On Sat, 15 Jul 2006 23:52:10 +0200, Sybren Stuvel wrote:
> Elmo Mäntynen enlightened us with:
>> Only locally. I want to be able to read/write to a single file from
>> multiple possibly parallel processes. Would 'touch lock' (or
>> something like that) work re
On Sat, 15 Jul 2006 23:28:21 +0200, Sybren Stuvel wrote:
> Elmo Mäntynen enlightened us with:
>> Is there something better than using fnctl? It seems a bit
>> intimidating with a quick look.
>
> Locking files is a complex business. What do you want to lock? Why?
> Lock
Is there something better than using fnctl? It seems a bit intimidating
with a quick look.
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On Thu, 06 Jul 2006 19:41:32 +, elmo wrote:
> I guess it could be a new MySQLdb issue causing breakage.
>
Replying to self, this is *very* close to the problem:
http://sourceforge.net/tracker/index.php?func=detail&aid=1438913&group_id=22307&atid=374932
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On Thu, 06 Jul 2006 19:16:53 +0200, Stefan Behnel wrote:
>>
>> Is there a correct way to handle text input from a when the page is
>> utf-8 and that input is going to be used in SQL statements? I've tried
>> things like (with no success):
>> sql = u"select * from blah where col='%s'" % input
>
Hello, after two days of failed efforts and googling, I thought I had
better seek advice or observations from the experts. I would be grateful
for any input.
We have various small internal web applications that use utf-8 pages for
storing, searching and retrieving user input. They have worked fine
z.ala()
> File "k.py", line 14, in ala
> ludzik.l()
> TypeError: unbound method l() must be called with ludzik instance as
> first argument (got nothing instead)
>
>
> i would be gratefull for resolving this problem for me
Elmo
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On Fri, 12 Aug 2005 12:44:11 -0700, Talin wrote:
> I want to make a dictionary that acts like a class, in other words,
> supports inheritance: If you attempt to find a key that isn't present,
> it searches a "base" dictionary, which in turn searches its base, and so on.
>
> Now, I realize its f
On Mon, 25 Jul 2005 21:15:36 +0300, Elmo Mäntynen wrote:
> On Mon, 25 Jul 2005 16:51:05 +0200, Johannes Findeisen wrote:
>
>> On Mon, 2005-07-25 at 17:23 +0300, Elmo Mäntynen wrote:
>>> I want to encode a plaindigest or a hexdigest in base 32. Any hints?
>>
>>
On Mon, 25 Jul 2005 16:51:05 +0200, Johannes Findeisen wrote:
> On Mon, 2005-07-25 at 17:23 +0300, Elmo Mäntynen wrote:
>> I want to encode a plaindigest or a hexdigest in base 32. Any hints?
>
> Search Google for "python base32" isn't as hard...
>
> Firs
I want to encode a plaindigest or a hexdigest in base 32. Any hints?
Elmo
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On Sat, 23 Jul 2005 23:27:44 +0200, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch wrote:
> In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Elmo Mäntynen wrote:
>
>> I know how to make a hash(using mhash), but instead of encoded as hex I
>> want it in base32 for use with the bitzi catalog. python-bitzi is u
I know how to make a hash(using mhash), but instead of encoded as hex I
want it in base32 for use with the bitzi catalog. python-bitzi is useful
but way too slow for just getting the hash of a file(am going to use it
elsewhere). Thanks.
Elmo
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On Fri, 15 Jul 2005 09:50:38 -0700, uche.ogbuji wrote:
> I'd say for now if you just need quick RDF parsing, and you're not also
> using plain XML, and stuff like Versa RDF query language aren't
> important to you, you'll get along just fine with rdflib.
Thanks for the insight!
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I was wondering about the differences with the referred libs and servers.
Since the documentation isn't so thorough(and a bit because of my laziness),
I thought I'd make request for usage accounts etc. stating the pros and
cons of the aforementioned. Any notes would be appreciated.
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On Wed, 13 Jul 2005 16:55:32 -0700, Chris wrote:
> Fantastic. May I ask what you are hoping to use it for?
>
> I checked out Scientific python:
> http://starship.python.net/~hinsen/ScientificPython/
>
> It has a module with multivariate polynomials with support for a good
> functionality but I t
On Wed, 13 Jul 2005 23:25:46 +0300, Elmo Mäntynen wrote:
> On Wed, 13 Jul 2005 23:22:01 +0300, Elmo Mäntynen wrote:
>
>> On Wed, 13 Jul 2005 15:49:27 +0300, Elmo Mäntynen wrote:
>>
>>> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
>>> Hash: SHA1
>>>
>>
On Wed, 13 Jul 2005 23:22:01 +0300, Elmo Mäntynen wrote:
> On Wed, 13 Jul 2005 15:49:27 +0300, Elmo Mäntynen wrote:
>
>> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
>> Hash: SHA1
>>
>> I'm interested in various metadata
>> extraction/prosessing/distr
On Wed, 13 Jul 2005 15:49:27 +0300, Elmo Mäntynen wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> I'm interested in various metadata
> extraction/prosessing/distribution/something tools(including ways of
> differentiating between files, eg hashing etc
On Tue, 12 Jul 2005 18:56:30 -0700, Chris wrote:
> Does anyone know of a good standalone implementation of multivariable
> polynomials in python?
>
> Thanks,
> Chris
I'm interested also, and am posting this in the hope that being now a
multipostthread with a plus sign next to it, someone more kn
On Wed, 13 Jul 2005 15:49:27 +0300, Elmo Mäntynen wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> I'm interested in various metadata
> extraction/prosessing/distribution/something tools(including ways of
> differentiating between files, eg hashing etc
tiating
eg. image recognition. I'm already aware of these: python-bitzi,
python-musicbrainz, mmpython, IMDbPY, python-mhash and imgSeek. If you
could point me to other relating resources it would be great.
Elmo
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Version: GnuPG v1.4.1 (GNU/Linux)
Comment: Using GnuPG w
ve is correct, you should append the pythonpath with
c:\Python24\ and refer to the wanted .py with Examples.PP2E.launchmodes.
As such the import statement obviously should be "from
Examples.PP2E.launchmodes import PortableLauncher". If the above isn't
the case and there is still
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Peter Hansen wrote:
> Заур Шибзухов wrote:
>
>> There is a syntactic sugar for item access in
>> dictionaries and sequences:
>>
>> o[e] = v <-> o.__setitem__(e, v)
>> o[e] <-> o.__getitem__(e)
>>
>> where e is an expression.
>>
>> There is no similar
to be new
with programming with python and thought of sharing this with you. You
have maybe read something like this before from a book or tutorial(there
are a couple of good free books for learning python, for example "byte
of python"), but good commenting and the like are usual
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This is the case:
>>> n=(100,) tuple(*n)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "", line 1, in -toplevel-
tuple(*n)
TypeError: iteration over non-sequence
To be sure I searched for ways to check if something is a sequence:
>>> n.__iter__().n
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