You have a lot of assignment statements, but nothing that produces output. Try
adding statements like this at appropriate places...
print ("bool_one = ", bool_one)
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
pyfdate -- http://www.ferg.org/pyfdate/
from pyfdate import Time
w = Time(2013,1,2) # start with January 2, 2013, just for example
# print the ISO weeknumber and date for 52 weeks
# date looks like this: October 31, 2005
for i in range(52):
w = w.plus(weeks=1)
print (w.weeknumber, w.d)
On Tuesday, December 11, 2012 10:48:53 AM UTC-5, bitbucket wrote:
>
> I noticed that the argument type is different for the out param (16392
> instead of 8). However, it doesn't appear to me that its generating return
> values instead of args (though I'm not very experi
On Monday, December 10, 2012 8:16:43 PM UTC-5, Mark Hammond wrote:
> "out" params are best supported if the object supplied a typelib - then
> Python knows the params are out and does the right thing automagically.
> If out params are detected, the result of the function will be a tuple
> of (
On Tuesday, December 11, 2012 3:42:35 AM UTC-5, Paul Kölle wrote:
> Before switching technologies I'd check if this solves your problem
>
> http://geekswithblogs.net/Lance/archive/2009/01/14/pass-by-reference-parameters-in-powershell.aspx
>
>
> TL;DR IMHO "out" parameters are basically pointer
On Monday, December 10, 2012 3:58:33 PM UTC-5, Terry Reedy wrote:
> I believe the easiest way to do that is to install the pywin extensions
>
> http://sourceforge.net/projects/pywin32/?source=directory
>
> I assume it can handle out params.
That definitely looks like a good starting point. Just
I have an existing Windows application which provides an OLE Automation
(IDispatch) interface. I'm not able to change that interface. I'd like to
call it from a scripting language. I figure this would provide a nice quick
way to invoke on the app.
I initially tried this with Windows Powershe
Problem solved
Yinon's messages prompted me to take another look at my own code
(below). I realized that in the batch file I am looking for pydoc.py
in different locations for Python25 and Python26, but I am executing
python.exe without changing the path. Which means that I am executing
the same
Has anybody encountered problems running pydoc with version 2.6.1?
I'm getting an error message that pydoc cannot import namedtuple
(details below).
(I'm running under 64-bit Windows Vista, although that probably is not
important.)
Here's my batch file, pydoc_test.bat:
===
I'm looking for tips on installing and running Python version 2.6 and
version 3.0 together on same Windows machine.
I'd like to install both 2.6 and 3.0 together on the same Windows
(Vista) machine, so I can test programs under both versions.
Is it possible to install both versions on the same Wi
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