Re: Official Python logo

2006-04-19 Thread rx
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Where do I find one? Is it the banner by Just van Rossum or the Picasso > snake on python.org? > Thanks. > They talk about logos - I don't know the site. http://www.pythonology.com/logos google python official logo link 6 -- htt

Re: multiline comments

2006-04-19 Thread rx
"Jorge Godoy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > rx wrote: > >> I don't understand the problem - why should comments (and I hope you >> believe there should be a one line comment at least) be restricted to one >> line

Re: multiline comments

2006-04-19 Thread rx
> > Of course! You should have used """ since you already used ''' in your > triple-quoted text. But I'm just repeating what I already said (and kept > above so that you can see it again). > > -- > Jorge Godoy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Sorry - I should have read more carefully. I like the ide

Re: multiline comments

2006-04-19 Thread rx
"Jorge Godoy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > rx wrote: > >> I have commented out a lot of C++ code and miss the block feature in >> python more than I missed the nested comments in C++. >> Besides nothing really strange

Re: multiline comments

2006-04-19 Thread rx
> > Also, if you remove the start of the block first, then your editor might > not > be highlighting anymore... With nested comments things get even worse > because you might miss the end of the outer block or something like that. > > -- > Jorge Godoy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > I have commente

Re: multiline comments

2006-04-19 Thread rx
"Jorge Godoy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Edward Elliott wrote: > > > You can use either """ or '''. I don't keep changing them in my code, so > I > can always use the other type (usually I use " so for commenting things > out > I'd use ') to do that. > Try

Re: multiline comments

2006-04-19 Thread rx
"Edward Elliott" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Ben Finney wrote: >> Indeed. Using revision control means never needing to comment out >> blocks of code. > > Typing (* and *) on a few line will always be quicker, easier, and less > confusing than any rcs diffs/rest

Re: accessing a classes code

2006-04-19 Thread rx
"Ryan Krauss" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Is there a way for a Python instance to access its own code (especially the __init__ method)? And if there is, is there a clean way to write the modified code back to a file? I assume that if I can get the code as a lis

Re: extracting a substring

2006-04-19 Thread rx
> and I want to extract the numbers 531, 2285, ...,359. > > One thing for sure is that these numbers are the ONLY part that is > changing; all the other characters are always fixed. > I'm not sure about what you mean by "always fixed" but I guess it means that you have n files with a fixed start

urllib2.ProxyHandler

2006-04-18 Thread rx
I'm trying to hide my IP with the following code: import urllib2 proxy=[urllib2.ProxyHandler({'http':'24.232.167.22:80'})] opener=urllib2.build_opener(proxy) f=opener.open('http://www.whatismyipaddress.com') print f.read() But that didn't work - my real IP showed up. Then I made the following re