On Jan 30, 4:40 pm, "Blubaugh, David A." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I do not understand why no one has answered the following question:
>
> Has anybody worked with Gene Expression Programming
>
> David Blubaugh
>
David (may i call you David?)
May i suggest you lock your workstation when you
On May 6, 6:26 am, "Martin P. Hellwig" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Dustan wrote:
> > On May 6, 8:20 am, Steven D'Aprano
> > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >> On Sun, 06 May 2007 04:53:23 -0700, Dustan wrote:
> >>> SPAM!
> >>> SPAM!
> >>> SPAM!
> >>> SPAM!
> >>> SPAM!
> >>> SPAM!
> >>> SPAM!
> >>> SP
On Apr 10, 1:36 am, Passer By <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Has any created or not of examples of random sentence generators using
> n-gram models (or other models might be interesting).
>
> I know of one example from a course at MIT, but besides that nothing.
>
> Any help would be great.
Markov ch
On Apr 6, 4:52 pm, "Jack" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Since the full installation of Python (from either the standard installer or
> ActiveState installer) is too big for my intended use, I'd like to build a
> custom distribution of Python for Windows platform, omitting some lib files,
> such as a
Paul Rubin wrote:
> "js " <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > Here, domain name doesn't contain subdomain,
> > or should I say, domain's part of 'www', mail, news and en should be
> > excluded.
>
> It's a little more complicated, you have to treat co.uk about
> the same way as .com, and similarly for
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> vbgunz wrote:
> > > > Has anyone tried this thing..
> > > > http://www.regular-expressions.info/regexbuddy.html
> >
> > I use kodos http://kodos.sourceforge.net/. I firmly agree using a tool
> > like this to learn regular expressions will not only save you a
> > ridiculo
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hello,
> I have an idea for a project which involves an editor that supports
> syntax highlighting. This would be for any language, particularly php,
> html, css, etc. I would like to write this program using python. It
> would only make sense to base this upon existi
Chris Lambacher wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 09, 2006 at 11:51:19AM -0400, Brendon Towle wrote:
> I don't disagree with you. The problem is that the obvious way to do it
> (eval) is a big security hole. In this case you are trusting that no one
> inserts themselves between you and the website providing
Petr Jake wrote:
> I have a standard 12-key mobile phone keypad connected to my Linux
> machine as a I2C peripheral. I would like to write a code which allows
> the text entry to the computer using this keypad (something like T9 on
> the mobile phones)
>
> According to the http://www.yorku.ca/mac
Gabriel Genellina wrote:
> Hello
>
> Most authors talk about Java/C++, and describe patterns used as a
> workaround to their static class model; the dynamic nature of Python
> allows for trivial implementations in some cases.
Eckel's thinking in Python too
http://www.mindview.net/Books/TIPython
Gabriel Genellina wrote:
> Hello
>
> Most authors talk about Java/C++, and describe patterns used as a
> workaround to their static class model; the dynamic nature of Python
> allows for trivial implementations in some cases.
> I've seen some design patterns examples on the ActiveState site, and
>
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi all. I've been try to learn ruby for a few months but I'm about
> ready to give up. The available books either assume a programming
> background, or are out of date. Anyway,
http://www.awaretek.com/book.html
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Paddy wrote:
> Laurent Rahuel wrote:
> >
> > Laurent.
>
> I, like Diez am unsure of why you would need what you have asked for,
> but maybe this will help.
>
> You can keep track of all instances of a class by this kind of thing:
>
> >>> class C1(object):
> ... inst = []
> ... def __init__(se
Georg Brandl wrote:
> Cameron Laird wrote:
> > In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> > iapain <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > .
> > .
> > .
> >>Does that mean there is no way to implement restricted enviorment?
> > .
> >
IOANNIS MANOLOUDIS wrote:
> I want to learn python.
> I plan to buy a book. I always find printed material more convenient than
> reading on-line tutorials.
> I don't know PERL or any other scripting language. I only know some BASH
> programming. I am looking for a book which will help me get star
bruce wrote:
> hi...
>
> is there someone in the Bay Area who knows python, that I can talk to ... I
> have the shell of a real basic app, and I'd like someone who can walk me
> through how to set it up.
>
> i'm talking about passing arrays, setting up global data, etc... basically,
> if i can cre
George Sakkis wrote:
> vinodh kumar wrote:
> > hai all,
> > i am student of computer science dept. i have planned to
> > design a search engine in python. i am seeking info about how to
> > proceed further.
> > i need to know what r the modules that can be used.
>
> There is not
bryan rasmussen wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Sorry, was imprecise, I meant not save the downloaded page locally.
> There probably isn't one though, so I should build one myself.
> Probably just need a good crawler that can be set to dump all links
> into dataset that I can analyse with R.
>
> Cheers,
> Bryan
a wrote:
> thanks for reading
Yah, the mass transit systems are, um, challenging but workable in many
US cities. Canada's much better
BUT the Subway framework that's not developed anymore had a dev mailing
list:
http://groups.google.com/group/subway-devel
Google for "subway web framework". An
A.M wrote:
> Hi,
>
>
>
> Is there any online resource that gives examples about advanced python
> string, list and map operations?
>
http://goog-goopy.sourceforge.net/goopy.functional.html#-variance
http://oakwinter.com/code/functional/documentation.html
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listin
bayerj wrote:
> Hi,
>
> If you switched from java to python the best point to start is
> http://dirtsimple.org/2004/12/python-is-not-java.html.
>
> Greets,
> -Justin
yup, you could spend weeks reading the Language Wars:
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=site%3Aartima.com+java+python&btnG=Goog
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> After several years developing in Java, I've begun to switch to Python
> for several of my new projects as I have found the language quite
> interesting. I've read several tutorials and implemented a few sample
> programs and I've found that Python enables one to progra
Florian Reiser wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I have 4 lists: a, b, c and d
> Out of this 4 lists I want to build a table (e.g. list of lists):
>
> a|b|c|d
> ---
> a1|b1|c1|d1
> a1|b2||d2
>
> You see: the lists are not equally sized.
> Is there a command which fills up the shorter
puzz wrote:
> Hi all,
> I'd also appreciate a link to a beginner forum
>
http://www.daniweb.com/techtalkforums/forum114.html
and (not really a beginner forum, not really high volume, either)
http://community.livejournal.com/python_dev/
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
bruno at modulix wrote:
>
> Else - if you want/need to stick to human readable flat text files - at
> least write a solid librairy handling this, so you can keep client code
> free of technical cruft.
>
> HTH
> --
> bruno desthuilliers
for human readable, you might want to look at reading and wri
Rene Pijlman wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
> >I have an application return in python. I want this to be
> >converted to C.
>
> http://www.python.org/doc/faq/general/#can-python-be-compiled-to-machine-code-c-or-some-other-language
>
http://pyfaq.infogami.com/can-python-be-compiled-to-machine-code-c-
jj_frap wrote:
> I'm new to programming in Python and am currently writing a three-card
> poker simulator. I have completed the entire simulator other than
> determining who has the best hand (which will be far more difficult
> than the aspects I've codes thus far)...I store each player's hand in
Laurent Pointal wrote:
> [for those who dont read clp.announce]
>
> The Python Quick Reference Card (PQRC) aims to provide a printable quick
> reference documentation for the Python language and some of its main
> standard libraries (currently for Python 2.4).
>
> PQRC tries to group informations
Mike Meng wrote:
> Hi all,
> I just finished reading Learning Python 3rd ed, and am doing my
> first Python application, which retrieves and process text and XML
> documents from Web. Python helped me to write the application in a few
> hours, I'm very happy with its productivity. But the p
robin wrote:
> hello list,
>
> does anyone know of a library which permits to summarise text? i've
> been looking at nltk but haven't found anything yet. any help would be
unclear what you're asking, maybe look at:
http://www.cs.waikato.ac.nz/~ml/weka/index.html
http://www.kdnuggets.com/software
satish wrote:
> how to write script for these
>
> 1.Given a test file containing lines of words such as (abc, abb,
> abd,abb, etc), write a script that prints, in order of frequency, how
> many times each word appears in the file.
>
> 2.
> Write a script running in an endless loop that pings an IP
gene tani wrote:
> Bobert wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > Do you know by chance if someone has archives from the "daily python url"
> > feed (http://www.pythonware.com/daily/rss2.xml) ? An archive of the last 3
> > or 6 months would be most useful to me.
>
&g
Bobert wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Do you know by chance if someone has archives from the "daily python url"
> feed (http://www.pythonware.com/daily/rss2.xml) ? An archive of the last 3
> or 6 months would be most useful to me.
it gets picked up on Swik.net, with a bunch of other stuff:
http://swik.net/Pyt
softwindow wrote:
> the re module is too large and difficult to study
it's powerful, takes a little time to work with. Make yourself aware
of the VERBOSE switch, RE debuggers in komodo and Wing, string
functions/methods and when you need a full parser, also
http://www.awaretek.com/tutorials.htm
Roman wrote:
> Does anybody know an easy way (or tool) to guess the language of a
> given text string?
>
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/355807
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/326576
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Erik Max Francis wrote:
> chun ping wang wrote:
>
> > Hey i have a stupid question.
> >
> > How do i get python to print the result in only three decimal place...
> >
> > Example>>> round (2.9954254, 3)
> > 2.9951
> >
> > but i want to get rid of all trailing 0's..how would i d
Rune Strand wrote:
> gene tani wrote:
> > Rune Strand wrote:
> > > Is there a way to measure how much memory a data structure use? For
> > > instance, what is the footprint of a particular list object like
> > > [0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]?
> >
> > i ha
Rune Strand wrote:
> Is there a way to measure how much memory a data structure use? For
> instance, what is the footprint of a particular list object like
> [0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]?
i have a note to try this, but haven't got around to it, if you want to
blog/post
http://pysizer.8325.org/
--
htt
John Bokma wrote:
> Roedy Green <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I leave that up to Xah's ISP/USP and hosting provider to decide :-D
>
he's solidified position as top troll of 2003-2006
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Just call me James wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Coming away from the luxury of the delphi IDE has been something of a
> shock.
>
> As a consequence I've become aware that maybe I need to spend some
> money on a python IDE.
You can google for lots of IDE reviews, here's a start
http://www.awaretek.com/tutori
Ant wrote:
> Take a look at the newgroup archives over the last week or two - there
> seem to have been a glut of people coming from Java to Python and
> asking the same sort of questions. There were some links to a bunch of
> Python 'gotcha' pages which will be useful.
>
Here's a few gotchas whi
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> hi
> i was looking at this :
> http://www.python.org/doc/essays/comparisons.html
> on comparisons of python and other languages? are there any updates to
> this doc? or is there
> other reliable source for such comparison elsewhere? thanks
lots of blogs out there, check
aum wrote:
>
> Makes me wonder, just out of curiosity - are there any universities
> actually teaching python (in anything bigger than a small elective
> module), or are they all still owned by Java, C++, C# and Visual Basic?
>
like NLTK, maybe?
http://www.ldc.upenn.edu/sb/home/papers/nltk.pdf
Ralph H. Stoos Jr. wrote:
> Tim,
>
> After a little more research, I did find that out. It is funny, but in
> the tutorial "Non-Programmers Tutorial For Python", it makes no mention
> of the indentation issue, at least in the beginning portions which I had
> read.
>
> This is an age old problem o
Lou Pecora wrote:
> YIKES! Don't do that. Don't mess with Apple's python. Not
> recommended. Check the MacPython FAQ and Wiki pages. Python 2.4 was
> installed in /usr/local/bin. You should put that in your $PATH variable
> Before /usr/bin. That will cause the new Python to be launched.
>
Peter Otten wrote:
> The old Python "To-Do List" now lives principally in a
> SourceForge reincarnation.
> http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?atid=355470&group_id=5470&func=browse
> http://python.sourceforge.net/peps/pep-0042.html
>
Thanks, very nice summary.
One thing, the
Fredrik Lundh wrote:
> the "what now?" page in the tutorial
>
> to replace it with something else, what should that be? what sites
> do pythoneers and pythonistas visit these days?
>
> post your suggestions in this thread or on this page:
>
Pilgrims tricks/ips
http://diveintopython.org/appendix/t
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Like in C we comment like
> /*
> Bunch of lines of code
> */
>
scite has a feature where you modify your delimiter in block comments,
i.e. what comes after "#"
http://scintilla.sourceforge.net/SciTEDoc.html
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Dave Benjamin wrote:
> On Tue, 28 Mar 2006, David Hirschfield wrote:
>
> > I need to be able to parse the script, modify some variable settings and
> > then write the script back out so that the only changes are the
> > variables I've modified (comments, ordering of statements, etc. must
> > remai
gene tani wrote:
> Christoph Zwerschke wrote:
> > Just because nobody has mentioned them so far:
> >
http://spyced.blogspot.com/2006/02/pycon-python-ide-review.html
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Christoph Zwerschke wrote:
> Just because nobody has mentioned them so far:
>
> - SciTe is a perfect editor for Pyhton on Win and Linx
> - PyScripter is a wonderful IDE (but only on Win)
> - DrPython is a nice platform independent editor/mini-IDE
>
http://www.artima.com/forums/flat.jsp?forum=106
vj wrote:
> I've been given a project which requires writing scripts that need to
> be run on over 3000 servers. Only about 15% of them have python
> installed on them. While all/most of them will have perl.
>
> I'll try and do as much as possible in pexpect but am sure I'll have do
> some signifi
gene tani wrote:
> Duncan Booth wrote:
> > Enigma Curry wrote:
> >
a couple more
http://cheeseshop.python.org/pypi/Orchid/1.0
http://cheeseshop.python.org/pypi/webstemmer/0.5.0
--
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Duncan Booth wrote:
> Enigma Curry wrote:
>
> > I've been looking for similar stuff recently. I haven't found much, but
> > this is the list of links I've come across so far:
> >
http://awaretek.com/nowak/mygale.html
http://cheeseshop.python.org/pypi/spider.py/0.5
http://sig.levillage.org/?p=599
JuHui wrote:
> Hi
> I want to get 20 html pages content from one server, you know
> urllib.urlopen need construct network connection, it will be very
> slowly, how to speed up this function?
> I try to using multi-thread, it speed up, but I want to quickly more,
> any idea about it?
> Thank
Colin J. Williams wrote:
> Harry Fuecks wrote:
> > Hi All,
> >
> > Wondering if a tool exists to generate "cross reference" documentation
> > for Python code bases?
> >
> > Particularly after something like phpxref -
> > http://phpxref.sourceforge.net/ : written in Perl, scans a bunch of
> > PHP s
Harry George wrote:
>
> re the OP:
>
> I find I have to concentrate on one language for a while (several
> programs) to ramp up on the syntax, semantics, idioms, and libraries.
> Then I'm safe to wander off and learn other languages. When it comes
> time to do a project, I use one main language u
Rich wrote:
> Hi,
>
> (this is a probably a bit OT here, but comp.lang seems rather
> desolated, so I'm not sure I would get an answer there. And right now
> I'm in the middle of learning Python anyway so...)
>
> Anyway, my question is: what experience you people have with working
> with different
Roy Smith wrote:
> Fredrik Tolf wrote:
> >If I have a variable which points to a function, can I check if certain
> >argument list matches what the function wants before or when calling it?
> >
> >Currently, I'm trying to catch a TypeError when calling the function
> >(since that is what is rais
Pitmairen wrote:
> I want to make a program that get info from a website and prints it out
> in a txt file.
>
> I made this:
>
> import urllib
> f = urllib.urlopen("http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0407304/";)
path of even less resistance
http://imdbpy.sourceforge.net/
--
http://mail.python.org/mail
Pitmairen wrote:
> I want to make a program that get info from a website and prints it out
> in a txt file.
>
> I made this:
>
> import urllib
> f = urllib.urlopen("http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0407304/";)
> s = f.read()
> k = open("test.txt","w")
> k.write(s)
> k.close()
> f.close()
>
> That saves
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> i am SURE i am using the wrong terminology...
>
> but what i would like to do is something like this:
>
> pageContent='''
> {toc}
> h1. Header Section
> h2. Date:
> {metadata:date}'''+date+'''{metatdata}
> h2. Author:
> {metadata:author}Len Sweet{metadata}
> h1.
Richard Blackwood wrote:
> Hello all. I have a few questions about simulation programming. One, do
> all programmers know to how to code a simulation? By simulation I mean a
> model of real world relationships (i.e. like Civilization which is a
> simulation of ruling nations through various histor
Jay Parlar wrote:
>
> All that looks fantastic, and I'd forgotten there was a paper on
> Shedskin.
>
> Thanks a bunch,
> Jay P.
lots of spirited discussion at artima
http://www.artima.com/forums/flat.jsp?forum=106&thread=7590
http://c2.com/cgi/wiki?DuckTyping
http://lambda-the-ultimate.org/node/
Terry Hancock wrote:
>
> This sounds like an article crying out to be written,
> "(Learning) Design Patterns with Python".
>
> Has it been written already?
>
> Cheers,
> Terry
>
> --
> Terry Hancock ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
> Anansi Spaceworks http://www.AnansiSpaceworks.com
There's a couple Alex M sl
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I am a newbie to Python. I am mainly using Eric as the IDE for coding.
> Also, using VIM and gedit sometimes.
>
> I had this wierd problem of indentation. My code was 100% right but it
> wont run because indentation was not right. I checked time and again
> but still no
gene tani wrote:
> Franz Steinhaeusler wrote:
> >
> > Who can help me (regular expression, which works for both cases).
>
> universal newlines:
> http://www.python.org/doc/2.3.3/whatsnew/node7.html
> http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-list/2006-February/324410.ht
Franz Steinhaeusler wrote:
> Hello, I need a regularexpression, which trims trailing whitespaces.
>
> While with unix line endings, it works;
> but not with Window (Dos) CRLF's:
>
> >>> import re
> >>> retrailingwhitespace = re.compile('(?<=\S)[ \t]+$', re.MULTILINE)
>
> 1) Windows
> >>> r="erewr
Jeffrey Schwab wrote:
> Max wrote:
> > I was just thinking perhaps we should create some kind of collection of
> > bits of "impressive" code like this.
>
> Do you mean something like the ASPN Cookbooks?
>
> http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/
>
repositories, indexes and search engine
Russ wrote:
> Does it ever make sense to derive a class from a basic type such as
> float or int? Suppose, for example, that I want to create a class for
> physical scalars with units. I thought about deriving from float, then
> adding the units. I played around with it a bit, but it doesn't seem
Terry Hancock wrote:
> On Tue, 21 Feb 2006 10:55:42 +0530
> Suresh Jeevanandam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Seriously,
> I think they are usually equivalent internally,
> at least for immutable objects.
>
yah, but when you do augmented assigns on lists, or mix immutable an
dmutable:
http://zeph
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> I'm wondering if someone can explain to me please what it is about
> Python that is so different from Lisp that it can't be compiled into
> something as fast as compiled Lisp? From this above website and
> others, I've learned that compiled Lisp can be nearly as fast
Jean-Paul Calderone wrote:
> On Thu, 16 Feb 2006 07:59:03 -0800, Alex Martelli <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >Graham <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >> I've been messing around with trying to get a small sandbox like
> >> environment where i could execute python code in a "safe" way.
> >> Basicall
abhinav wrote:
> Hi guys.I have to implement a topical crawler as a part of my
> project.What language should i implement
Oh, and there's some really good books out there, besides the Orilly
Spidering Hacks. Springer Verlag has a couple books on "Text Mining"
and at least a couple books with "we
Paul Rubin wrote:
> "abhinav" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > maintaining huge data structures.What should be the language so as
> > not to compromise that much on speed.What is the performance of
> > python based crawlers vs C based crawlers.Should I use both the
> > languages(partly C and pytho
VSmirk wrote:
> I'm working primarily on Windows XP, but my solution needs to be cross
> platform.
>
> The problem is that I need more than the fact that a file has been
> modified. I need to know what has been modified in that file.
>
> I am needing to synchronize the file on a remote folder, an
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> MKoool wrote:
> > I have an application with one function called "compute", which given a
> > filename, goes through that file and performs various statistical
> > analyses. It uses arrays extensively and loops alot. it prints the
> > results of it's statistical signif
Kenneth Xie wrote:
> att, thx.
Start here.
http://www.python.org/moin/PythonSpeed/PerformanceTips
http://trific.ath.cx/resources/python/optimization/
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Paul Rubin wrote:
> Xavier Morel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > BeautifulSoup...
> > The API of the package is extremely simple, straightforward and... obvious.
>
> I did not find that. I spent a few minutes looking at the
> documentation and it wasn't obvious at all how to use it. Maybe I
1.
Raja Raman Sundararajan wrote:
> Hello guys,
> I was investigating how one can use the "text indexers" in python
> and I stumbled across several ones. eg., pylucene
>
> I wanted to know how the algorithm of indexers look like. I have heard
> people talking about B-Trees. But this info. is simp
Matt Goodall wrote:
> Jay Parlar wrote:
> > I was hoping to get some c.l.p. opinions on O'Reilly's new Twisted book.
>
> I think it's a good book to get. I know a fair amount about Twisted but
> it still made for interesting reading.
>
> Tommi Virtanen (aka tv) posted a great review of the book sh
Simon Faulkner wrote:
> Pardon me if this has been done to death but I can't find a simple
> explanation.
>
> I love Python for it's ease and speed of development especially for the
> "Programming Challenged" like me but why hasn't someone written a
> compiler for Python?
>
> I guess it's not that
BBands wrote:
> Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
> > I did a levenshtein-fuzzy-search myself, however I enhanced my version by
> > normalizing the distance the following way:
>
> Thanks for the snippet. I agree that normalizing is important. A
> distance of three is one thing when your strings are long, bu
ngw wrote:
>
> Try os.path.dirname (__file__)
>
what O/S and python release are you using? I get NameError: '__file__'
not defined in win32 and OS X (both are 2.4.x, installed from
ActiveState installers)
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S Borg wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I have been writing very simple Python programs that parse HTML and
> such, mainly just to get
> a better feel for the language. Here is my question: If I parsed an
> HTML page into all of the image
> files listed on that page, how could I request all of those images an
Livin wrote:
> I'm a noobie so please be easy on me. I have searched a ton and did not find
> anything I could understand.
>
> I'm using py2.3
>
> I've been using Try/Except but this gets long with multiple dictionaries.
>
> I found some code on web pages and such but cannot get them to work. Any
Luis M. González wrote:
> Lamentablemente, no conozco ningún tutorial o libro en castellano...
http://www.python.org/doc/NonEnglish.html#spanish
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Peter Hansen wrote:
> gene tani wrote:
> > Roy Smith wrote:
> >>Thanks for posting that URL; I hadn't seen the list before.
> [...]
> >
> > pls don't hijack threads
>
> Um, he didn't "hijack" it, he follow a tangent to the disc
Roy Smith wrote:
> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> "gene tani" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > http://zephyrfalcon.org/labs/python_pitfalls.html
>
> Thanks for posting that URL; I hadn't seen the list before. Skimming over
> it, none
Olaf "El Blanco" wrote:
> Maybe there is someone that speak spanish. I need the best spanish book for
> learning python.
>
you should learn Chinese, Korean and Russian so you can read this many
times
http://diveintopython.org/#languages
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ankit wrote:
> Is it possible to limit the size of list in python.
> I want to make list of 5 elements. How can I achieve this thing in
> python. And one more thing can we declare list to store elements of
> same type as in c, C++ we can declare an
> array which can have 5 elements of type int.
>
Florian Daniel Otel wrote:
> Hello all,
>
>
> Attached are 3 small python scripts that illustrate my "problem". The
> first one uses string tuples and behaves as expected. The other two
> use dictionaries and (resp.) lists and illustrate my "problem"
>
> TIA for any pointers,
>
> Florian
>
> P.S.
gene tani wrote:
> ankit wrote:
> > Is it possible to limit the size of list in python.
> > I want to make list of 5 elements. How can I achieve this thing in
> > python. And one more thing can we declare list to store elements of
> > same type as in c, C++ we can dec
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Anyone has any idea on why is there no post/pre increment operators in
> python ?
> Although the statement:
> ++j
> works but does nothing
"+=1" and "-=1" inflate your KLOC by .001, but they always work as
expected with integers, it's when you do augmented assignments
Gerard Brunick wrote:
> My way is ugly. These has to be a better way.
>
> Thanks,
> Gerard
transpose funcitons/methods:
http://numeric.scipy.org/
http://numpy.sourceforge.net/numdoc/numdoc.pdf
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[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> How make a Python script
>
> 1. login
> 2. type password &
> 3. download file
>
> all from a **remote web site**?
>
> I'm not comfortable with *MY* software handling the password part.
>
> It just seems like trouble if users must tell *my* software their
> password.
>
>
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> How make a Python script
>
> 1. login
> 2. type password &
> 3. download file
>
> all from a **remote web site**?
>
> I'm not comfortable with *MY* software handling the password part.
>
> It just seems like trouble if users must tell *my* software their
> password.
>
>
Xavier Morel wrote:
> Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> > b) to retrieve feedback subjecting the Process Definition itself
> > (content of diagramms, clarity, terminology etc.)
> >
> This is a lie, and you know it.
I've said it before, i'll say it again; medical insurance premiums
should be lower for peop
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> pissed-offedly-yr's, rurpy
>
>
Well, i'm sorry your pissed off. I will say i believe that
map(None,*sequences)
mentioned above is a pretty commonly seen thing, as is padding shorter
sequence for zip/izip. Also have you looked at diff
Alvin A. Delagon wrote:
> emacs has been my long time companion for php, perl, and python. My boss
> recommended to me Wing2.0, I find it hard to adjust though. What can you
> say about this IDE? He say's if I think it could improve my productivity
> he's willing to buy it for me. Suggestions for
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