Hello,
On Thu, Apr 19, 2012 at 08:54:28AM +0200, Peter Otten wrote:
> Have a second look at the desired output. Your suggestion doesn't produce
> that.
oh', I'm really sorry, I was distracted...
thanks:
a.
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hello,
On Wed, Dec 07, 2011 at 11:39:20PM -0800, marco.ru...@gmail.com wrote:
> Hi, take a look at this online tool: http://easytimestamping.com
I need to create the PDF on my server - it could be any online
service, but it must to have any kind of API.
> It is able to apply RFC3161 compliant t
Hello,
On Thu, Dec 08, 2011 at 04:28:01PM +1100, Alec Taylor wrote:
> Just digitally sign the document using python-gnupg
>
> /problem-solved!
using gnupg to sign a document != add a timestamp to a pdf.
May be this doc helps to clear what's the different, and what I want:
http://learn.adobe.co
Hello Irmen,
On Wed, Dec 07, 2011 at 08:59:11PM +0100, Irmen de Jong wrote:
> On 07-12-11 20:41, Hegedüs, Ervin wrote:
> >Hello Everyone,
> >
> >I'm looking for a tool, which can add a trusted timestamp to an
> >existing PDF file (and can sign - but currently on
Hello Everyone,
I'm looking for a tool, which can add a trusted timestamp to an
existing PDF file (and can sign - but currently only have to add
TS).
Could anybody help?
Thanks:
a.
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hello,
On Mon, Oct 03, 2011 at 09:28:27AM +0200, Hans Mulder wrote:
> On 3/10/11 08:10:57, Hegedüs, Ervin wrote:
> >
> >If you fork() your process, then it will also loose the tty...
>
> Errhm, I suggest you check again. This cannot be true.
>
> >os.setsid()
>
hello,
On Mon, Oct 03, 2011 at 04:37:43AM +, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
>
> I wanted to ensure that it would do the right thing when run without a tty,
> such as from a cron job.
If you fork() your process, then it will also loose the tty...
import os
import sys
try:
pid = os.fork()
hello,
On Thu, Sep 22, 2011 at 06:12:01AM +, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> I don't understand why some environment variables are not visible from
> Python.
>
> [steve@wow-wow ~]$ echo $LINES $COLUMNS $TERM
> 30 140 xterm
> [steve@wow-wow ~]$ python2.6
> Python 2.6.6 (r266:84292, Dec 21 2010, 18:1
hello,
On Thu, Sep 01, 2011 at 10:00:27AM +0200, Michiel Overtoom wrote:
> On Sep 1, 2011, at 09:48, Amogh M S wrote:
[...]
> > class S:
> >def _init_(self, name=None):
> >self.name = name
> > s = S("MyName")
>
> Two things: Derive your class from object,
why's that better than just
hello,
>
> import smtplib
> def prompt(prompt):
> return raw_input(prompt).strip()
> fromaddr = prompt("From: ")toaddrs = prompt("To: ").split()print
> "Enter message, end with ^D (Unix) or ^Z (Windows):"
> # Add the From: and To: headers at the start!msg = ("From: %s\r\nTo:
> %s\r\n\r\n"
>
hello,
On Fri, Jun 24, 2011 at 12:37:40AM -0700, mando wrote:
> Take a look to reportlab:
>
> http://www.reportlab.com/software/opensource/
thanks, I'll check it out,
a.
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Hello Everyone,
I'm looking a good PDF module for Python 2.x - I've never used
any PDF in Python, I don't know, what would be a good choice.
There are several PDF tool for Python - this is my problem :)
What I need:
- utf8 support
- create header and footer
- (in headers there are small images)
Hello,
thanks for all reply,
On Mon, May 02, 2011 at 03:20:40AM +0100, Nobody wrote:
> You need to build your module for a 32-bit version of Python.
ok, I believed it, I was hoping there is another solution,
> On a 64-bit system, each process is either 32-bit or 64-bit process. You
> can't mix
hello,
Thomas, Gregory,
thank you for your ansrwers,
> I guess this is the point where yo should start printf programing.
oh', already done :)
> * What happens during module initialization?
successfully initialized,
> * What happens n the functions?
> * Where does the stuff fail?
> * What a
Hello,
this is not a "clear" Python question - I've wrote a module in C,
which uses a 3rd-party lib - it's a closed source, I just get the
.so, .a and a header file.
Looks like it works on 32bit (on my desktop), but it must be run
on 64bit servers.
When I'm compiling it on 64bit, gcc says:
/us
hello,
On Wed, Apr 27, 2011 at 11:58:18AM +0200, Thomas Rachel wrote:
> Am 26.04.2011 20:44, schrieb Hegedüs Ervin:
>
> >and (maybe) final question: :)
> >
> >I defined many exceptions:
> >
> >static PyObject *cibcrypt_error_nokey;
> >static PyObject
hello,
> I'm using ElementTree to parse an XML file, but it stops at the
> second record (id = 002), which contains a non-standard ascii
> character, ä. Here's the XML:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> The complaint offered up by the parser is
I've checked this xml with your script, I think your l
Hello,
> >But, when I don't read input arguments (there isn't
> >PyArg_ParseTuple), there isn't exception.
> >
> >How Python handle the number of arguments?
>
> From what you tell it: with PyArg_ParseTuple(). (see
> http://docs.python.org/c-api/arg.html for this).
>
> You give a format string (i
Dear Thomas,
thank you again,
> The ownership rules say that the input parameter belongs to the
> caller who holds it at least until we return. (We just "borrow" it.)
> So no action needed.
ok, its' clear, I understand,
> >>* Py_BuildValue()
>
> This function "transfers ownership", as it is n
Hello,
thanks for the answer,
> >Everything works fine, but sorry for the recurrent question: where
> >should I use the Py_INCREF()/Py_DECREF() in code above?
>
> That depends on the functions which are called. It should be given
> in the API description. The same counts for the incoming paramet
hello,
sorry for the typo, these are many "cibcrypt" reference, this is
the real name of my module - I just replaced it somewhere to
"mycrypt" - and somewhere I forgot... :(
> ...
> static PyObject *cibcrypt_error_badparm;
> ...
>
> void handle_err(int errcode) {
> switch(errcode) {
> ...
Hello,
thanks for the reply,
> >static PyObject*
> >mycrypt_encrypt(PyObject *self, PyObject *args)
> >{
> > int cRes = 0;
> > int OutLen = 0;
> >
> > char * url;
> > char * path;
> >
> > if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "ss",&url,&path)) {
>
> Use the "s#" format instead to get
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