On Thursday, January 3, 2019 at 1:49:31 PM UTC-6, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 4, 2019 at 6:46 AM Mohan Mohta wrote:
> >
> > Hello,
> > I am trying to grep the keyword (which I got from report_file ) from
> > report_file
> >
> > I tried multip
Hello,
I am trying to grep the keyword (which I got from report_file ) from report_file
I tried multiple ways but am unable to get it to work.
Below are the methods I tried.
fp=open(txt_file,'r')
for line in fp :
line=line.strip()
var1=line.lower()
g_info=subprocess
a couple of notes on style: the terminating semicolons in your code
> is unnecessary. It's only needed for multiple statements on a single line.
> Please use a single space on each side of a binary operator or assignment -
> it improves readability.
>
> Regards,
>
>
On Monday, September 26, 2016 at 8:08:13 PM UTC-5, MRAB wrote:
> On 2016-09-27 01:34, Mohan Mohta wrote:
> > On Monday, September 26, 2016 at 6:56:20 PM UTC-5, Nathan Ernst wrote:
> >> On Mon, Sep 26, 2016 at 6:00 PM, MRAB wrote:
> >>
> >> > On 2016-09-2
On Monday, September 26, 2016 at 6:56:20 PM UTC-5, Nathan Ernst wrote:
> On Mon, Sep 26, 2016 at 6:00 PM, MRAB wrote:
>
> > On 2016-09-26 23:03, M2 wrote:
> >
> >> Hello
> >> The program is designed to collect different statistics from servers
> >> across the network and populate in excel sheet.
On Wednesday, June 3, 2015 at 5:34:31 PM UTC-5, Waffle wrote:
> You think "(f)" makes a tuple, but it does not.
> the parentesis is not the tuple constructor, the comma is
> try:
> t=thread.start_new_thread(proc,(f,))
Thanks for the pointer waffle.
The program executes now but still not the way I
On Wednesday, June 3, 2015 at 4:01:13 PM UTC-5, Sam Raker wrote:
> proc(f) isn't a callable, it's whatever it returns. IIRC, you need to do
> something like 'start_new_thread(proc, (f,))'
If I execute something like
t=thread.start_new_thread(proc,(f))
I get:
Traceback (most recent call last):
Hello
I am trying to create multiple thread through the below program but I am
getting an error
#! /usr/bin/python
import os
import subprocess
import thread
import threading
from thread import start_new_thread
def proc(f) :
com1="ssh -B "
com2=line.strip('\n')
com3= " un