On Aug 18, 6:52 pm, "Jan Kaliszewski" wrote:
> 19-08-2009 o 00:24:20 markscottwright wrote:
>
> > What's the correct way to turn an iterator over bytes into a string?
> > This works, but, ewww:
> > In [8]: "".join(iter("four score and se
This does what I expected:
In [6]: list(iter([1,2,3,4,5]))
Out[6]: [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
But this appears to be doing a __repr__ rather than making me a nice
string:
In [7]: str(iter("four score and seven years ago"))
Out[7]: ''
What's the correct way to turn an iterator over bytes into a
I've got an ordered list of MyClasses that I want to be able to do
binary searches on, but against a tuple. MyClass has valid
__lt__(self, rhs) and __eq__(self, rhs) member functions that work
when rhs is a tuple.
This works:
l = [MyClass(..), MyClass(..), ...]
l.find((a,b))
But this doesn't:
bi
Fredrik Lundh wrote:
> markscottwright wrote:
>
> > If it were that easy, the PyPy guys would be done by now.
>
> if the PyPy guys had focused on writing a Python interpreter in Python,
> they'd been done by now.
>
>
Isn't that the point of PyPy? It'
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> While studying the SICP video lectures I have to twist my mind some to
> completely understand the lessons. I implement the programs shown there
> in both Python and Scheme, and I find the Python implementations
> simpler to write (but it's not a fair comparison because
But, by deleting their namespace entries haven't I effectively unloaded
them? In other words, from the point of the interpreter, isn't the
state at point A and point B the same?
--- point A:
import os
del __main__.__dict__['os']
--- point B
I guess my question boils down to,
I'm trying to cobble together an IDLE equivalent using pyshell and VIM
(My idea is just to pipe exec file commands from VIM to pyshell via a
socket or something). The one feature that IDLE has that I would
really like but can't seem to duplicate is the "Restart Shell" command.
Delving through the
Just for the hell of it, I've been going through the old Scheme-based
textbook "Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs" and seeing
what I can and can't do with python. I'm trying to create a function
that returns the function (not the results of the function, but a
function object) that
Has anyone sucessfully run makepy and Microsoft Word Object Library
(9.0)? Mine crashes under XP Pro and Python 2.4.
It only seems to be word that has the problem, though.
I get a dialog that says that pythonwin.exe has crashed:
AppName: pythonwin.exe AppVer: 0.0.0.0 ModName: ntdll.dll