On Tuesday, May 24, 2016 at 5:47:55 AM UTC-6, thomas povtal.org wrote:
...
>1: I get "RuntimeWarning: tp_compare didn't return -1 or -2 for
>exception". It's a line like:
>
>"if Foo = False:" where Foo is a global variable (global Foo).
...
Are you really using "if Foo = False:"?
If s
On Monday, April 6, 2015 at 11:26:15 PM UTC-6, rah...@gmail.com wrote:
> I have an old project which uses web ware, where i want to convert to latest
> version 3.4
>
> I am wondering whether any webware is available for python version 3.4. What
> I am seeing is the webware version 1.1.1 which is
On Tuesday, January 13, 2015 at 2:03:30 AM UTC-7, brice DORA wrote:
> i consume a web service that return a element whose the type is "instance".
> but this element seem be a dictionary but when i want to use it like a
> dictionary, i got some errors. so this is the element and please someone can
On Wednesday, November 19, 2014 2:08:27 PM UTC-7, Denis McMahon wrote:
> So what I'm looking for is a method to create an html5 document using "dom
> manipulation", ie:
>
> doc = new htmldocument(doctype="HTML")
> html = new html5element("html")
> doc.appendChild(html)
> head = new html5element("
On Tuesday, April 15, 2014 12:32:14 PM UTC-6, Mark H. Harris wrote:
> On 4/14/14 2:32 PM, Phil Dobbin wrote:
> > On a related note, Guido announced today that there will be no 2.8 &
> > that the eol for 2.7 will be 2020.
> >
>
> Can you site the announcement?
>
> Thanks
http://hg.python.org/peps/
On Friday, July 19, 2013 7:22:48 AM UTC-6, Devyn Collier Johnson wrote:
> I have some code that I want to simplify. I know that a for-loop would
>
> work well, but can I make re.sub perform all of the below tasks at once,
> or can I write this in a way that is more efficient than using a for-loo
CoffeeScript maybe? http://jashkenas.github.com/coffee-script
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On Jul 16, 10:58 am, Jason Friedman wrote:
> $ python
> Python 2.6.4 (r264:75706, Dec 7 2009, 18:43:55)
> [GCC 4.4.1] on linux2
> Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> "x.vsd-dir".rstrip("-dir")
>
> 'x.vs'
>
> I expected 'x.vsd' as a return value.
One way to
One single line regex solution would be:
re.sub(r'http\://www.mysite.org/\?page=([^"]+)',r'pages/\1.htm',html)
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Or perhaps more generically:
>>> import re
>>> string = 'scatter "http://.yahoo.com quotes and text anywhere
>>> www.google.com" "www.bing.com" or not'
>>> print re.findall(r'(?:http://|www.)[^"\s]+',string)
['http://.yahoo.com', 'www.google.com', 'www.bing.com']
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Regular expression are very powerful, and I use them a lot in my
paying job (unfortunately not with Python). You are however,
basically using a second programing language, which can be difficult
to master.
Does this give you the desired result?
import re
matches = re.findall('([\d\.,]+)\s*', c
Why is it so many, so called high tech companies, insist on the 19th
century practice of demanding an employee's physical presence in a
specific geographic location.
This is the 21st century with climate change, carbon footprints,
broadband internet, telecommuting, tele-presence, telephones, fax
m
How about:
print ('%s ' + '%-5.4f ' * 7) % ('text',1,2,3,4,5,6,7)
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