Oh, man, it has been a while. The last one I remember is PEP 404 (if you
can find it :) ), dated 2011 and it wasn't an April Fool's...
On Sat, Apr 1, 2023 at 11:23 AM Skip Montanaro
wrote:
> Just wanted to throw this out there... I lament the loss of waking up on
> April 1st to see a creative A
On Mon, Dec 16, 2019 at 7:02 PM Bill Deegan
wrote:
> - EXPERIMENTAL NEW FEATURE: Enable caching MSVC configuration
> If SCONS_CACHE_MSVC_CONFIG shell environment variable is set,
> SCons will cache the results of past calls to vcvarsall.bat to
> a file; integrates with exist
Get Outlook for Android<https://aka.ms/ghei36>
From: Eric Gonzalez
Sent: Thursday, December 12, 2019 9:35:40 PM
To: python-list@python.org
Subject: Problem installing pygame
Hello, with the above mentioned i am having some serious problems wi
On Sat, Jan 27, 2018 at 2:02 PM, Barry Warsaw wrote:
> please welcome your next release manager…
>
> Łukasz Langa!
Congrats, Łukasz! (or condolences? )
-eric
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> click.echo(u'Hello World')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "", line 1, in
File "C:\Users\eric\my_env\lib\site-packages\click\utils.py", line
259, in echo
file.write(message)
File "C:\Users\eric\my_env\lib\site-package
directory with different VS directories in the source tree, now it isn't
there any more.
Thanks,
~Eric
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On 1/5/2017 7:48 PM, Michael Torrie wrote:
> While Python can do that, using a web framework to process HTTP requests
> and generate HTML to display in the browser, I don't believe Python is
> the appropriate language for the task at hand. Most web sites that do
> interactive formula calculations
On 11/28/2016 2:02 PM, Amirouche Boubekki wrote:
> Also, FWIW users are looking for a Javascript replacement that is real
> Python, not another coffeescript.
does this count? http://brython.info/
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ant to publish a couple of
things that I found useful. My creations tend to be single file modules
or commands and what I hope to understand from your guidance is how to
bundle that single file module or standalone program for publication.
--- eric
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 11/2/2016 2:40 PM, Chris Warrick wrote:
> Because, as the old saying goes, any sufficiently complicated Bottle
> or Flask app contains an ad hoc, informally-specified, bug-ridden,
> slow implementation of half of Django. (In the form of various plugins
> to do databases, accounts, admin panels
On 11/2/2016 12:15 PM, Chris Warrick wrote:
> SimpleHTTPServer is meant to be used for development and testing. It
> should not be used for anything remotely serious for security and
> speed reasons.
Given that many people are trying to use SimpleHTTPServer for
"production" should teach us that
On 9/11/2016 10:26 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
> No, God isn't part of the universe, any more than an author is part of
> his novel.
>
as any fiction writer will tell you, the author is found in one or more
of their characters.
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On 8/27/2016 7:28 PM, ROGER GRAYDON CHRISTMAN wrote:
> Your response is appreciated. I just thought I'd comment a little more on
> the
> script:
>
> Woman: I'm not a witch! I'm not a witch!
>
> V: ehh... but you are dressed like one.
>
> W: They dressed me up like this!
>
> All: naah no we
Hi Pythoners
I need help in understanding hoe to put up the code to the following command
- Create a constructor that takes in an integer and assigns this to a
`balance` property
Regards,
Eric Kago
+254(0)714249373
Nairobi
Kenya
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On 6/3/2016 12:02 AM, Muhammad Ali wrote:
> On Friday, June 3, 2016 at 6:27:50 AM UTC+8, Eric S. Johansson wrote:
>> On 6/2/2016 2:03 PM, Joel Goldstick wrote:
>>> Although the OP is using Windows 7, according to recent articles,
>>> Ubuntu is teaming with MS for Windows
On 6/2/2016 2:03 PM, Joel Goldstick wrote:
> Although the OP is using Windows 7, according to recent articles,
> Ubuntu is teaming with MS for Windows 10 to include a bash shell,
> presumably with the package management of Ubuntu (debian), with pip
> goodness and virtualenv and virtualenvwrapper.
On 6/2/2016 12:38 PM, Wildman via Python-list wrote:
> On Thu, 02 Jun 2016 04:22:45 -0700, Muhammad Ali wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I use windows regularly, however, I use linux for only my research work at
>> supercomputer. In my research field (materials science) most of the scripts
>> are being writ
ll related, tried all
combinations of firewall. here are the links to the error logs. any help would
be appreciated.
-eric
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1V_1BrmKdCMOwXH9Lt4Zl2xlXp8wkM-sjcrteSRzkucM/pub
Python 3.5.1 (32-bit)_20160503210453_000_core_JustForMe.log
| |
I was inspired by the thread on packaging practices discussion with
bidict to ask a related question which is what are the best practices
with packaging/releasing a single file Python module ?
Back story: I'm always creating little bits of useful code that I want
to reuse (for example, recursi
On 3/30/2016 9:09 AM, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Thu, Mar 31, 2016 at 12:06 AM, Eric S. Johansson wrote:
I need a co-conspirator with better hands than mine to get through the next
stage which is some form of an AST smart editor that operates on larger
chunks such as idioms or snippets in a
On 3/30/2016 6:21 AM, BartC wrote:
On 30/03/2016 11:07, Sven R. Kunze wrote:
On 30.03.2016 01:29, Eric S. Johansson wrote:
On 3/29/2016 6:05 AM, Sven R. Kunze wrote:
Python = English
As someone who writes English text and code using speech recognition,
I can assure you that Python is
On 3/29/2016 6:05 AM, Sven R. Kunze wrote:
Python = English
As someone who writes English text and code using speech recognition, I
can assure you that Python is not English. :-)
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the install of the basic 2.7 seems to go ok but when installing the win32
extensions, I get:
close failed in file object destructor:
sys.excepthook is missing
lost sys.stderr
I've tried installing as administrator but no joy. what should I try next?
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On Tue, Sep 1, 2015 at 12:20 PM, Marko Rauhamaa
wrote:
Steven D'Aprano :
I believe that Marko is wrong. It is not so easy to compile Python
to
machine language for real machines. That's why the compiler targets
a
virtual machine instead.
Somehow Guile manages it even though Scheme is
- Original Message -
From: "Irmen de Jong"
Eric, if you're concerned about performance, Pyro4 (the source
distribution) comes with
several examples that do simple performance related tests. You could
run these and see
what figures you get on your setup to see i
it
needs to be relatively light because execution time does have an influence on
recognition accuracy and speed.
thanks in advance
--- eric
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https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
ence count increases by 2. This could very well be by design of the
DataFrame object doing some internal caching of the string, but does not appear
in the documentation, so I thought I would bring up the issue.
Thanks,
Eric Edmond
University of Michigan | Class of 2016
--
https://mail.python.o
I am trying to better understand the built-in python3 web server functionality
and have just started reading the documentation.
There seem to be two options provided by Python 3.
1.
wsgiref
https://docs.python.org/3/library/wsgiref.html
2.
http.server
https://docs.python.org/3/library/http.ser
On 05/22/2015 03:50 PM, Laura Creighton wrote:
In a message of Fri, 22 May 2015 12:29:20 -0400, "Eric S. Johansson" writes:
2 needs. first is determining if NaturallySpeaking injects keycodes or
ascii char into the windows input queue. second is building a test
widget to capture a
, is in
yrs of programming, I've never written a GUI interface so I have no idea
where to start. help, tutor, pointers to samples would be most welcome.
--- eric
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
creator
seem to subscribe to the build-and-toss-into-the-wild school of development.
http://buzhug.sourceforge.net/
http://www.pydblite.net/en/index.html
both are useful, both could use multi-writer support, and both need some
love from the python world.
--- eric
--
https://mail.python.org
Yes yes, it's a broadbrush that you can probably slap me with. :-)
Oh and before I forget does anyone know how to contact Eric who was developing
that accessible speech driven IDE? Thanks
Well, you could try looking in a mirror and speaking my name three times
at midnight But you would get b
m first being a framework where I can add speech
driven UI elements to an editor so I can start experimenting with a
bunch of these pieces.
Another way you can help is be my hands. sometimes I just run out of
hand time and it takes a while for me build up enough energy so I can
spend
On 1/5/2015 3:12 AM, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Mon, Jan 5, 2015 at 6:43 PM, Eric S. Johansson wrote:
The obvious answer is saving that meta-information in conjunction with the
code but when working in a team environment, that information is going to
drive you handies up the wall because it
hard problem. So thoughts, ideas would be
welcome. Don't worry about giving me old ideas that have been looked at
and rejected because you may have a take on it that I haven't seen
considered and it's worth trying.
Thank you for reading this far. I know it's a long m
27;)
session.storbinary('STOR Bkup.tar.gz', file)
file.close()
session.quit()
Thanks!
Eric
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On 8/14/2014 7:19 PM, Denis McMahon wrote:
On Wed, 13 Aug 2014 07:39:20 -0400, Eric S. Johansson wrote:
you are clear but also missing a really good reason to break captchas.
handicapped accessibility. Captchas are a huge barrier to access and in
many cases push disabled users away from
On 8/14/2014 2:37 PM, Peter Pearson wrote:
On Wed, 13 Aug 2014 14:16:02 -0600, Ian Kelly wrote:
. . . and as computers get more powerful the intersection
of {problems machines can't solve} and {problems humans can reliably
solve} grows ever smaller.
"Which of the following eight sentences are
On 8/13/2014 3:27 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
I agree with you, and I don't use CAPTCHAs on any of my services,
anywhere, and never have. (Partly because they *are* broken by people
writing scripts, and/or by just grinding them with human solvers; but
also because of the problems they cause for le
On 8/12/2014 9:46 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Wed, Aug 13, 2014 at 11:36 AM, Wesley wrote:
If my questions make you guys not so happy, I am sorry and please just ignore.
I just wanna a general suggestion here in the beginning.
Why I need to write such program is just having such requirements,
On 6/14/2014 8:10 PM, Michael Torrie wrote:
On 06/13/2014 03:05 PM, Eric S. Johansson wrote:
I appreciate any insight before I go too far off track.
--- eric
Perhaps this is off-topic, and doesn't answer your question, but is
Parsley a natural language parsing tool? If not, and if
'm just
going to do a %s expansion when I create the grammar.
I appreciate any insight before I go too far off track.
--- eric
TF_grammar = r"""
kwToken = (letter|digit|'_')+
uses_statement = 'uses' ws kwToken:kwT ':' :roL -> do_uses
("&
On 6/3/2014 7:29 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Wed, Jun 4, 2014 at 9:22 AM, Eric S. Johansson wrote:
On the other hand, curly braces are royal pain to dictate or navigate around
when programming with speech recognition.
I've never done that, in any language, but if I had to guess, I&
braces are royal pain to dictate or navigate
around when programming with speech recognition.
--- eric
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
how do you parse multi line text with parsley? here is a work in
progress and I'm trying to figure out why I need to split the text and
process per line vrs all at one go.
thanks for any help.
--- eric
Here's the whole body of code ---
import parsley
#
#
natlink.pdf
How hard is it to convert from C++ extensions for 2.x to 3.x? are there
any tools to help with the process?
Thanks for any insights.
--- eric
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
a fuss About the notation, let me say that
this was aimed at disabled developers who cannot type anymore or who
want to listen because they cannot see. What I have created is far more
productive and speakable than any of the other systems out there.
--- eric
--
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Le 20/03/2014 16:21, Marko Rauhamaa a écrit :
> All tutorials will tell you to start it with
>
>#!/usr/bin/env python
>
> which will start python2 on all (?) existing linux distros, but is
> expected to start python3 within the next decade.
With Arch-Linux, python is python3...
--
https:
Le 02/03/2014 15:05, Mark Lawrence a écrit :
> The behaviour is consistent except when you try to modify a tuple.
>
Not in my opinion...
li = [10, 30]
li = li + "spam" --> TypeError: can only concatenate list (not "str")
li += "spam" --> Ok
So, not, that's not what i call consistent.
Le 02/03/2014 13:32, Ian Kelly a écrit :
> On Sat, Mar 1, 2014 at 7:04 PM, Eric Jacoboni wrote:
>> In fact, i think i'm gonna forget += on lists :)
>
> Well, do what you want, but I think you're taking the wrong lesson
> from this. Don't forget about using += o
Le 01/03/2014 22:21, Mark H. Harris a écrit :
> The point I'm trying to make with this post is that s[2]+=[46] and
> s[2]=s[2]+[46] are handled inconsistently.
For my own, the fact that, in Python, a_liste += e_elt gives a different
result than a_list = a_list + e_elt is a big source of trou
Le 01/03/2014 01:22, Mark H. Harris a écrit :
> I'll address the second first by asking a question... should an immutable
> type (object) be able to hold (contain) mutable objects ... should tuples be
> allowed to hold lists?
>
> lists within a tuple should be converted to tuples.If you w
Le 27/02/2014 17:13, Zachary Ware a écrit :
>
> You're not the first person to have this question :)
>
> http://docs.python.org/3/faq/programming.html#why-does-a-tuple-i-item-raise-an-exception-when-the-addition-works
>
Oh yes, i was aware of this explanation (thanks to Chris for his answer,
too
Hi,
I'm using Python 3.3 and i have a problem for which i've still not found
any reasonable explanation...
>>> a_tuple = ("spam", [10, 30], "eggs")
>>> a_tuple[1] += [20]
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "", line 1, in
TypeError: 'tuple' object does not support item assignment
Ok... I
Hi,
Say i want create a class with a __slots__ tuple in order to prevent
creation of new attributes from outside the class.
Say i want to serialize instances of this class... With pickle, all is
ok : i can dump an object to a file, then reload it.
With PyYAML, i can dump an object to a file, but
On 2/8/2014 3:35 AM, Rustom Mody wrote:
On Saturday, February 8, 2014 1:11:53 PM UTC+5:30, cstru...@gmail.com wrote:
I am writing a couple of class methods to build up several lines of html. Some
of the lines are conditional and most need variables inserted in them.
Searching the web has gi
On 1/13/2014 2:24 AM, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Sun, 12 Jan 2014 10:08:31 -0500, Eric S. Johansson wrote:
Now just walk the template for $ signs. Watch out for $$ which escapes
the dollar sign. Here's a baby parser:
found a different way
import string
cmplxstr="""
ansion i.e. an identifier
contains a template.
Thanks
--- eric
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Hi,
I have been following a very good online tutorial for matplotlib:
http://www.loria.fr/~rougier/teaching/matplotlib/#introduction
However, when I try to annotate the point where the cosine/sine graphs cross
the scatter graph misses the point where it crosses the axes; green and pink
colou
On 10/25/2013 7:55 PM, Yaşar Arabacı wrote:
Hi people,
I wrote this decorator: https://gist.github.com/yasar11732/7163528
wow, this looks really powerful. I would like to add the ability to
associate a tag or set of tags with the decorator so that the debug
output only happens when there is
r to Python so that cffi can cast and use
it.
On Fri, Oct 11, 2013 at 2:09 AM, dieter wrote:
> Eric Frederich writes:
>
> > I'm extending an application that supports customization using the C
> > language.
> > I am able to write standalone python applications that
uot;(k)", &some_structure);
PyObject_CallObject(pFunc, pArgs)
... and from the Python side...
def my_function(struct_ptr):
struct = ffi.cast("mystruct_t *", struct_ptr)
Like I said, this works fine. I am able to manipulate the structure from
within Python.
I just want to know the corr
he boolean.
The client, which happens to be Java/Eclipse based, then has something that
resembles a Python console in the GUI and uses that single service to
interact with the remote Python console.
Lots of stuff going on but it works very well.
On Wed, Sep 11, 2013 at 1:42 PM, Scott wrote:
> Eri
On Tue, 06 Aug 2013 09:27:10 -0400, Burak Arslan
wrote:
First, let's get over the fact that, with dynamic typing, code fails at
runtime. Irrespective of language, you just shouldn't ship untested
code, so I say that's not an argument against dynamic typing.
It's not so much shipping unteste
On Sun, 28 Jul 2013 19:49:07 -0400, Ethan Furman
wrote:
On 07/28/2013 10:57 AM, Chris Angelico wrote:
.
.
.
Okay, how did you get confused that this was a Python List question? ;)
got_a_little_list["victim must be found"] =
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1NLV24qTnlg
--
http
On Mon, 22 Jul 2013 08:11:25 -0400, Gilles wrote:
On Sun, 21 Jul 2013 18:28:27 -0600, Michael Torrie
wrote:
The Sendmail MTA has been ported to many platforms including windows.
But...
Thanks for the tip. Since I couldn't find a good, basic, native
Windows app, I was indeed about to look at
On Thu, 18 Jul 2013 00:36:17 -0400, Aseem Bansal
wrote:
I wanted to do a little project for learning Python. I thought a chat
system will be good as it isn't something that I have ever done.
I wanted to know what will I need? I think that would require me these
1 learn network/socket progr
On Fri, 12 Jul 2013 18:34:30 -0400, Dennis Lee Bieber
wrote:
Sounds like you might have liked an accessory I had on my Amiga.
Basically a proportional joystick feeding an interface box which
converted
the position value into a sequence of mouse movements --
sounds very cool. Alt
On Fri, 12 Jul 2013 10:22:59 -0400, L O'Shea
wrote:
Literally any idea will help, pen and paper, printing off all the code
and doing some sort of highlighting session - anything! I keep reading
bits of code and thinking "well where the hell has that been defined and
what does it mean" to
On Fri, 12 Jul 2013 00:24:26 -0400, Steven D'Aprano
wrote:
Frankly, nothing comes even close to a real mouse for feedback and ease
of use. Maybe a stylus. But that's it.
before tremors, I would agree with you. Stylus is amazingly good tool for
user interaction in a GUI. After tremors, not
On Fri, 05 Jul 2013 23:13:24 -0400, Rustom Mody wrote:Yes...The fact that rms has crippling RSI should indicate that emacs' ergonomics is not right.
As someone crippled by Emacs ( actual cause not known), I should also point out that RMS, instead of doing the responsible thing and using speech re
Can python sockets be used to capture IP traffic when the traffic is
originating from a non-python source?
Using a Lantronix UDS-1100 serial to IP converter. The goal is to write a small
proof of concept piece in Python to capture serial data output by this device
over IP.
I've done a couple t
I see where I can specify a module that distutils will try to compile.
I already have the .so files compiled.
I'm sure its simple, I just can't find it or don't know what to look for.
On Mon, May 6, 2013 at 9:13 PM, Miki Tebeka wrote:
>
>> Basically, I'd like to know how to create a proper setup
the work. It produces a directory that simply
needs to be copied to site-packages but how do I craft a setup.py
script to do the actually installation?
Thanks,
~Eric
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On 05/05/2013 10:08 AM, leonardo selmi wrote:
hi guys
i need to find a good book to learn python with exercises and
solutions, any suggestions?
thanks!
Leonardo,
There are several good online tutorials available, many listed here:
http://wiki.python.org/moin/BeginnersGuide
There is al
there is a Django REST framework. Is this a good framework?
Are there good Google and Facebook authentication extensions?
Thanks,
~Eric
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http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Sorry.
Won't happen again.
signing off this topic.
Eric.
--
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On Monday, April 1, 2013 8:33:47 AM UTC+10:30, Eric Parry wrote:
> On Sunday, March 31, 2013 9:45:36 AM UTC+10:30, Dave Angel wrote:
>
> > On 03/30/2013 06:06 PM, Eric Parry wrote:
>
> >
>
> > > On Saturday, March 30, 2013 8:41:08 AM UTC+10:30, Dave Angel wrote
On Sunday, March 31, 2013 9:45:36 AM UTC+10:30, Dave Angel wrote:
> On 03/30/2013 06:06 PM, Eric Parry wrote:
>
> > On Saturday, March 30, 2013 8:41:08 AM UTC+10:30, Dave Angel wrote:
>
> >> On 03/29/2013 05:47 PM, Eric Parry wrote:
>
> >>
>
> >&
On Saturday, March 30, 2013 8:41:08 AM UTC+10:30, Dave Angel wrote:
> On 03/29/2013 05:47 PM, Eric Parry wrote:
>
> >
>
> >>
>
> >>
>
> > That explains why the program keeps running after a solution is found.
>
>
>
> A recursive
On Friday, March 29, 2013 9:15:36 AM UTC+10:30, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 29, 2013 at 9:11 AM, Eric Parry wrote:
>
> > Thank you for that explanation.
>
> > No, I do not understand recursion. It is missing from my Python manual. I
> > would be pleased to
On Friday, March 29, 2013 9:58:27 AM UTC+10:30, Dave Angel wrote:
> On 03/28/2013 06:11 PM, Eric Parry wrote:
>
> > On Thursday, March 28, 2013 3:06:02 PM UTC+10:30, Dave Angel wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> >>
>
> >>
>
> >
On Thursday, March 28, 2013 3:06:02 PM UTC+10:30, Dave Angel wrote:
> On 03/27/2013 11:00 PM, Eric Parry wrote:
>
> > On Wednesday, March 27, 2013 6:28:01 PM UTC+10:30, Ulrich Eckhardt wrote:
>
> >>
>
>
> http://wiki.python.org/moin/GoogleGroupsPython &
On Wednesday, March 27, 2013 6:28:01 PM UTC+10:30, Ulrich Eckhardt wrote:
> Am 27.03.2013 06:44, schrieb Eric Parry:
>
> > I downloaded the following program from somewhere using a link from
>
> > Wikipedia and inserted the “most difficult Sudoku puzzle ever” string
>
&g
Thank you all for your help and suggestions.
Eric
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at random. Can
anyone explain how it works in simple terms?
Eric.
def same_row(i,j): return (i/9 == j/9)
def same_col(i,j): return (i-j) % 9 == 0
def same_block(i,j): return (i/27 == j/27 and i%9/3 == j%9/3)
def r(a):
i = a.find('0')
if i == -1:
print a
exit(a)
exclud
On 3/5/2013 6:18 PM, Gregory Ewing wrote:
Eric Johansson wrote:
the only thing that would make it better is if either of these kits
used standard Rich text edit controls under Windows so I can speech
enable these applications.
PyGUI's TextEditor is based on the rich edit control in
Wi
On 3/5/2013 1:38 PM, Dave Angel wrote:
On 03/05/2013 12:56 PM, Eric Johansson wrote:
I finally have an intern helping me with my various accessibility
projects. We need to do pair programming so he can write the code in my
head that I can't express by broken hand or speech recognition
I finally have an intern helping me with my various accessibility
projects. We need to do pair programming so he can write the code in my
head that I can't express by broken hand or speech recognition (yet).
The best technique with come up with so far is to use putty sessions
with the same lay
On 3/5/2013 10:06 AM, Tim Golden wrote:
On 05/03/2013 14:55, Kevin Walzer wrote:
On 3/5/13 9:20 AM, Eric Johansson wrote:
The main reason I discount both of those is that they are effectively
dead as I can see. Last updates in the 2010/2011 range.
Why not give EasyGUI a try?
or PyGUI
I need a simple GUI toolkits like easygui pythoncard. The main reason I
discount both of those is that they are effectively dead as I can see.
Last updates in the 2010/2011 range. Has there been some toolkit to
replace them? And no, the existing wxpython/gtk/qt/... toolkits really
aren't accept
On Saturday, December 15, 2012 9:14:25 PM, Terry Reedy wrote:
I believe this worked with Firefox the last time I tested. I just read
the docs. Never tried IE. I believe details partly depend on browser.
thank you Terry. I will try with Firefox but the main reason I'm using
IE is simply becau
arate tabs within the same
browser instance.:-)
A clue or two would be welcome. Thanks
--- eric
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
class Msg(object):
pass
... and then instantiate an instance, and call the function.
msg = Msg()
foo(msg)
I know how to create an empty dictionary and I get get by with that, but
I'd like to create an object.
Thanks,
~Eric
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I can do this in stand alone programs because my code does the import and
calls the login function so I can control the order of things.
Unfortunately stand alone programs are not the only ways in which I am
using these Python bindings.
You can customize and extend this 3rd party application at va
n I try to import smtplib it tries getting things from there and
that is where the errors are coming from.
The question now is how do I fix this?
On Thu, Nov 15, 2012 at 4:37 PM, Terry Reedy wrote:
> On 11/15/2012 1:48 PM, Eric Frederich wrote:
>
>> Thanks for the idea.
>>
only get these errors/warnings on one environment out of 10 or so
development and qa machines.
Any help trying to figure out what is different before and after the login
would be appreciated.
Is there some place in /proc I could look to see what happened?
Thanks,
~Eric
On Thu, Nov 15, 2012 at
Thanks for the idea.
sys.path was the same before and after the login
What else should I be checking?
On Thu, Nov 15, 2012 at 11:57 AM, Terry Reedy wrote:
> On 11/15/2012 9:38 AM, Eric Frederich wrote:
>
>> Hello,
>>
>> I created some bindings to a 3rd party library.
&
Hello,
I created some bindings to a 3rd party library.
I have found that when I run Python and import smtplib it works fine.
If I first log into the 3rd party application using my bindings however I
get a bunch of errors.
What do you think this 3rd party login could be doing that would affect the
= MyInteractiveConsole()
On Fri, Aug 17, 2012 at 10:06 AM, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 17, 2012 at 11:28 PM, Eric Frederich
> wrote:
> > Within the debugging console, after importing all of the bindings, there
> > would be no reason to import anything whatso
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