Hi!
I've go a script which uses python requests
(http://docs.python-requests.org/en/latest/).
I need to add to it socks proxy feature.
AFAIK requests doesn't support socks proxy
(http://stackoverflow.com/questions/12601316/how-to-make-python-requests-work-via-socks-proxy)
so i was about to sw
On Friday, September 21, 2012 3:04:02 PM UTC+2, Tarek Ziadé wrote:
> On 9/21/12 2:14 PM, xliiv wrote:
>
> >
>
> > Python Paste is probably what you are looking for - see
>
> >
>
> > http://lucasmanual.com/mywiki/PythonPaste for example
>
> > I
On Friday, September 21, 2012 1:08:23 PM UTC+2, Tarek Ziadé wrote:
> On 9/21/12 12:07 PM, xliiv wrote:
>
> > Like the topic.. . I found this:
>
> >
>
> > http://learnpythonthehardway.org/book/ex46.html
>
> >
>
> > it seems fine, but s
On Friday, September 14, 2012 12:55:06 PM UTC+2, Laszlo Nagy wrote:
> > but when i lookup tg in a paper table (last decade math book) i've got
> > these values:
>
> >
>
> > tg(63'10'') = 1.9768
>
> > tg(63'20'') = 1.9912
>
> > tg(63'30'') = 2.0057
>
> >
>
> > For me python should return some
I do some math with python:
import math as m
m.degrees(m.atan(2))
>>> 63.43494882292201
but when i lookup tg in a paper table (last decade math book) i've got these
values:
tg(63'10'') = 1.9768
tg(63'20'') = 1.9912
tg(63'30'') = 2.0057
For me python should return something more like 63'2x'' th
On Tuesday, May 22, 2012 2:45:11 AM UTC+2, alex23 wrote:
> On May 22, 3:00 am, xliiv wrote:
> > Now I know that my 'solution' is not a solution and problem still bugs me.
> > Any ideas how to deal with it?
>
> I haven't tried it but this thread talks about be
On Monday, May 21, 2012 6:38:34 AM UTC+2, alex23 wrote:
> On May 18, 6:22 pm, xliiv wrote:
> > Like the topic, more details in followed links..
> > http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10637450/how-to-hide-console-with-...
>
> Try replacing all of your code with something sim
> > Seems like an awfully obtuse way of doing things -- I don't really
> > want to have 15 different copies of Python (or even links), and it
> > requires root privleges every time you want to run a Python program
> > with the "correct" name.
>
> Why do you need root? Can't you copy / link into y
> >> Like the topic.. .
> >> I use Python a lot, both Windows and Linux, and it's little weird to have
> >> many python process without fast distinction which is what.
> >
> > I've no idea if it's even possible on Windows. On Linux, what you want
> > is the prctl function, which (AFAIK) isn't dire
> >> Like the topic.. .
> >> I use Python a lot, both Windows and Linux, and it's little weird to have
> >> many python process without fast distinction which is what.
> >
> > I've no idea if it's even possible on Windows. On Linux, what you want
> > is the prctl function, which (AFAIK) isn't dire
Like the topic.. .
I use Python a lot, both Windows and Linux, and it's little weird to have many
python process without fast distinction which is what.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
There is many packaging solutions for python.
I was confused about that but it's nothing. I had to pick one of them.
I picked distutils because it's part of standard python since 3.3, am
i right?
My goal is to write setup.py with this feature: 'download required
package if not installed already, li
On May 28, 3:20 am, globalrev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> tried all kinds of combos to get this to work.
>
> http://docs.python.org/lib/module-HTMLParser.html
>
> from HTMLParser import HTMLParser
>
> class MyHTMLParser(HTMLParser):
>
> def handle_starttag(self, tag, attrs):
> print "E
On May 11, 4:19 am, John Salerno <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I know it's popular and very handy, but I'm curious if there are purists
> out there who think that using something like:
>
> for x in range(10):
> #do something 10 times
>
> is unPythonic. The reason I ask is because the structure o
On May 9, 11:52 am, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Maybe it's also harder to read than this::
>
> print '-'.join(map(str, time.localtime()[:3]))
I like this concept, it's so, .. ziped :)
> Of course, if you don't mind the extra padding zeroes in day and month::
>
> prin
I started playing with Python and love it since the very beginning,
programming using Python is so ...human-like? but one thing returns to
me almost everytime when I see/write the code
Let's take a look at two ways of thinking...
the standard one which is well-known and loved by almost everyone :
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