...I have some C code (foo.c and foo.h) that I would like to be able to access
using python.
I've written my interface file (foo.i) like so:
%module foo
%{
#include "foo.h"
%}
%include "foo.h"
I then do the following on the command line:
$ swig -python foo.i
$ gcc -c foo.c foo_wrap.c -I /usr/inc
Ed Hotchkiss wrote:
> def ZeroThrough255():
> x = 0
> while x <= 255:
> if len(x) == 1:
> mySet = '00' + str(x)
> elif len(x) == 2:
> mySet = '0' + str(x)
> else:
> mySet = x
>
sheffdog wrote:
> Using regular expressions, the best I can do so far is using the re.sub
> command but it still takes two lines. Can I do this in one line? Or
> should I be approaching this differently? All I want to end up with is
> the file name "ppbhat.tga".
A regular expression to do what you
Заур Шибзухов wrote:
> There is a syntactic sugar for item access in
> dictionaries and sequences:
>
> o[e] = v <-> o.__setitem__(e, v)
> o[e] <-> o.__getitem__(e)
>
> where e is an expression.
>
> There is no similar way for set/get attribute for objects.
> If e is a given name, then
>
>
John Abel wrote:
> Does anyone know of a quick way of performing this:
>
> $testVar =~ s#/mail/.*$##g
Use the re (regular expression) module. Since you are iterating over a lot of
entries, it is good to compile the regular expression outside of the loop.
>>> import re
>>> mailRE = re.compile('/
I'm creating a python package foo.
What is intended use for __init__.py files?
Well, I found this: http://www.python.org/doc/essays/packages.html
>From what I can gather it is for initialization of the package when doing an
import, but I would really like to see an example or situation that makes
I would like my application to be able to authenticate through PAM. Is
there any code out there that implements this? All I could find was PyPAM
(http://www.pangalactic.org/PyPAM/), which doesn't look like it has been
touched in almost 6 years and requires python1.5.
--
http://mail.python.org/mai
Gary Wilson Jr wrote:
> alpha = 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz'.upper()
> pairs = [x for x in alpha] + [''.join((x,y)) for x in alpha for y in alpha]
I forget, is string concatenation with '+' just as fast as join()
now (because that would look even nicer)
Bill Mill wrote:
> On 5/19/05, Peter Otten <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>>Bill Mill wrote:
>>
>>
Traceback (most recent call last):
File"",line1,in?
NameError: name 'sorted' is not defined
I think you're probably using 2.4 ??
>>>
>>>Yes, sorted() is new in python 2.4 .You coul