http://www.djangosites.org/
Instagram, Pinterest, Washington Post, and The Onion all use djangoto
run their websites.
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1906795/what-are-some-famous-websites-built-in-django
Django is of course a very highly-regarded web framework written in
python, but there are
Having a conference during the summer is generally more expensive,
because you have to compete with tourists for lodging and such. For
this reason, summer-time conventions are often in places where nobody
wants to be during the summer, like Phoenix.
That said, Santa Clara probably isn't a cheap l
In case the rest of the email didn't make it obvious, everything you
quoted me on was sarcasm. I know those things can't be done, and I
explained why they can't and shouldn't be done.
Michael
On Thu, Jul 26, 2012 at 5:16 AM, Devin Jeanpierre
wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 26, 2
It's not uncommon for "pass" to be referred to as a control statement,
although I see your point that it isn't exerting as much control over
the flow of execution as others. As further evidence, this doc
categorizes it as a "statement" within "flow control tools":
http://docs.python.org/tutorial/c
If we want pass(), then why not break() and continue()? And also
def() and class()? for(), while(), if(), with(), we can make them all
callable objects!
Except that they are control statements. They are not objects, they
have no type, and they can never be evaluated in an expression. And
most
Please consider batching this data and doing larger writes. Thrashing
the hard drive is not a good plan for performance or hardware
longevity. For example, crawl an entire FQDN and then write out the
results in one operation. If your job fails in the middle and you
have to start that FQDN over,
What are you keeping in this status file that needs to be saved
several times per second? Depending on what type of state you're
storing and how persistent it needs to be, there may be a better way
to store it.
Michael
On Sun, Jul 8, 2012 at 7:53 AM, Christian Heimes wrote:
> Am 08.07.2012 13:2
The last three lines print the return value from the "get_numbers"
function, which isn't returning anything. In python, the default
return value is None, and that's why you're seeing it.
Michael
On Thu, Jun 21, 2012 at 11:42 PM, Xander Solis wrote:
> Hello Python list,
>
> Noob here with a newb
Let udev run your script when the appropriate device is connected.
http://www.reactivated.net/writing_udev_rules.html
Then you just need to run an ssh command against the correct mount point.
Honestly, python might be overkill for this. Consider writing a very
small bash script.
Michael
On Fr
>>> import logging
>>> logging.Logger.manager.loggerDict
{}
>>> logging.getLogger('foo')
>>> logging.getLogger('bar')
>>> logging.Logger.manager.loggerDict
{'foo': , 'bar':
}
Enjoy,
Michael
On Thu, Jun 14, 2012 at 5:03 PM, Roy Smith wrote:
> Is there any way to get a list of all the loggers th
Which makes total sense. If any user could directly read the entire
contents of the disk, filesystem permissions would be useless.
Michael
On Mon, Jun 4, 2012 at 4:14 AM, Xia wrote:
> so only root or accounts in group disk can access /dev/sda1,
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pytho
http://www.virtualenv.org/
You can install multiple versions of the python interpreter in ubuntu
without issue. You can use virtualenv to maintain different site
packages for whatever purposes you need.
Michael
On Wed, May 30, 2012 at 4:38 PM, wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> For various reasons, I would
I'm surprised nobody beat me to posting this:
>>> def foo(stuff=[]):
... stuff.append('bar')
... print stuff
...
>>> foo()
['bar']
>>> foo()
['bar', 'bar']
>>> foo()
['bar', 'bar', 'bar']
On Wed, Apr 4, 2012 at 6:34 PM, Miki Tebeka wrote:
> Greetings,
>
> I'm going to give a "Python Gotcha's"
This is not a gotcha, and it's not surprising. As John described,
you're assigning a new value to an index of a tuple, which tuples
don't support.
a[0] += [3]
is the same as
a[0] = a[0] + [3]
which after evaluation is the same as
a[0] = [1, 3]
You can always modify an item that happens to be
m my laptop
> using imaplib.IMAP4_SSL() without the VPN turned on.
>
> Thank you,
>
> Julien
>
> On Apr 2, 3:10 pm, Michael Hrivnak wrote:
>> That method uses the default port 993. Can you connect to that port
>> at all from your computer? For example, try using a teln
That method uses the default port 993. Can you connect to that port
at all from your computer? For example, try using a telnet client.
Michael
On Sat, Mar 31, 2012 at 1:39 AM, Julien wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm able to connect to an Exchange server via SMTP and IMAP from my
> iPhone using SSL and w
Pickle cannot pickle a reference to an instance method. So the
problem is that self.myDict has values which are references to
instance methods.
Without questioning what this is trying to do or why (I assume it's a
proof of concept), here is a way to make it picklable:
http://pastebin.com/1zqE52mD
What is the output of:
>>> os.path.exists("C:\Users\조창준\Desktop\logs\2011-07-03")
? One possible issue here is that for some reason os.path.isdir()
can't even access the directory either because of permissions,
misinterpretation of the path, or some other reason.
Michael
2011/7/19 Nulpum :
> I
Multiple clients reading from and writing to a central collection of
related data is a problem that has been largely solved. Use a
database, and have the clients act on it with transactions. There's
no reason to re-invent the wheel.
You could have the clients connect to the database directly ove
Dodgy medium? Such as? I just avoid sending code over any medium
that is going to change the text in any way. Are you sending it with
an instant messenger client or something? There are lots of ways,
some very convenient, to transfer files without them being modified.
If you need to quickly sha
Was tried at least once before:
http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0287/
Check in here with your ideas:
http://www.python.org/community/sigs/current/doc-sig/
Have any other languages mandated the use of a specific documentation markup?
Michael
On Thu, Jul 14, 2011 at 7:02 PM, rantingrick wrote
the language to accommodate your
refusal to follow the most basic best practices.
Best of luck,
Michael
On Sun, Jul 10, 2011 at 10:35 PM, rantingrick wrote:
> On Jul 10, 7:31 pm, Michael Hrivnak wrote:
>> It sounds to me like you need a better IDE, better documentation,
>> and/or
It sounds to me like you need a better IDE, better documentation,
and/or better code to work on and use. I don't understand why it's
difficult to look at a derived class as see what methods are
overridden. If you are working on the code, it is quite obvious what
methods exist in the base class.
In order to find the end of the packet, include a field that is the
packet length. This is what IP packets do to find the end of their
header.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPv4#Header
And the TCP header (see "data offset") does the same:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transmission_Control_Protoco
That would be a help to you, and
a way to give back to the open source community.
Best of luck,
Michael
On Fri, Jun 24, 2011 at 6:17 AM, saurabh verma wrote:
> Michael Hrivnak wrote:
>>
>> The latest libcurl includes the CURLOPTS_RESOLVE option
>> (http://curl.haxx.se/libcur
There are many open-source options that you should consider before
deciding to write your own. For example, Satchmo:
http://www.satchmoproject.com/
Also, don't be afraid to integrate with something not written in
python. If you can find something with a nice API that meets your
needs, it's proba
Why not use one of the many projects and products that are designed to
store email? Do you have a special reason for wanting to implement
your own email storage?
I'm thinking that you can use fetchmail with your favorite mail store,
and you won't need to write any code at all.
http://fetchmail.b
On Sat, Jun 18, 2011 at 1:26 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
> SSL certificates are good, but they can be stolen (very easily if the
> client is open source). Anything algorithmic suffers from the same
> issue.
This is only true if you distribute your app with one built-in
certificate, which does indee
The latest libcurl includes the CURLOPTS_RESOLVE option
(http://curl.haxx.se/libcurl/c/curl_easy_setopt.html) that will do
what you want. It may not have made its way into pycurl yet, but you
could just call the command-line curl binary with the --resolve
option. This feature was introduced in ve
Python is great for automating sysadmin tasks, but perhaps you should
just use rsync for this. It comes with the benefit of only copying
the changes instead of every file every time.
"rsync -a C:\source E:\destination" and you're done.
Michael
On Fri, Jun 17, 2011 at 1:06 AM, John Salerno wrot
Authentication by client SSL certificate is best.
You should also look into restricting access on the server side by IP address.
Michael
On Sat, Jun 18, 2011 at 7:34 AM, mzagu...@gmail.com wrote:
> Hello Folks,
>
> I am wondering what your strategies are for ensuring that data
> transmitted to
Your function only works if n is an integer. Example:
>>> num_digits(234)
3
>>> num_digits(23.4)
325
When doing integer division, python will throw away the remainder and
return an int. Using your example of n==44, 44/10 == 4 and 4/10 == 0
Before each iteration of the while loop, the given exp
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