> > > if set(a).union(b) == set(a): pass
> > >
> > > Does Python compute set(a) twice?
On Mon, 2010-08-16 at 23:17 +, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 20:40:52 +0200, Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>
> > How about
> >
> >>>> [obj for obj in dataList if obj.number == 100]
> >
> > That should create a list of all objects wh
On Sun, 2010-08-15 at 15:14 +0200, Peter Otten wrote:
> ChrisChia wrote:
>
> > dataList = [a, b, c, ...]
> > where a, b, c are objects of a Class X.
> > In Class X, it contains self.name and self.number
> >
> > If i wish to test whether a number (let's say 100) appears in one of
> > the object, a
On Fri, 2010-07-09 at 19:38 +0200, Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
> Frederic Rentsch wrote:
> > I develop in an IDLE window.
> >
> > Module M says 'from service import *'.
> > Next I correct a mistake in function 'service.f'.
> > Now 'servic
On Fri, 2010-07-09 at 15:58 +, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On Fri, 09 Jul 2010 15:02:25 +0200, Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>
> > I develop in an IDLE window.
> >
> > Module M says 'from service import *'. Next I correct a mistake in
> > function '
I develop in an IDLE window.
Module M says 'from service import *'.
Next I correct a mistake in function 'service.f'.
Now 'service.f' works fine.
I do 'reload (service); reload (M)'.
The function 'M.f' still misbehaves.
'print inspect.getsource (service.f)' and
'print inspect.getsource (M.f)' sh
Hi,
Where can one get assistance if a Windows installation service fails to
install an msi installer? I used to download zip files, but they seem to
have been replaced with msi files. I know this issue is off topic here.
So my question simply is: where is it not off topic?
Thanks for any hin
Gabriel Genellina wrote:
> En Mon, 21 Jan 2008 18:33:10 -0200, Frederic Rentsch
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribió:
>
>> Hi, here's something that puzzles me:
>>
>> >>> class Fix_Point (long):
>> def __init__ (self, l):
>>
Hi, here's something that puzzles me:
>>> class Fix_Point (long):
def __init__ (self, l):
long.__init__ (self, l * 0x1):
>>> fp = Fix_Point (99)
>>> fp
99
With prints:
>>> class Fix_Point (long):
def __init__ (self, l):
print l
l_ = l *
mtuller wrote:
> Alright. I have tried everything I can find, but am not getting
> anywhere. I have a web page that has data like this:
>
>
>
> LETTER
>
> 33,699
>
> 1.0
>
>
>
> What is show is only a small section.
>
> I want to extract the 33,699 (which is dynamic) and set the value to a
>
TOXiC wrote:
> Hi everyone,
> First I say that I serched and tryed everything but I cannot figure
> out how I can do it.
> I want to open a a file (not necessary a txt) and find and replace a
> string.
> I can do it with:
>
> import fileinput, string, sys
> fileQuery = "Text.txt"
> sourceText = '
Chris Mellon wrote:
> On 11 Jan 2007 15:01:48 +0100, Neil Cerutti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> On 2007-01-11, Frederic Rentsch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>>> If I derive a class from another one because I need a few extra
>>> features,
Hi all,
If I derive a class from another one because I need a few extra
features, is there a way to promote the base class to the derived one
without having to make copies of all attributes?
class Derived (Base):
def __init__ (self, base_object):
# ( copy all attributes )
...
Tom Plunket wrote:
> Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>
>
>> Your rules seem incomplete.
>>
>
> Not my rules, the stated documentation for dedent. "My" understanding
> of them may not be equivalent to yours, however.
It's not about understanding, I
Tom Plunket wrote:
> Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>
>
>> It this works, good for you. I can't say I understand your objective.
>> (You dedent common leading tabs, except if preceded by common leading
>> spaces (?)).
>>
>
> I dedent common leadi
John Nagle wrote:
> Felipe Almeida Lessa wrote:
>
>> On 26 Dec 2006 04:22:38 -0800, placid <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>>
>>> So do you want to remove "&" or replace them with "&" ? If you want
>>> to replace it try the following;
>>>
>> I think he wants to replace them, but just t
Tom Plunket wrote:
> Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>
>
>> Following a call to dedent () it shouldn't be hard to translate leading
>> groups of so many spaces back to tabs.
>>
>
> Sure, but the point is more that I don't think it's valid
Tom Plunket wrote:
> Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>
>
>>> Well, there is that small problem that there are leading tabs that I
>>> want stripped. I guess I could manually replace all tabs with eight
>>> spaces (as opposed to 'correct' tab stops),
Tom Plunket wrote:
> CakeProphet wrote:
>
>
>> Hmmm... a quick fix might be to temporarily replace all tab characters
>> with another, relatively unused control character.
>>
>> MyString = MyString.replace("\t", chr(1))
>> MyString = textwrap.dedent(MyString)
>> MyString = MyString.replace(chr(1
Hendrik van Rooyen wrote:
> "Aahz" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>> Anyone else getting "Python-related" spam? So far, I've seen messages
>> "from" Barry Warsaw and Skip Montanaro (although of course header
>> analysis proves they didn't send it).
>> --
>>
>
> not like that - just the nor
Dan wrote:
> On 22 nov, 22:59, "John Machin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>>> processes (Vigenère)
>>>
>> So why do you want to strip off accents? The history of communication
>> has several examples of significant difference in meaning caused by
>> minute differences in punctuation or
ronrsr wrote:
> still having a heckuva time with this.
>
> here's where it stand - the split function doesn't seem to work the way
> i expect it to.
>
>
> longkw1,type(longkw): Agricultural subsidies; Foreign
> aid;Agriculture; Sustainable Agriculture - Support; Organic
> Agriculture; Pesticides,
Paddy wrote:
> Paddy wrote:
>
>> Paddy wrote:
>>
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>>>
Hi, I'm looking for something like:
multi_split( 'a:=b+c' , [':=','+'] )
returning:
['a', ':=', 'b', '+', 'c']
whats the python way to achieve this, preferably without regexp?
>
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I've been working on some code to search for specific textstrings and
> act upon them insome way. I've got the conversion sorted however there
> is 1 problem remaining.
>
> I am trying to work out how to make it find a string like this "==="
> and when it has found it, I
mp wrote:
> I have html document titles with characters like >, , and
> ‡. How do I decode a string with these values in Python?
>
> Thanks
>
>
This is definitely the most FAQ. It comes up about once a week.
The stream-editing way is like this:
>>> import SE
>>> HTM_Decoder = SE.SE ('htm2is
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi,
> I have a string '((1,2), (3,4))' and I want to convert this into a
> python tuple of numbers. But I do not want to use eval() because I do
> not want to execute any code in that string and limit it to list of
> numbers.
> Is there any alternative way?
>
> Thanks
Fredrik Lundh wrote:
> Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>
>
>> And here's the proof I am being perceived as a nuisance. I apologize,
>> keeping to myself that I don't care.
>>
>
> since you're constantly targeting newbies, and are hawking your stu
Fredrik Lundh wrote:
> Gary Herron wrote:
>
>
>> As a matter of polite netiquette, a message like this really ought to
>> have a paragraph telling us what SE *is*.(Unless it's a secret :-))
>>
>
> nah, if you've spent more than five minutes on c.l.python lately, you'd
> noticed that it
Gary Herron wrote:
> Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>
>> A few Cheese Shop upload problems have been solved with the help of this
>> creative group. Thank you all!
>>
>> Version 2.2 beta should be phased out. It has a functional defect,
>> missing matches wit
C or L Smith wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I'm evaluating different methods of handling a transliteration (from an
> ascii-based representation of the devanagari/indian script to a romanized
> representation). I found SE and have been working with it today. One thing
> that I ran into (that I don't see a
A few Cheese Shop upload problems have been solved with the help of this
creative group. Thank you all!
Version 2.2 beta should be phased out. It has a functional defect,
missing matches with a very low statistical probability. Version 2.3 has
this fixed.
Download URL: http://cheeseshop.pyt
jim-on-linux wrote:
> Frederic,
>
> I've been trying to get back into my package in
> the Cheese Shop for over a year. The phone
> company changed my e:mail address and to make a
> long and frustrating story short I can't get back
> into the Cheese Shop to make changes to my file.
>
> Time is m
...: '''
>
> In [18]: print HTM_Decoder (test_string)
>
> ø=(xf8) # 248 f8
> ù=(xf9) # 249 f9
> ú=(xfa) # 250 fa
> û=(xfb)# 251 fb
> ü=(xfc) # 252 fc
> ý=(xfd) # 253 fd
> þ=(xfe)# 254 fe
> é=(xe9)
> ê=(xea)
> ë=
Some time ago I had managed to upload a small package to the Cheese Shop
using the data entry template. Uploading is in two steps: first the text
then the package file. When I had a new version it went like this: The
new text made a new page, but the new file went to the old page. The old
page
> will not work as Python expects the file extension to be "py".
>
> Thanks,
> Ray
>
> Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>
>> Rares Vernica wrote:
>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> How can I unescape HTML entities like " "
Rob Williscroft wrote:
> Frederic Rentsch wrote in news:mailman.1556.1162316571.11739.python-
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] in comp.lang.python:
>
>
>> Rob Williscroft wrote:
>>
>>> Frederic Rentsch wrote in news:mailman.1536.1162292996.11739.python-
>
Rob Williscroft wrote:
> Frederic Rentsch wrote in news:mailman.1536.1162292996.11739.python-
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] in comp.lang.python:
>
>
>> Rob Williscroft wrote:
>>
>>> Frederic Rentsch wrote in news:mailman.1428.1162113628.11739.python-
>>
Rob Williscroft wrote:
> Frederic Rentsch wrote in news:mailman.1428.1162113628.11739.python-
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] in comp.lang.python:
>
>
>>def increment_time (interval_ms):
>> outer weeks, days, hours, minutes, seconds, mseconds #
一首诗 wrote:
> Oh, I didn't make myself clear.
>
> What I mean is how to convert a piece of html to plain text bu keep as
> much format as possible.
>
> Such as convert " " to blank space and convert to "\r\n"
>
> Gary Herron wrote:
>
>> 一首诗 wrote:
>>
>>> Is there any simple way to solve thi
Fredrik Lundh wrote:
> Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>
>
>> At some later point I need to increment my units some more and probably
>> will again a number of times. Clearly this has to go into a function.
>>
>
> since Python is an object-based language, clear
Rares Vernica wrote:
> Hi,
>
> How can I unescape HTML entities like " "?
>
> I know about xml.sax.saxutils.unescape() but it only deals with "&",
> "<", and ">".
>
> Also, I know about htmlentitydefs.entitydefs, but not only this
> dictionary is the opposite of what I need, it does not have " ".
Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
>> If I may turn the issue around, I could see a need for an inner function
>> to be able to access the variables of the outer function, the same way a
>> function can access globals. Why? Because inner functions serve to
>> de-multiply code segments one would otherwise n
Fredrik Lundh wrote:
> Steven D'Aprano wrote:
>
>
>> I defined a nested function:
>>
>> def foo():
>> def bar():
>> return "bar"
>> return "foo " + bar()
>>
>> which works. Knowing how Python loves namespaces, I thought I could do
>> this:
>>
>>
> foo.bar()
>
DataSmash wrote:
> Hello,
> I need to search and replace 4 words in a text file.
> Below is my attempt at it, but this code appends
> a copy of the text file within itself 4 times.
> Can someone help me out.
> Thanks!
>
> # Search & Replace
> file = open("text.txt", "r")
> text = file.read()
> file
SpreadTooThin wrote:
> import array
> a = array.array('f', [1,2,3])
>
> print a.mean()
> print a.std_dev()
>
> Is there a way to calculate the mean and standard deviation on array
> data?
>
> Do I need to import it into a Numeric Array to do this?
>
>
I quickly fish this out of my functions tool
Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
> On Mon, 23 Oct 2006 20:34:20 +0100, Steve Holden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> declaimed the following in comp.lang.python:
>
>
>
>> Don't give up, attach it as a file!
>>
>>
> Which might be acceptable on a mailing list, but might be
> problematic on a "text" newsg
Antoine De Groote wrote:
> Hi there,
>
> I have a word document containing pictures and text. This documents
> holds several 'ABCDEF' strings which serve as a placeholder for names.
> Now I want to replace these occurences with names in a list (members). I
> open both input and output file in bi
Steve Holden wrote:
Frederic Rentsch wrote:
Frederic Rentsch wrote:
Frederic Rentsch wrote:
Paul McGuire wrote:
"Michael B. Trausch" <"mike$#at^&nospam!%trauschus"> wrote in message
Sorry about the line wra
Frederic Rentsch wrote:
> Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>
>> Paul McGuire wrote:
>>
>>
>>> "Michael B. Trausch" <"mike$#at^&nospam!%trauschus"> wrote in message
>>>
>>>
>
> Sorry about the li
Frederic Rentsch wrote:
> Paul McGuire wrote:
>
>> "Michael B. Trausch" <"mike$#at^&nospam!%trauschus"> wrote in message
>>
Sorry about the line wrap mess in the previous messa
Paul McGuire wrote:
> "Michael B. Trausch" <"mike$#at^&nospam!%trauschus"> wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>> Alright... I am attempting to find a way to parse ANSI text from a
>> telnet application. However, I am experiencing a bit of trouble.
>>
>> What I want to do is have all A
Michael B. Trausch wrote:
> Alright... I am attempting to find a way to parse ANSI text from a
> telnet application. However, I am experiencing a bit of trouble.
>
> What I want to do is have all ANSI sequences _removed_ from the output,
> save for those that manage color codes or text presentatio
Nick Craig-Wood wrote:
> Frederic Rentsch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> It was called a flow chart. Flow charts could be translated directly
>> into machine code written in assembly languages which had labels, tests
>> and jumps as the only flow-contr
spawn wrote:
> but I've been struggling with this for far too long and I'm about to
> start beating my head against the wall.
>
> My assignment seemed simple: create a program that will cacluate the
> running total of user inputs until it hits 100. At 100 it should stop.
> That's not the problem,
Tim Peters wrote:
> [Frederic Rentsch]
>
>> Thanks a lot for your input. I seemed to notice that everything
>> works fine without setting the cursor as long as it stops before the end
>> of the file. Is that also a coincidence that may not work?
>>
>
Frederic Rentsch wrote:
> Matt wrote:
>> I am attempting to reformat a string, inserting newlines before certain
>> phrases. For example, in formatting SQL, I want to start a new line at
>> each JOIN condition. Noting that strings are immutable, I thought it
>> best to s
Matt wrote:
> I am attempting to reformat a string, inserting newlines before certain
> phrases. For example, in formatting SQL, I want to start a new line at
> each JOIN condition. Noting that strings are immutable, I thought it
> best to spllit the string at the key points, then join with '\n'.
>
Tim,
Thanks a lot for your input. I seemed to notice that everything
works fine without setting the cursor as long as it stops before the end
of the file. Is that also a coincidence that may not work?
Frederic
Tim Peters wrote:
> [Frederic Rentsch]
>
>>Working with re
Hi all,
Working with read and write operations on a file I stumbled on a
complication when writes fail following a read to the end.
>>> f = file ('T:/z', 'r+b')
>>> f.write ('abcdefg')
>>> f.tell ()
30L
>>> f.seek (0)
>>> f.read ()
'abcdefg'
>>> f.flush () # Calling or not makes no dif
John Machin wrote:
> Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>
>> Hi all,
>>
>>I have a class Time_Series derived from list. It lists days and
>> contains a dictionary of various Lists also derived from list which
>> contain values related to said days. (e.g. Stock quot
Hi all,
I have a class Time_Series derived from list. It lists days and
contains a dictionary of various Lists also derived from list which
contain values related to said days. (e.g. Stock quotes, volumes traded,
etc.)
I defined an operator += which works just fine, but only once. If I
r
Kay Schluehr wrote:
> Sybren Stuvel wrote:
>
>> Kay Schluehr enlightened us with:
>>
>>> Usually I struggle a short while with \ and either succeed or give up.
>>> Today I'm in a different mood and don't give up. So here is my
>>> question:
>>>
>>> You have an unknown character string c suc
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Frederic Rentsch:
>
>> Good idea, but shorter with ->
>> >>> SE.SE ('se_definition_files/int_to_binary.se') ('%X' % 987654321)
>> '0011101011000110100010110001'
>>
>
> Note that y
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Mirco Wahab:
>
>> But where is the %b in Python?
>>
>
> Python doesn't have that. You can convert the number to a hex, and then
> map the hex digitds to binary strings using a dictionary, like this:
> http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/440528
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>
>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>>
>>> These are csound files. Csound recently added python as a scripting
>>> language and is allowing also allowing csound calls from outside of
>>> csound. T
Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
> On 25 Sep 2006 10:25:01 -0700, "codefire" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> declaimed the following in comp.lang.python:
>
>
>> Yes, I didn't make it clear in my original post - the purpose of the
>> code was to learn something about regexps (I only started coding Python
>> last w
lets you write ugly looking
> song code that is almost unreadable at times (would look nice in a
> grid)
>
> http://www.msn.com
> ..
>
>
> Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>
>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>>
>>> Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>>>
>
CSUIDL PROGRAMMEr wrote:
> Folks
> I am trying to read a file
> This file has a line containing string 'disable = yes'
>
> I want to change this line to 'disable = no'
>
> The concern here is that , i plan to take into account the white spaces
> also.
>
> I tried copying all file int list and then
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>
>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>>
>>> Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> All I am af
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>
>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>>
>>> All I am after realy is to change this
>>>
>>> reline = re.line.split('instr', '/d$')
>>>
>>> into something that grab
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> All I am after realy is to change this
>
> reline = re.line.split('instr', '/d$')
>
> into something that grabs any line with instr in it take all the
> numbers and then grab any comment that may or may not be at the end of
> the line starting with ; until the end of the
theju wrote:
> Well here are some self explanatory functions that I've written for
> displaying the text vertically and from right to left. As for rotation
> gimme some more time and i'll come back to you. Also I don't guarantee
> that this is the best method(cos I myself am a newbie), but I can
>
Donlingerfelt wrote:
> I would like to download stock quotes from the web, store them, do
> calculations and sort the results. However I am fairly new and don't have a
> clue how to parse the results of a web page download. I can get to the
> site, but do not know how to request the certain data
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>
>
>
>>If you need regexes, why not just reverse-sort your expressions? This
>> seems a lot easier and faster than writing another regex compiler.
>> Reverse-sorting places the longer
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Frederic Rentsch wrote:
>
>
>
>>If you need regexes, why not just reverse-sort your expressions? This
>> seems a lot easier and faster than writing another regex compiler.
>> Reverse-sorting places the longer
Licheng Fang wrote:
> Basically, the problem is this:
>
>
p = re.compile("do|dolittle")
p.match("dolittle").group()
> 'do'
>
> Python's NFA regexp engine trys only the first option, and happily
> rests on that. There's another example:
>
>
p = re.compile("one(self
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