On 2007-04-05, Thinker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>> --- START ---
>>> import os
>>>
>>> msg = chr(0x02) + chr(0x36) + chr(0x00) + chr(0x01) + chr(0x0a) +
>>> chr(0xb0) + chr(0x77)
>>>
>>> f = os.open('/dev/pytest', os.O_RDWR)
>>> os.write(f,msg)
>>> os.close(f)
>>>
>>> f = file('/dev/pytest', 'w
En Thu, 05 Apr 2007 11:38:06 -0300, Grant Edwards <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
escribió:
> On 2007-04-05, Thomi Aurel RUAG A <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> The output was:
>> --- Start ---
>> Pytest write> 02 36 00 01 0a b0 77
>> Pytest write> 02 36 00 01 0a
>> Pytest write> b0 77
>> --- END ---
>
> I'm
Grant Edwards wrote:
> On 2007-04-05, Thomi Aurel RUAG A <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>> A simplified test programm to compare the function for opening
>> a file i used ("file()") and your suggested "os.open()" showed
>> different behaviour.
>>
>> My simple testprogramm:
>>
>> --- START ---
>>
On 2007-04-05, Thomi Aurel RUAG A <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> A simplified test programm to compare the function for opening
> a file i used ("file()") and your suggested "os.open()" showed
> different behaviour.
>
> My simple testprogramm:
>
> --- START ---
> import os
>
> msg = chr(0x02) + chr(
Hy Mike
Thanks for your links, unfortunately they weren't very usefull for my
specific problem.
Hy Grant Edwards
Thanks for your hints.
A simplified test programm to compare the function for opening a file i
used ("file()") and your suggested "os.open()" showed different
behaviour.
My simple test