Response to message [1] on trac.devel (as I cannot write there, due to
an informally applied censorship)
Mr. Boos: "I left that ticket open simply to avoid having someone to
reopen it over
and over..."
(note to reader: this someone is me)
Mr. Boos, the ticket status should reflect reality. So, i
[RESEND answer to all initial groups]
On 16 Öåâ, 19:15, Jeff Schwab <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> > Essence:
> Spam spam spam spam...
> I just looked at your resume.
http://lazaridis.com/resumes/lazaridis.html
(need to update it, lot's o
[RESEND of answer to all initial groups]
On 16 Öåâ, 15:45, Steve Holden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> [...]> Of course I'll not stay with trac, I'll leave the sinking ship, I've
> > prepare long time ago to do so, step by step. An wil
On 16 Φεβ, 15:45, Steve Holden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
>
> [...]> Of course I'll not stay with trac, I'll leave the sinking ship, I've
> > prepare long time ago to do so, step by step. An will migrate step by
> > s
On 16 Φεβ, 19:15, Jeff Schwab <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> > Essence:
>
> Spam spam spam spam...
>
> I just looked at your resume.
http://lazaridis.com/resumes/lazaridis.html
(need to update it, lot's of irrelevant stuff, should focus on
On 16 Φεβ, 15:45, Robert Klemme <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 16.02.2008 13:16, Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
>
>
>
> Oh, it's him again. Please do not respond.
>
> http://dev.eclipse.org/newslists/news.eclipse.foundation/msg00167.html
Thanks, nice message, I
Essence:
* Trac is deficient, cause of "proud to be an egoism driven amateur"
developers
* Python and it's communities is excellent for learning. Not
programming, but to "learn from deficiency", community organization,
transparency, efficiency etc.!
* Do it in perl, if you need something more '
On Dec 23, 2:47 am, Steven D'Aprano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
cybersource.com.au> wrote:
> On Sat, 22 Dec 2007 13:05:23 -0800, Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
> > I've never encountered such items
> > supported by the language.
>
> >OS specific extensions MIGHT supply it...
>
> Picky picky... but of course y
On 22 Δεκ, 09:09, Fredrik Lundh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[...]
> For Python, standard process monitoring tools (combined with a basic
> understanding of how dynamic memory allocation works on modern
> platforms) are usually sufficient to get a good view of an application's
> memory usage patterns
On Dec 21, 3:21 pm, "Diez B. Roggisch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[...]
Please get serious, Mr.!
(and avoid further off-topics)
.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Dec 21, 12:25 pm, Graham Dumpleton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> On Dec 21, 7:42 pm, Ilias Lazaridis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Dec 19, 5:40 am, Ilias Lazaridis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > On Dec 17, 8:41 am, Ilias Lazaridis <[EMAIL PROTECTE
On Dec 19, 5:40 am, Ilias Lazaridis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Dec 17, 8:41 am, Ilias Lazaridis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > How to detect memory leaks of python programms, which run in an
> > environment like this:
>
> > * Suse Linux 9.3
> >
On Dec 18, 9:15 pm, smallpond <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Dec 17, 9:23 pm, Ilias Lazaridis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Essence:
>
> > * Deletion of valid defect reports on trac community resources
>
> > The "WikiInclude" plu
On Dec 17, 8:41 am, Ilias Lazaridis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> How to detect memory leaks of python programms, which run in an
> environment like this:
>
> * Suse Linux 9.3
> * Apache
> * mod_python
>
> The problem occoured after some updates on the infrastructur
On Dec 18, 4:23 am, Ilias Lazaridis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Essence:
>
> * Deletion of valid defect reports on trac community resources
UPDATE:
Instead of fixing the "WikiInclude" in the repo (or at least leave the
ticket open, thus a developer can do it), Mr. Noah
Essence:
* Deletion of valid defect reports on trac community resources
The "WikiInclude" plugin is not recognised on trac 0.11, thus I took a
look an made a small addition to the setup.py (the entry_point).
Other users have the same problem, thus I filed a ticket in the "trac-
hacks" community
How to detect memory leaks of python programms, which run in an
environment like this:
* Suse Linux 9.3
* Apache
* mod_python
The problem occoured after some updates on the infrastructure. It's
most possibly caused by trac and it's dependencies, but several
components of the OS where updated,
Ο/Η Diez B. Roggisch έγραψε:
... (several off-topics)
Please control yourself.
Ï/Ç metaperl:
>>> TurboEntity was quite sweet. Supposedly a complete rewrite as a new
>>> product is on its way though.
Ilias Lazaridis:
>>the first major problem of this rewrite:
>>it
[1]
-
Ο/Η metaperl:
>>> TurboEntity was quite sweet. Supposedly a complete rewrite as a new
>>> product is on its way though.
Ilias Lazaridis:
>>the first major problem of this rewrite:
>>it happens 'silently' (non-public)
Michael Bayer wrote within:
h
Peter Wang wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> > Peter Wang wrote:
> > > Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> > > > what about persistency?
> > >
> > > Um... what about it?
> >
> > "
> > As far as I can see, there's no persistency b
Peter Wang wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> > looks interesting.
>
> Thanks!
>
> > what about persistency?
>
> Um... what about it?
"
As far as I can see, there's no persistency binding available.
Is one planned?
"
http://groups.google.co
Terry Reedy wrote:
> "Ilias Lazaridis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > I share the infrastructure which I use:
> >
> > http://dev.lazaridis.com/base
>
> But not quite yet, it appears. "A public release is planned
Robert Kern wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> > Robert Kern wrote:
> >> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> >>> Robert Kern wrote:
> >>>> No, he's just a troll that enjoys telling everyone what to do. Don't try
> >>>> to get
> >
Peter Decker wrote:
> On 11 Oct 2006 20:08:12 -0700, Ilias Lazaridis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > Well, then, why not contribute? Or are you waiting for everyone else
> > > to do it for you?
> >
> > I've contributed already (my contructive c
Robert Kern wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> > Robert Kern wrote:
>
> >> No, he's just a troll that enjoys telling everyone what to do. Don't try
> >> to get
> >> him to contribute anything useful; it won't work.
> >
> > Mr.
Robert Kern wrote:
> Peter Decker wrote:
> > On 11 Oct 2006 18:56:30 -0700, Ilias Lazaridis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >> yes, an interesting tool.
> >>
> >> But to get more attention and developers, the project needs to be
> &
Peter Decker wrote:
> On 11 Oct 2006 18:56:30 -0700, Ilias Lazaridis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > yes, an interesting tool.
> >
> > But to get more attention and developers, the project needs to be
> > polished.
> >
> > really unattractiv
Peter Decker wrote:
> On 10/10/06, Peter Maas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > I for my part would be happy to see a Delphi-like RAD tool for Python,
> > a reference implementation for web programming as part of the standard
> > library, Jython 2.5, Python for PHP or whatever attracts new programm
Peter Maas wrote:
> Paul Boddie wrote:
> > People who bring up stuff about self and indentation are just showing
> > their ignorance, in my opinion, since Python isn't the first language
> > to use self in such a way, and many C++ and Java programs use this
> > pervasively in order to make attribut
Robert Kern wrote:
> Edward Diener No Spam wrote:
...
> >> You'll definitely want to take a look at Enthought's Traits (disclaimer:
> >> I work for Enthought). I'm supposed to be on vacation now, so I'm not
> >> going to give you the full rundown of Traits and Traits UI, so I'm
> >> simply going t
Peter Maas wrote:
> Bruno Desthuilliers schrieb:
> > Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch wrote:
> > (snip)
> > Python itself is a RAD tool.
> >
> > +1 QOTW
>
> No, please stop self-assuring, self-pleasing QOTWs! This afternoon
> I was in the local book warehouse and went to the computer book
> departme
Ben Finney wrote:
> "Ilias Lazaridis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > As for Mr. Holden... it's not a matter of not respecting you.
> > It is in his nature to babble in this way.
> > Sometimes it's even funny!
>
> Oh my. You have *seriousl
Giovanni Bajo wrote:
> Aahz wrote:
>
> >> Are you ever going to try and make a point which is not "you are not
> >> entitled to have opinions because you do not act"? Your sarcasm is
> >> getting annoying. And since I'm not trolling nor flaming, I think I
> >> deserve a little bit more of respect.
Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> IDLE has an output format like this:
>
> >>> object
>
> >>> type
>
> >>> object.__class__
>
> >>> object.__bases__
>
> How can I customize it to become like that:
>
> >>> object
Gabriel Genellina wrote:
> At Wednesday 27/9/2006 09:29, Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
>
> >import sys
> >def f(obj):
> > if obj:
> > print '::: ' + repr(obj)
> >sys.displayhook = f
>
> Have you tried that? You have to filter out None,
Michael Ströder wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> >
> > You need just 2 active contributors - and the python community, not
> > more
>
> Hmm, this number does not say much. It really depends on the required
> service level and how much time these two people can spend
Richard Brodie wrote:
> "Diez B. Roggisch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> > This is on the same level of interest to the communities of python, ruby &
> > java as the
> > color of my socks this morning - a deep black with cute little skulls
> > imprinted.
>
> I
Ben Finney wrote:
> "Ilias Lazaridis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > I admit it is difficult to detect that this post is in-topic.
> > But it is.
>
> Really, it's not. If you want a voice, you already have your
> website. Mailing lists and other d
Paul McGuire wrote:
> "Ilias Lazaridis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >
> here whatsoever>
>
> WHAT IS THIS CRAP DOING ON THIS NEWSGROUP???!!! IT IS UNWANTED AND
> UNWELCOME!!!
>
> If you want to make som
[For some reason, the newsgroup server seems to not have distributed
the messages yet. Thus posting via groups-google now. first message was
from 2006-09-27, second message from 2006-09-28, both with a CC to Andy
Singleton]
Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
>> CC to
Steve Holden wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> > Giovanni Bajo wrote:
> >
> >>Hello,
> >>
> >>I just read this mail by Brett Cannon:
> >>http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2006-October/069139.html
> >>where the "PSF infr
Robert Kern wrote:
> Giovanni Bajo wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > I just read this mail by Brett Cannon:
> > http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2006-October/069139.html
> > where the "PSF infrastracture committee", after weeks of evaluation,
> > recommends
> > using a non open source tracker (
Giovanni Bajo wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I just read this mail by Brett Cannon:
> http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2006-October/069139.html
> where the "PSF infrastracture committee", after weeks of evaluation,
> recommends
> using a non open source tracker (called JIRA - never heard before o
metaperl wrote:
> I was shocked to see the personal insults hurled in this thread:
> http://groups.google.com/group/comp.lang.python/browse_thread/thread/d0758cb9545cad4b
>
> I have been very pleased with Python developers regardless of skill
> levels in both the IRC channel as well as here - no ho
Gabriel Genellina wrote:
> At Wednesday 27/9/2006 09:29, Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
>
> >import sys
> >def f(obj):
> > if obj:
> > print '::: ' + repr(obj)
> >sys.displayhook = f
>
> Have you tried that? You have to filter out None, not
Gabriel Genellina wrote:
> At Tuesday 26/9/2006 15:29, Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
>
> > > >>> def f(obj):
> > > print '' + repr(obj)
> > >
> > > >>> sys.displayhook = f
> >
> >I've placed this co
James Stroud wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
...
> Well, for example, the output (I'm indenting manually for visual clarity):
>
> >>> print 'bob'
> : bob
> >>> print [i for i in xrange(3)]
> : [0, 1, 2]
>
>
>
James Stroud wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
...
> > I am wondering that other users are not annoyed by this reduced
> > readability.
>
> I'm sure its quite unpopular to agree with you, but I do. I am
> tremendously annoyed the format of the interactive interpreter
Gabriel Genellina wrote:
> At Sunday 24/9/2006 18:55, Robert Kern wrote:
>
> >Anyways, against my better judgement, I will tell you that you can
> >customize the
> >output by replacing sys.displayhook with your own function:
> >
> >http://www.python.org/doc/current/lib/module-sys.html
> >
> >
Robert Kern wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> > Steve Holden wrote:
>
> >> And I am wondering at your continual surprise when the rest of the world
> >> fails to share your perceptions. Doesn't this carry *any* information?
> >
> > not the rest of
Steve Holden wrote:
> Xah Lee wrote:
...
> > This project was undertaken as a response to a challenge put forth to
> > me with a $100 reward, on 2005-04-12 on comp.lang.python newsgroup. I
> > never received the due reward.
> >
> Your reading skills must be terrible. You never received the reward
>
Steve Holden wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> > Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> >
> >>IDLE has an output format like this:
> >>
> >> >>> object
> >>
> >> >>> type
> >>
> >> >>> object.__class__
Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> IDLE has an output format like this:
>
> >>> object
>
> >>> type
>
> >>> object.__class__
>
> >>> object.__bases__
>
> How can I customize it to become like that:
>
> >>> object
IDLE has an output format like this:
>>> object
>>> type
>>> object.__class__
>>> object.__bases__
How can I customize it to become like that:
>>> object
>>> type
>>> object.__class__
>>> object.__bases__
or that:
>>> object
:
>>> type
:
>>> object.__cla
Steve Holden wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
>> Steve Holden wrote:
...
>>> Though of course the easiest way to enforce your classes to new style is
>>> to begin each module with
>>>
>>> __metaclass__ = type
>>
>> I assume placing this in
[followup to c.l.py]
Xah Lee wrote:
> the Python regex documentation is available at:
> http://xahlee.org/perl-python/python_re-write/lib/module-re.html
>
> Note that, i've just made the terms of use clear.
>
> Also, can anyone answer what is the precise terms of license of the
> official python
Paul Boddie wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
... (helpful comments)
> > Have those old style classes any benefits?
>
> That you don't have to write the bizarre conceptual accident that is
> "(object)" when declaring a "top-level" class?
This was most p
Steve Holden wrote:
> Paul Boddie wrote:
> > Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> [...]
> >>Have those old style classes any benefits?
> >
> >
> > That you don't have to write the bizarre conceptual accident that is
> > "(object)" when declaring a
Steve Holden wrote:
> Michele Simionato wrote:
> > (I don't believe I am responding to a notorious troll ...)
> >
> Believe it. You are. Ain't life a bitch? :-)
>
> > One (bad) solution is to write in your sitecustomize.py the following:
> >
> > $ echo /usr/lib/python/sitecustomize.py
> > import __
Fredrik Lundh wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
>
>> note: I am aware about search engines.
>
> but you're incapable of using them, or ?
-
>> I ask for documentation which other developers have found useful
>
> most recent Python books contains good discussion
Ben Finney wrote:
> "Ilias Lazaridis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> Where can I find _compact_ documentation about
>
> Can you tell us what is lacking about the documentation at
> http://www.python.org/doc/> ? Specifically, what problems have
> you f
Another topic [1] has raised the need of a deeper teach-in.
Where can I find _compact_ documentation about
* Differece between New Style / Old Style Classes
Are there any documents available (again: compact ones) which describe
unification attemps subjecting
* New Style Classes
* Old Style C
George Sakkis wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
>
> > I like to add a method "writeDebug(self, msg)" to all (or the most
> > possible) classes in the system.
> >
> > How do I do this?
> >
> > * with new style classes
> > * with old styl
MonkeeSage wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
>> no, I don't know it.
>
> OK...so how do you evaluate a language when you don't know its basic
> operations? Hmmm, sounds fishy.
The learning-process is an important part of the evaluation.
>> how do I define somethi
MonkeeSage wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> > where do I place this function...
>
> The place where you want it to be.
>
> > ...thus it becomes available within class "Foo" and all other Classes?
>
> Anything defined in the top-level (i.e., the sys.module
Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> If I understood things right, setuptools extends the functionality of
> distutils
>
> Thus replacing within a setup.py:
>
> from distutils.core import setup
>
> with
>
> try:
> from setuptools import setup
> except ImportError:
&g
MonkeeSage wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> > How do I do this?
>
> It's easy:
>
> def writeDebug(msg):
> print "I do not debug things, I _evaluate_ with professionals on the
> industries! See ticket 547!\n" \
> "Oh yeah, and %s"
Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> > Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> >> I understand that I can use __metaclass__ to create a class which
> >> modifies the behaviour of another class.
> >>
> >> How can I add this metaclass to *all* classes in
Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> I understand that I can use __metaclass__ to create a class which
> modifies the behaviour of another class.
>
> How can I add this metaclass to *all* classes in the system?
>
> (In ruby I would alter the "Class" class)
I got confus
GinTon wrote:
> EyeDB is a free ODBMS based on the ODMG 3 specification with
> programming interfaces for C++ and Java. It is very powerfull, mature,
> safe and stable. In fact, it was developed in 1992 for the Genome View
> project althought rewritten in 1994, and has been used in a lot of
> bioin
Calvin Spealman wrote:
> On 18 Sep 2006 20:23:03 -0700, Ilias Lazaridis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Steve Holden wrote:
> > > Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> > ...
> > > > http://www-128.ibm.com/developerworks/linux/library/l-pymeta.html
> > > >
&
Steve Holden wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
...
> > http://www-128.ibm.com/developerworks/linux/library/l-pymeta.html
> >
> > I am not so much interested in old-style, as is start production with
> > python 2.4 (possibly even with python 2.5).
> >
>
> The
If I understood things right, setuptools extends the functionality of
distutils
Thus replacing within a setup.py:
from distutils.core import setup
with
try:
from setuptools import setup
except ImportError:
from distutils.core import setup
should have the following behaviour:
* does no
Damjan wrote:
> >> I understand that I can use __metaclass__ to create a class which
> >> modifies the behaviour of another class.
> >>
> >> How can I add this metaclass to *all* classes in the system?
> >>
> >> (In ruby I would alter the "Class" class)
> >
> > You'd have to set
> >
> > __metaclass
I understand that I can use __metaclass__ to create a class which
modifies the behaviour of another class.
How can I add this metaclass to *all* classes in the system?
(In ruby I would alter the "Class" class)
.
http://lazaridis.com
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
> Yah, I've been posting here about three months now. Why, did I miss
> > something? :-)
> >
> Yes: the previous posts from the same poster. Ilias Lazaridis'
> communications can be a little obscure, to say the least, and it's
> apparent that his approach to languag
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hello,
>
> It is a pleasure to announce in this mailing list the newly released
> Dao. This is the first release after the Dao interpreter being
...
> Two modules are also released along with the virtual machine: DaoMySQL
> and DaoPyhon. DaoPython is particularly intere
Maric Michaud wrote:
> Le Vendredi 09 Juin 2006 20:06, Ilias Lazaridis a écrit :
>> the code below works, but has the limitation that I cannot import the
>> syncdb_hook within "django.core.management".
>
> In [4]: from b import CONS
>
> In [5]: import b
>
Slawomir Nowaczyk wrote:
> On Thu, 08 Jun 2006 15:28:39 +0300
> Ilias Lazaridis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> #> *IMPORT*
> #>
> #> I would like to know, if this construct is valid, or if it can
> #> result in problems (that I do not see as a newcomer):
Duncan Booth wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
>
>>> #patch_service.py
>>> from toto import service
>>>
>>> def my_impl(self, *args) :
>>> old_result = self._old_method(*args)
>>> # ...
>>> return new_res
Maric Michaud wrote:
> Le Jeudi 08 Juin 2006 14:28, Ilias Lazaridis a écrit :
>> Another possibility is to enlink (hook?) the functionality into an
>> existent function
>>
>> Is there any way (beside a patch) to alter the behaviour to an existing
>> function. Is t
Duncan Booth wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
>
>> I would like to know, if this construct is valid, or if it can result in
>> problems (that I do not see as a newcomer):
>>
>> 1082try:
>> 1083from django.rework.evolve import evolvedb
Maric Michaud wrote:
> Le Jeudi 08 Juin 2006 15:15, Duncan Booth a écrit :
>> but the more usual way is just to call the original method directly in the
>> base class.
>>
>> class SqliteAdapter(BaseClass):
>> def create_table(self, *args)
>> self.table_evolve(*args)
>> result =
Tim N. van der Leeuw wrote:
[...]
http://case.lazaridis.com/wiki/Please
.
--
http://lazaridis.com
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I have a few small questions subjecting python functionality, most
importantly the "alias_method".
-
*IMPORT*
I would like to know, if this construct is valid, or if it can result in
problems (that I do not see as a newcomer):
1082try:
1083from django.rework.evolve imp
Rene Pijlman wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis:
>> What is the credibility and value of the provided "wikipedia" entry?
>
> Wikipedia always tells the Absolute Truth, because if it doesn't, we can
> edit it and fix it right away.
fascinating!
.
--
http://lazarid
Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
>> What is going on with the pudge project?
>
> Any chance to get an comment on this?
After a little bit off-list discussion, I understand that many python
documentation projects stop at some point, and that efforts are in
g
Steve Holden wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
>> Steve Holden wrote:
>>> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
...
This thread is now technical.
Thank you for your comments.
.
--
http://lazaridis.com
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Brian wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
>
>> http://lazaridis.com
>
> I would agree with you that this is a place to discuss python.
> However, your posts primarily deal with your expulsion from another
> group. Instead of discussing that, why don't your discuss t
Steve Holden wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
>> [Replying to comp.lang.python, due to censorship on Django User]
>> [additional notification of poster via email, as medium is changed]
>>
> And yet you still don't see why people call you a troll?
Mis
[Replying to comp.lang.python, due to censorship on Django User]
[additional notification of poster via email, as medium is changed]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> yep. i feel particularly hosed for trying to work with you offline to
> synchronize our efforts.
I don't think that telling me when yo
Simon Willison wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
>> [posted publicly to comp.lang.python, with email notification to 6
>> recipients relevant to the topic]
>>
>> I have implemented a simple schema evolution support for django, due to
>> a need for a personal projec
Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilias_Lazaridis
What has this "wikipedia" entry to do with the topic here?
What is the credibility and value of the provided "wikipedia" entry?
Let's review the editor's list:
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ilias_Lazaridis&action
[posted publicly to comp.lang.python, with email notification to 6
recipients relevant to the topic]
I have implemented a simple schema evolution support for django, due to
a need for a personal project. Additionally, I've provided an Audit:
http://case.lazaridis.com/wiki/DjangoAudit
As a resu
Xah Lee wrote:
> Thanks to the great many people who has written to my ISP in support of
[...]
> As to dreamhost my webhosting company canceling my account, i will try
> to reason with them, and see what is the final outcome. They have the
> legal right to kick me because in the contract that allo
Tim X wrote:
[...]
> I think the other point here is that everyone *assumes* Xah's account
> was cancelled simply because of a campaign to report him for spamming
> multiple newsgroups. I suspect there were other factors involved. for
> all anyone knows, the provider might have been getting complai
Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> What is going on with the pudge project?
Any chance to get an comment on this?
> Mr. Patrik O'Brien (Orbtech LLC) had told me that there is no similar
> tool available within the python domain, thus I have invested some
> effort to create a Website
crossposted to 5 groups, which are affected by this case.
followup not applicable.
-
I am currently selecting a Hosting Provider / Project Host...
http://case.lazaridis.com/multi/wiki/Host
For this larger scale project...
http://case.lazaridis.com/multi
-
An incident within usenet has remin
What is going on with the pudge project?
Mr. Patrik O'Brien (Orbtech LLC) had told me that there is no similar
tool available within the python domain, thus I have invested some
effort to create a Website template, and to enable pudge to generate
colored code:
http://audit.lazaridis.com/schevo
Mark Shelor wrote:
> Xah Lee wrote:
>
>> Programming languages are religions. For a long while now I've been
...
...
> Is there really something new out there? I would argue that software
> needs innovation more than it needs philosophers.
software needs innovation.
innovation needs philosoph
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