On Wed, Jun 16, 2010 at 2:09 PM, Dave Angel wrote:
> Fix any one of them, and I'd probably have kept quiet.
>
Thanks for piping up ;)
beno
>
>
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Victor Subervi wrote:
DavidA corrects me:
Since you didn't name your modules (what you persist in calling scripts),
I can only guess their names from the import statements:
e.g.:
>from New_Passengers_Curr_Customers import New_Passengers_Curr_Customers
I don't see any case differe
Stephen Hansen suggests running this line before running or testing code:
python -m compileall -f .
Noted. Will do.
Stephen also mentions, along with many others, that using CGI these days is
silly (my word). Noted. I'll switch over, but not today. Got other things
more pressing ;)
DavidA corr
On 6/13/10 3:19 PM, Ethan Furman wrote:
> I thought python (well, cpython, at least) didn't use .pyc files for the
> main script?
You're right, it doesn't. I forgot about that interaction with CGI*.
--
Stephen Hansen
... Also: Ixokai
... Mail: me+list/python (AT) ixokai (DOT) io
...
Stephen Hansen wrote:
On 6/12/10 12:50 PM, Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
On Sat, 12 Jun 2010 14:42:27 -0400, Victor Subervi
declaimed the following in
gmane.comp.python.general:
Interestingly,
ls -al
reveals *no* *.pyc files.
Which would seem to indicate that you have no user modules
On 6/12/10 12:50 PM, Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
> On Sat, 12 Jun 2010 14:42:27 -0400, Victor Subervi
> declaimed the following in
> gmane.comp.python.general:
>
>>
>> Interestingly,
>> ls -al
>> reveals *no* *.pyc files.
>>
> Which would seem to indicate that you have no user modules that are
Victor Subervi wrote:
DaveA suggested I not use the same name for my fn. as I do for my var;
however, there is a difference in capitalization, and I'm trying to
standardize this way. It makes it easy to recognize the difference (caps)
and easy to recognize which vars go with which fns.
Th
On Sat, Jun 12, 2010 at 1:58 PM, Stephen Hansen wrote:
> The only suggestion I have is: try dumping all the .pyc's.
>
Interestingly,
ls -al
reveals *no* *.pyc files.
Yeah, that problem caught me once as well.
TIA,
beno
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On 6/12/10 9:01 AM, Victor Subervi wrote:
>> You're doing something that you're not telling us. There's something
>> else going on. There's no way that form.getfirst() being in another file
>> will in and of itself (notwithstanding possibilities of the second
>> invocation actually not working at a
On Sat, Jun 12, 2010 at 11:46 AM, Stephen Hansen
wrote:
> On 6/12/10 6:19 AM, Victor Subervi wrote:
> > You will note those very first lines. This also addresses two other
> > responders who believed perhaps I had called the variable from the form
> in
> > question more than once and that it had b
On 6/12/10 6:19 AM, Victor Subervi wrote:
> You will note those very first lines. This also addresses two other
> responders who believed perhaps I had called the variable from the form in
> question more than once and that it had been "used up/consummed" in the
> first call. Here, the first call i
Stephen Hansen suggests I move the line:
new_passengers_curr_customers =
int(form.getfirst('new_passengers_curr_customers', 0))
from "Script 3" (as he dubs it) to "Script 2". Naturally (though he wouldn't
have known) that's how I had it at first. After sending the post that
finally cleared up the
On 6/11/10 1:09 PM, Dave Angel wrote:
> Your question would have been much easier to understand if you had
> referred to "form field" rather than variable, since I assumed you
> really meant Python variable. Also, this script is a CGI script,
> written in Python. But the other files that you impo
Victor Subervi wrote:
Ok. Starting over. Here is the script that "generates" the variable
"new_passengers_curr_customers":
Now, here's the form that *should* be able to access that variable:
!/usr/bin/python
import cgitb; cgitb.enable()
import cgi
import sys,os
sys.path.append(os.getcwd(
Victor Subervi wrote:
Ok. Starting over. Here is the script that "generates" the variable
"new_passengers_curr_customers":
[snip]
Now, here's the form that *should* be able to access that variable:
!/usr/bin/python
import cgitb; cgitb.enable()
import cgi
import sys,os
sys.path.append(os.get
... This is the first time you've actually clearly expressed what you're
doing.
On 6/11/10 12:11 PM, Victor Subervi wrote:
I dub thee Script1.py:
> *** RIGHT HERE! ***
>
> print " name='new_passengers_curr_customers' />"
>
> *** SEE IT? *
Ok. Starting over. Here is the script that "generates" the variable
"new_passengers_curr_customers":
#!/usr/bin/python
import cgitb; cgitb.enable()
import cgi
import sys,os
sys.path.append(os.getcwd())
import MySQLdb
from login import login
from Curr_Passengers_Table import Curr_Passengers_Table
Victor Subervi wrote:
On Fri, Jun 11, 2010 at 12:24 PM, Stephen Hansen
wrote:
Sure, if you have some file that two separate scripts import, and in
said file you generate some value-- as long as that value will be the
same at all times, it'll appear that the two scripts are sharing some
state
[reordering the message a bit]
On 6/11/10 10:40 AM, Victor Subervi wrote:
>>> Now you guys can make fun of me all you want, but until you actually
READ
>>> and UNDERSTAND what I'm writing, I'm afraid I think your criticisms are
>>> ridiculous and make you look like fools.
> On Fri, Jun 11, 2010 a
On Fri, Jun 11, 2010 at 12:24 PM, Stephen Hansen
wrote:
> Sure, if you have some file that two separate scripts import, and in
> said file you generate some value-- as long as that value will be the
> same at all times, it'll appear that the two scripts are sharing some
> state. They are not, howe
On 6/11/10 4:46 AM, Victor Subervi wrote:
> You know, if this were the first time I'd worked with "passing variables
> around" through cgi, I'd think you may be right. But answer me this:
if what
> you assume is correct,
I do not assume. I know.
With CGI, each web request is independent. This is
On 6/11/2010 4:46 AM Victor Subervi said...
Now you guys can make fun of me all you want, but until you actually READ
and UNDERSTAND what I'm writing, I'm afraid I think your criticisms are
ridiculous and make you look like fools.
I think the point is exactly as you state -- until you actually
On Thu, Jun 10, 2010 at 2:07 PM, Stephen Hansen wrote:
> On 6/10/10 10:48 AM, Victor Subervi wrote:
> > Now, create_edit_passengers3() is called by the form/submit button in
> (you
> > guessed it) create_edit_passengers2.py, the latter containing a var in it
> > which *should* be accessible to cre
Stephen Hansen a écrit :
On 6/10/10 8:35 AM, Bruno Desthuilliers wrote:
Stephen Hansen (L/P) a écrit :
On 6/10/10 7:14 AM, Victor Subervi wrote:
(snip)
+1 for "absolutely worst framed question of the day" :)
IMHO you're wasting your time. Some guys never learn, and I guess we do
have a world
On 6/10/10 8:35 AM, Bruno Desthuilliers wrote:
> Stephen Hansen (L/P) a écrit :
>> On 6/10/10 7:14 AM, Victor Subervi wrote:
> (snip)
>>
>> +1 for "absolutely worst framed question of the day" :)
>
> IMHO you're wasting your time. Some guys never learn, and I guess we do
> have a world-class all-t
On 6/10/10 10:48 AM, Victor Subervi wrote:
> Now, create_edit_passengers3() is called by the form/submit button in (you
> guessed it) create_edit_passengers2.py, the latter containing a var in it
> which *should* be accessible to create_edit_passengers3.py, one would think.
Wait, wait, wait.
If a
No, I think you've misunderstood because while I thought I was being clear I
probably was not. So here is the complete code of
create_edit_passengers3.py:
#!/usr/bin/python
import cgitb; cgitb.enable()
import cgi
import sys,os
sys.path.append(os.getcwd())
import MySQLdb
from login import login
im
On 6/10/10 10:11 AM, Victor Subervi wrote:
> On Thu, Jun 10, 2010 at 10:30 AM, Stephen Hansen (L/P) pyt...@ixokai.io> wrote:
>>
>> But what does "cannot be called" mean? "Cannot" usually means "an error
>> happened" -- in which case you shouldn't really even mention it unless
>> you're gonna back
On Thu, Jun 10, 2010 at 10:30 AM, Stephen Hansen (L/P) wrote:
> On 6/10/10 7:14 AM, Victor Subervi wrote:
> > Hi;
> > I have a script that calls values from the form that calls it. This
> script
> > imports another script:
> >
> > from New_Passenger import New_Passenger
> >
> > def create_edit_pa
Stephen Hansen (L/P) a écrit :
On 6/10/10 7:14 AM, Victor Subervi wrote:
(snip)
+1 for "absolutely worst framed question of the day" :)
IMHO you're wasting your time. Some guys never learn, and I guess we do
have a world-class all-times champion here.
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http://mail.python.org/mailman/li
On 6/10/10 7:14 AM, Victor Subervi wrote:
> Hi;
> I have a script that calls values from the form that calls it. This script
> imports another script:
>
> from New_Passenger import New_Passenger
>
> def create_edit_passengers3():
> ...
> new_passengers_curr_customers = New_Passengers_Curr_Cus
Hi;
I have a script that calls values from the form that calls it. This script
imports another script:
from New_Passenger import New_Passenger
def create_edit_passengers3():
...
new_passengers_curr_customers = New_Passengers_Curr_Customers(customers,
flights)
if new_passengers_curr_customer
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