cks
http://whiffdoc.appspot.com/docs/W1100_2200.TreeView
Google App Engine compatibility
http://whiffdoc.appspot.com/docs/W1100_2300.GAEDeploy
And much more.
Please try it out and let me know what you
think. Also, thanks to all for suggestions and other
feedback.
-- Aaron Watters
===
This one goes
ge.net/mechanize/doc.html
It looks like downloading any sort of file and saving it should be
straightforward to me, but I haven't tried it.
Aaron Watters
http://whiffdoc.appspot.com
===
% man less
less is more.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
thon in favor of a less
chaotic platform, like Java or C# or even (got help us) Perl.
I apologize if I pontificate.
-- Aaron Watters
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
regular expressions and such. It's very easy
to understand, develop, debug. This is why I wrote
WHIFF to use a similar but generalized "drop
in" paradigm.
http://whiffdoc.appspot.com
-- Aaron Watters
===
% man less
less is more.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I scripting. I also had to mess
with some directory permissions because my MySQLdb on my
Mac in inside a Python Egg... to get around these sorts
of problems you may have to look at your server error log.
Also please see the WHIFF quickstart for a discussion
of setting up a WSGI/WHIFF based CGI script.
Good luck!
-- Aaron Watters
===
% man less
less is more.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
source at
this link.
http://code.google.com/p/whiff/source/browse/#hg/trunk/test/root/schema
Let me know what you think. If you want to get the source you will
have to
clone the google code mercurial archive (it isn't part of the whiff
release yet).
-- Aaron Watters
===
This
eploy
And much more.
Please try it out and let me know what you
think
-- Aaron Watters
===
This one goes to eleven.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
out the test drive.
http://whiffdoc.appspot.com/docs/W.intro
-- Aaron Watters
===
This one goes to 11.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Sorry, I should have looked harder.
I found this:
http://bugs.python.org/issue1160
It looks exactly like my use case. drat.
-- Aaron Watters http://whiffdoc.appspot.com
===
less is more.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
very large? Do they remain as fast?
Do they display reasonable (linear or n log n) memory
growth? Do they just stop working at some point?
Please reply if you have any experience with very
large regexes or other insights.
Thanks in advance. -- Aaron Watters
===
less is more
--
than full
> academic description.
http://whiffdoc.appspot.com (again) there are lots and lots of
examples.
I hope you like it and have a happy new year! -- Aaron Watters
===
my resolution last year
was not to make any resolutions this year.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
using wave, please add it to a wave and try it out.
It should "respond" to a BNF rule you type in like this one:
program ::= "begin" (statement ";")+ "end" $$
Happy Holidays everyone... I'm off to the slopes :).
-- Aaron Watters
===
an apple ev
gh for you? :)
You are now immortalized in the WHIFF repository
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/cgi-bin/whiffRepo.cgi/rev/6d8c650102dd
Please let me know if anything else offends your
sensibilities.
Thanks again, -- Aaron Watters
===
an apple every 8 hours
will keep 3 doctors away. -- kliban
--
http
or Python or any other programming language. Generally you can
always get to any piece of data in about 4 seeks at most anyway,
so if your disk is fast your app will be fast too. The file can
be accessed concurrently without problems by any number of processes
or threads.
-- Aa
On Dec 9, 1:48 pm, Terry Reedy wrote:
> Aaron Watters wrote:
> > Also the WHIFF documentation is now hosted on Google App
> > Engine at thehttp://whiffdoc.appspot.com/domain.
>
> When I went there and clicked on the "scatter chart is generated by a
> straightforwa
lemented on Google App
Engine using WHIFF.
I hope you like.
-- Aaron Watters
===
Talk low.
Talk slow.
And don't say a lot.
-- John Wayne's advice to Clint Eastwood
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
/
and here
http://listtree.appspot.com/
I hope that helps.
-- Aaron Watters
===
an apple every 8 hours
will keep 3 doctors away. -kliban
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Comparing language platforms using small
numeric benchmarks often completely misses the
point.
-- Aaron Watters
http://whiffdoc.appspot.com
http://listtree.appspot.com
===
an apple every 8 hours will keep 3 doctors
away. - kliban
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
speaking someone should invite Matt Mackall
to give a Python conference keynote. Or how about
Bram Cohen for that matter...
-- Aaron Watters http://listtree.appspot.com/
===
if you want a friend, get a dog. -Truman
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
om/ service is implemented
using WHIFF under the Google App Engine environment.
-- Aaron Watters
===
TO INFINITY... AND BEYOND!
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
running on my laptop is *much* faster.
By the way: the GO language smells like Rob Pike,
and I certainly hope it is more successful than
Limbo was. Of course, if Google decides to really
push it then it's gonna be successful regardless
of all other considerations, just like Sun
did to
le javascript if you want to use this page..."
What is the state of best-practices and such?
-- Aaron Watters
===
she was dirty, flirty / musta been about thirty...
Stones '60s
she was shifty, nifty / musta been about fifty...
Stones '90s
(what rhymes with 80?)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Oct 30, 12:51 pm, Robert Kern wrote:
> On 2009-10-30 11:31 AM, Aaron Watters wrote:
>
> > I know this may be due to simple laziness and negligence,
> > but in that case they should turn moderation off.
>
> That's the funny thing about mailing list problems. I
in particular
-- I'm just making a general observation. Maybe
as Robert suggests I will try comp.lang.python as
a fall back after a few days of nonresponsiveness
in the future...
-- Aaron Watters
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/docs/W1100_2200.TreeView
===
"I'm
line RTFM reply to the poster.
There, I feel better now.
-- Aaron Watters
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/docs/W1100_1600.openFlashCharts
===
If you think you are smart enough
to write multi-threaded programs,
then you're not.-- Jim Ahlstrom
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I built WHIFF :).
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/docs/W1100_2200.TreeView
-- Aaron Watters
===
If all you got is lemons, make lemonade.
-- anon.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Oct 27, 8:16 am, Aaron Watters wrote:
> On Oct 27, 8:02 am, alex23 wrote:
>
> > If you need a full traceback, let me know.
>
> Well, yes, the bottom of the traceback would be more useful :).
>
> -- Aaron Watters
Alex sent me the traceback (thanks!) and after con
On Oct 27, 8:02 am, alex23 wrote:
> If you need a full traceback, let me know.
Well, yes, the bottom of the traceback would be more useful :).
-- Aaron Watters
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Paul Boddie wrote:
> On 27 Okt, 03:49, Aaron Watters wrote:
...
> > http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/GenBankTree/index
>
> This looks interesting, but when I have JavaScript switched off, I get
> a big traceback ...
I just tried it. How do you get a traceback? For me none
On Oct 27, 7:04 am, Paul Boddie wrote:
> On 27 Okt, 03:49, Aaron Watters wrote:
>
>
>
> > WHIFF now includes components for
> > implementing "tree views" for web navigation panes
> > or other purposes, either using AJAX or frame
> &g
aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/GenBankTree/index
http://whiff.sourceforge.net
-- Aaron Watters
===
It gotta be rock-roll music
if you wanna dance with me
if you wanna dance with me
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
at
are shorter and easier to understand. Read
it here:
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/docs/W1100_2050.UrlMapping
WHIFF HOME PAGE: http://whiff.sourceforge.net
I hope you like it! -- Aaron Watters
===
less is more.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Oct 16, 10:35 am, mario ruggier wrote:
> On Oct 5, 4:25 pm, Aaron Watters wrote:
>
> > Occasionally I fantasize about making a non-trivial change
> > to one of these programs, but I strongly resist going further
> > than that because the ORM meatgrinder makes
etween extremely unpleasant and impossible to make any
non-trivial changes to a non-trivial program, especially after
it has been populated with data.
Ok I feel a little better now. Maybe I should get back
to work...
-- Aaron Watters
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/docs/W1100_1200.wwiki
in support for AJAX.
You could probably use this as a starting point for building
your "grid" widget.
I've used WHIFF with jquery and mootools javascript libraries
with much success.
Please let me know what you think.
-- Aaron Watters
===
Ban DHMO!
http://www.dhmo.org/
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
wsgi/wiki/ConfigurationDirectives#WSGIScr...
Thanks. I think this observation makes a liar of me :(.
I'll have to reword the claim. I could split hairs to
assert that this is "not the same" thing, but it's close
enough
-- Aaron Watters
===
Speak roughly to your little boy
o note similarities with
to modpy/publisher and even CGI but
none of these are WSGI components
or infrastructures whereas WHIFF is both a WSGI
component and an infrastructure. So this is
not the counterexample I was looking for.
-- Aaron Watters
===
- She turned me into a newt!
- A newt?
- ...I g
to
correct the statement and my knowledge of what else is out
there is faulty and incomplete, so please correct me.
Thanks, -- Aaron Watters
===
less is more
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
se are very pretty.
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/docs/W1100_1600.openFlashCharts
-- Aaron Watters
===
Tee front:
80 minutes / 16 positions / no protection
back:
Rutgers Rugby
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
script And XML).
Project home page:
http://whiff.sourceforge.net .
Documentation index:
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/docs/W.intro .
I hope you like it!
-- Aaron Watters
===
an apple every 8 hours will keep 3 doctors away
-- kliban
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
IFF is a collection of support services for WSGI
applications which allows applications to be composed
by "dropping" dynamic pages into container directories.
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/docs/W.intro
thanks, -- Aaron Watters
===
Sisyphus got ripped.
--
http://mail.pytho
n the results I want.
(Lucene has this property
too -- you get the results the algorithm wants you to get,
rather than the results you want to get.)
-- Aaron Watters
===
In communism the future is certain,
but the past is ever changing.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Aug 17, 10:05 am, Aaron Watters wrote:
> Just a note. It seems that google groups is increasing the
> sucks coefficient.
I'm having better luck now using the advanced search option
with queries like
gadfly group:comp.lang.python
which become
http://groups.google.com/grou
ng? gmane?
With all the smart people working at google how can they
up like this?
Inquiring minds want to know.
-- Aaron Watters
===
Sisyphus got ripped.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
.
Documentation index:
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/docs/W.intro .
I hope you like it!
-- Aaron Watters
===
% ping elvis
elvis is alive
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
the extra £10-£30 to get the
> latest edition?
This is the best book ever written on computer science
and the first edition is free.
http://www.math.upenn.edu/~wilf/AlgComp3.html
-- Aaron Watters
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/amcharts/doc
===
less is more.
--
http://mail.python.
oked pretty good
too, which I may add sometime.
http://teethgrinder.co.uk/open-flash-chart/
-- Aaron Watters
===
an apple every 8 hours
will keep 3 doctors away. -- kliban
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
F does not provide a "packaged cake mix"
for baking a web application.
Instead WHIFF is designed to provide a set of
ingredients which can be easily combined to make
web applications (with no need to refine your own
sugar or mill your own wheat).
I hope you like it. -- Aaron Watters
===
l
in applets.
Documentation here:
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/amcharts/doc
You can get it from the WHIFF mercurial repository for now.
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/cgi-bin/whiffRepo.cgi
I will upload a tarball to http://whiff.sourceforge.net soonish.
Thanks in advance for any comments.
-- Aaron Watte
ular is pure Python.
Nucular indexes and retrieves data quickly.
Nucular has a funny name.
More information about Nucular including links
to documentation, and releases is available at
http://nucular.sourceforge.net
Thanks: Rene Maurer and Matt Chaput and others
for comments, suggestions, patches.
Regarding feedback about
WHIFF -- WSGI/HTTP Integrated Filesystems Frames
On Apr 23, 3:43 pm, Aaron Watters wrote:
> On Apr 23, 11:54 am, Johannes Bauer wrote:
>
> > To sum it up, I think it's a neat idea, but it's not really intuitive.
> > After being quite sta
te
for my initial thoughts inspired by J.B's comments.
[BTW: I had to back out a handful of mootools coolnesses
because they broke in horrible ways under IE8 -- I
apologize if you saw a blank page or any other weirdness.]
Thanks again! -- Aaron Watters
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/mya
and the
FCK wisiwig editor, checked in
to the repository and demoed in the
documentation, but not tarred up
in a release yet.
At least I'm having fun with it!
-- Aaron Watters
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/docs/W1500.whyIsWhiffCool
===
ban dhmo!
http://www.dhmo.org/
--
http:/
months but I
think I started/restarted 3 times before
I was happy with the basic approach and could
move forward past step (3).
-- Aaron Watters
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/docs/W1500.whyIsWhiffCool
===
Software time estimation rule:
How long could it possibly take?
Double that.
Switch
wledge. I'm looking forward to learning
otherwise. Please don't be too harsh.
-- Thanks, Aaron Watters
===
If all the economists in the world
were placed end to end
they'd still point in different directions.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
etter way to explain what I mean.
-- Aaron Watters ( http://whiff.sourceforge.net )
===
Sisyphus got ripped.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
me testing
the comments feature :) ).
Back in the old days you could at least count on someone yelling
at you about how your design was such a bad idea
-- Aaron Watters
===
HELP! HELP! I'M BEING REPRESSED!
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
There are many other
HTML generation approaches as indicated by the
Wiki link previously. As far as I
know the WHIFF approach is the most "compositional".
Please correct me if I'm wrong.
Thanks, -- Aaron Watters
===
'To join the Guild I had to kill somebody,
cruelly, with no
ns when making this decision?
>
> Thanks!
It looks to me that the two designs
might be useful for different
purposes. What are you trying to do?
-- Aaron Watters
whiff.sourceforge.net
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/root/misc/erdTest
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
king a web application.
Instead WHIFF is designed to provide a set of
ingredients which can be easily combined to make
web applications (with no need to refine your own
sugar or mill your own wheat).
I hope you like it. -- Aaron Watters
===
Why is a giraffe's neck so long?
Because its head is
rmats (the change
was needed to fix a bug).
On Windows XP I had to delete the old
package manually from the Python library
before the install for the new package
would work properly.
I hope you like it.
-- Aaron Watters
===
Fear has several advantages over gratitude.
Gratitude is intrinsical
erms anywhere (full text)
searches for terms within fields, searches for prefixes in fields,
searches
based on field inequality, or searches for field exact value. I would
argue this subsumes the standard "fielded approach".
-- Aaron Watters
===
Oh, I'm a lumberjack and I'
7;m completely confused about any implications related to
integrated system testing or "easyinstall"...
Wise, pragmatic advice would be appreciated. (But if we
could avoid the "buzzillion directories" approach prevalent
in the java alternative universe, that would be nice.)
aranoid,
whereas pickle is a security disaster waiting to happen
unless you are extremely cautious... yet again.
Sorry, I know a even a monkey learns after 3 times...
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FREETEXT=disaster
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
h no bubbling.
It's too bad the Python that comes
installed on Macs doesn't support channels :(.
I know I didn't address your question or comments...
-- Aaron Watters
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FREETEXT=ifdef+stackless
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
variable-width.
You lost me here.
python 2.6:
>>> def (a): a[:]=[x]
File "", line 1
def (a): a[:]=[x]
^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
All the best. -- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FREETEXT=gaping+security+hole
--
http://mail
his using L.sort(cmp) where
cmp is implemented in Python can result in
a significant speed penalty.
What's up with Tim Peters anyway? I haven't
seen much from him for a while.
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FREETEXT=quote+tim+peters
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On May 1, 9:02 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Apr 29, 3:35 pm, Aaron Watters <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > > Thanks for the code, Aaron. I will give it a try.
>
> > > I've been reading some more about cookielib and am not sure whether I
&g
this would make an excellent computer science Master's
Thesis topic. Anybody looking for a topic?
-- Aaron Watters
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FREETEXT=use+while+fresh
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
tes that looked
a little
like this...)
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FREETEXT=slip+nibble
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
possible that my understanding of Django is not
deep enough and that the answer is "Django".
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FREETEXT=you+may+cheat
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
send the cookie header to the client
correctly (if the client is configured to cooperate).
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FREETEXT=default+does+nothing
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
entific data repositories
(not web search forms: downloadable complete data)?
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FREETEXT=valence
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
if cookie == '':
return {}
c = SimpleCookie()
c.load(cookie)
cookiedict = {}
for key in c.keys():
cookiedict[key] = c.get(key).value
return cookiedict
===
All the best. -- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FREETEXT=monster
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
k about it.
Can anyone recommend a good book on Ruby :)?
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FREETEXT=unnecessary+breakage
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
ith no changes (but please
note that I don't write gui stuff, which is less
stable -- I'm speaking of algorithmic and system
libraries).
-- Aaron Watters
===
btw: usage (5) for "shame" in the python source:
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FocusId=463&FREETEXT=shame
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Apr 24, 10:10 am, Paul McGuire <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
> end point applications (I consider maintaining 2 branches to be in the
> "not working" category), but it does NOT WORK for people who maintain
> modules for other people to use, because those people may be on a
> range of Python versions
alty (afaik there isn't).
An alternative is to provide an alternate interface to string.format
so
that you could pass in an object which might emulate a dictionary,
like string.formatDict(D) -- or you could even adopt a shortcut
notation like string % D -- hey there's an idea!
-- Aaron Watt
mple way to translate
my code, I think. I suspect you will find this kind of subtle
issue in many places. Or worse, you won't find it
until after your program has been installed
in production.
It's a damn shame because
if string%dict was just left in it wouldn't be an issue.
Also,
ho have a
"rabbit cage" project -- and if you just pickle
everything you will end up traversing the entire
database, possibly multiple times
to find it. A little old fashioned
database design up front can save you a lot of pain.
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydi
sting code.
I really like developing in Python -- but it's hard
to keep doing it when the growth curve is so slow
and a so many people have deep reservations about it,
inspired in part, justifiably, by nonsense like this.
In fact, I basically stopped. Then I came back. Now
I'm won
ally or accidentally
which means I'll have to carefully rewrite
and retest any code which uses the
new and improved libraries ... and the "deprecated/removed"
libs won't work anymore, so I can't just put them into
my package...
sigh.
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfe
an python" is a "better coding practice". I've seen
it happen.
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FREETEXT=alien
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
e Perl 4 was.
The cost paid for these minor improvements is too high in my
book. But I suppose if it is going to happen do it sooner
rather than later. Just *please* *please* don't
systematically break the pre-existing code base again for a
very long time, preferable ever.
-- Aaron Wat
uld be a good
thing. It seems to have happened in the Perl4->5
migration some years ago. Could happen again.
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FREETEXT=repeatedly+hammer
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
in xrange(1,1):
test = power(10,10)
if __name__=="__main__":
try:
from cProfile import run
except:
from profile import run
for x in range(1, 1):
run("test1()")
all the best! -- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nuc
on environment, ecosystem and community. In the short
term I foresee everything bifurcating into two separate code bases,
and I
think that's a shame, and I don't really see the need.
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FREETEXT=nightmare
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Apr 16, 12:27 pm, Rhamphoryncus <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Apr 16, 6:56 am, Aaron Watters <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > I don't get it. It ain't broke. Don't fix it.
>
> So how would you have done the old-style class to new-style class
>
On Apr 16, 11:15 am, Gabriel Genellina <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 16 abr, 09:56, Aaron Watters <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > In my opinion python's adherence to backwards compatibility
> > has been a bit mythological anyway -- many new python versions
e the basic treatment of strings is totally
different in py3k, it seems.
Maybe there is a secret desire in the Python
community to remain a fringe minority underdog
forever?
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FREETEXT=reap+dead+child
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
istake :) (but I still think full stackless would be
much better, which python seems to be very slowly moving
towards.)
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FREETEXT=nonsense
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igned to stream
results sequentially from disk whenever possible. The one place where
it doesn't do this very well (proximity searches) shows the most
problems with performance (under bad circumstances like searching
for two common words in proximity).
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xf
hink the default behaviour of the gc is
pretty silly. I tend to disable automatic gc and explicitly put in
collections when I know I'm done with some big operation these
days.
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FREETEXT=dumb+slow
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Python installations.
The profile "run" function will run the tests function and print
a report on the timings and counts it found.
More info here:
http://docs.python.org/lib/profile.html
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FREETEXT=emulate+perl
--
ht
On Apr 2, 11:07 am, Paul McGuire <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Can you post a link?
>
> -- Paul
Sorry. It came from private email.
And I don't want to get anyone in trouble...
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FREETEXT=
nd in emergencies
it can save you a lot of pain. But if you use it too often
and too seriously you end up with really big problems.
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FREETEXT=mysterious+objects
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would be a great
idea; it's about time; gotta do something about this
mess...
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FREETEXT=other+surprises
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s to say I feel that they all make me learn
so much about the internals and features of the
O-R mapper itself that I would be better off rolling
my own queries on an as-needed basis without
wasting so many brain cells.
comments?
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro
zarre and surprising results in the illustrated case.
It's a matter of taste of course...
-- Aaron Watters
===
http://www.xfeedme.com/nucular/pydistro.py/go?FREETEXT=mondo+bizarre
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s, delimiter):
for line in lines:
fields = line.split(delimiter)
fields = map(trimQuotes, fields)
yield fields
def test():
lines = ['"t"h"is";"is";"a";"test"']
for fields in simpleCsv(lines, ';'):
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