If I have a list, say of names. And I want to count all the people
named, say, Susie, but I don't care exactly how they spell it (ie,
Susy, Susi, Susie all work.) how would I do this? Set up a regular
expression inside the count? Is there a wildcard variable I can use?
Here is the code for the non-
typing in pythonwin
>>> from scipy import *
>>>
Then played around with some of the methods. Pretty cool stuff. Thanks
all!
Frithiof Andreas Jensen wrote:
> "hawkesed" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> skrev i en meddelelse
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
> > S
Hi All,
has anyone out there recently set up scipy on Windows? Cause I am
trying to do so know and I am not having much luck. I have ActiveState
and Plone. When I try to import scipy in ActiveState it says
>>> import scipy
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "", line 1, in ?
ImportError: No
Actually,
I think I got it now. Here is what I did:
>>> for num in alist:
... if adict.has_key(num):
... x = adict.get(num)
... x = x + 1
... adict.update({num:x})
... else:
... adict.update({num:1})
...
>>> adict
{128: 2, 129: 2, 132: 1, 15
Steve,
thanks for the input. That is actually what I am trying to do, but I
don't know the syntax for this in python. For example here is a list I
want to work with as input:
[101, 66, 75, 107, 108, 101, 106, 98, 111, 88, 119, 93, 115, 95, 114,
95, 118, 109, 85, 75, 88, 97, 53, 78, 98, 91, 115, 77
Here is an example of the input list:
[101, 66, 75, 107, 108, 101, 106, 98, 111, 88, 119, 93, 115, 95, 114,
95, 118, 109, 85, 75, 88, 97, 53, 78, 98, 91, 115, 77, 107, 153, 108,
101]
Here is the code I am working on now:
>>> for num in alist:
... if adict.has_key(num):
... x = adic
Hi,
I am semi new to Python. Here is my problem : I have a list of 100
random integers. I want to be able to construct a histogram out of the
data. So I want to know how many 70's, 71's, etc. I can't figure out
how to do this. A dictionary is supposedly can do key value pairs
right? I want to be