On Monday, 3 March 2014 22:55:32 UTC, Chris Kaynor wrote:
> You can go much simpler than that. Merely port Python to LISP, then write a
> LISP interpreter in Python. Done.
http://blog.pault.ag/post/46982895940/heres-my-talk-from-pycon-2013-i-tried-to-queue
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https://mail.python.org/mailman/lis
On Wednesday, 26 February 2014 09:30:21 UTC, Ganesh Pal wrote:
> Here is what is happening ( only short hand with -)
>
> # python-5.py -p=/ifs/1.txt -q=XOR -f=1234 -n=1 -l
>
> Usage: python-5.py [options]
> python-5.py: error: option -q: invalid choice: '=XOR' (choose from 'XOR',
> 'ADD',
>
>
On Sunday, 16 February 2014 08:13:14 UTC, Nagy László Zsolt wrote:
> > Though I don't see anything in the ActiveState builds (which are all
> > I've ever used) to handle the #! type selection of the desired version.
> > Just got done updating my 2.7, replacing 3.2 with 3.3, and then having to
On Tuesday, 25 February 2014 03:52:29 UTC, Jaydeep Patil wrote:
> I need to use COM interface for PowerPoint generation.
The following will get you started
http://nbviewer.ipython.org/github/sanand0/ipython-notebooks/blob/master/Office.ipynb
Then you'll need to interpret the Microsoft MSDN docs
On Monday, 24 February 2014 11:48:23 UTC, sffj...@gmail.com wrote:
> split_points = [2, 4, 5]
Change this to `split_points = [3, 5]` for your requirements
--Simon Kennedy
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https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Monday, 24 February 2014 11:35:08 UTC, Jaydeep Patil wrote:
> I need to create a new powerpoint presentation. I need to add images, paste
> some graphs, add texts, tables into powerpoint.
>
> Is any link or document available which help me to do this work more
> effectivey & faster.
Always
On Thursday, 20 February 2014 16:22:00 UTC, kxjakkk wrote:
> Let's say I have a sample file like this:
> Name1 2 34 5 6 78
>
> name1099-66-7871 A-FY10067815
On Sunday, 23 February 2014 05:43:17 UTC, Scott W Dunning wrote:
> I had a question regarding functions. Is there a way to call a function
> multiple times without recalling it over and over. Meaning is there a way I
> can call a function and then add *5 or something like that?
The followin
On Sunday, 23 February 2014 05:43:17 UTC, Scott W Dunning wrote:
> I had a question regarding functions. Is there a way to call a function
> multiple times without recalling it over and over. Meaning is there a way I
> can call a function and then add *5 or something like that?
>
The followi