the memorize function you make gets
relatively few requests that are identical, it may not be worthwhile.
-Original Message-
From: Python-list On
Behalf Of MRAB via Python-list
Sent: Sunday, March 31, 2024 3:24 PM
To: python-list@python.org
Subject: Re: Can you help me with this
On 2024-03-31 09:04, marc nicole wrote:
Thanks for the first comment which I incorporated
but when you say "You can't use a list as a key, but you can use a
tuple as a key,
provided that the elements of the tuple are also immutable."
does it mean the result of sum of the array is not conveni
Thanks for the first comment which I incorporated
but when you say "You can't use a list as a key, but you can use a tuple as
a key,
provided that the elements of the tuple are also immutable."
does it mean the result of sum of the array is not convenient to use as
key as I do?
Which tuple I sho
On 2024-03-31 00:09, marc nicole via Python-list wrote:
I am creating a memoization example with a function that adds up / averages
the elements of an array and compares it with the cached ones to retrieve
them in case they are already stored.
In addition, I want to store only if the result of t
I am creating a memoization example with a function that adds up / averages
the elements of an array and compares it with the cached ones to retrieve
them in case they are already stored.
In addition, I want to store only if the result of the function differs
considerably (passes a threshold e.g.
On 2024-03-06, MRAB via Python-list wrote:
> On 2024-03-06 01:44, Ethan Furman via Python-list wrote:
>> On 3/5/24 16:49, MRAB via Python-list wrote:
>> > On 2024-03-06 00:24, Ethan Furman via Python-list wrote:
>> >> On 3/5/24 16:06, Chano Fucks via Python-list wrote:
>> >>
>> >>> [image:
On 2024-03-06 01:44, Ethan Furman via Python-list wrote:
On 3/5/24 16:49, MRAB via Python-list wrote:
> On 2024-03-06 00:24, Ethan Furman via Python-list wrote:
>> On 3/5/24 16:06, Chano Fucks via Python-list wrote:
>>
>>> [image: image.png]
>>
>> The image is of MS-Windows with the p
On 3/5/24 18:44, Ethan Furman via Python-list wrote:
On 3/5/24 16:49, MRAB via Python-list wrote:
> On 2024-03-06 00:24, Ethan Furman via Python-list wrote:
>> On 3/5/24 16:06, Chano Fucks via Python-list wrote:
>>
>>> [image: image.png]
>>
>> The image is of MS-Windows with the python inst
On 3/5/24 16:49, MRAB via Python-list wrote:
> On 2024-03-06 00:24, Ethan Furman via Python-list wrote:
>> On 3/5/24 16:06, Chano Fucks via Python-list wrote:
>>
>>> [image: image.png]
>>
>> The image is of MS-Windows with the python installation window of "Repair
Successful". Hopefully somebody
On 2024-03-06 00:24, Ethan Furman via Python-list wrote:
On 3/5/24 16:06, Chano Fucks via Python-list wrote:
[image: image.png]
The image is of MS-Windows with the python installation window of "Repair
Successful". Hopefully somebody better at
explaining that problem can take it from here..
On 2024-03-06 00:06, Chano Fucks via Python-list wrote:
[image: image.png]
This list removes all images.
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On 3/5/24 16:06, Chano Fucks via Python-list wrote:
[image: image.png]
The image is of MS-Windows with the python installation window of "Repair Successful". Hopefully somebody better at
explaining that problem can take it from here...
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[image: image.png]
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Well, although I never used pandas and never will, if that's about
artworks, that's mine.
Obviously, you need to iterate columns and sum values returned by the
snippet you provided. A quick search tells us to use colums property.
So, it might look like this:
na_sum = sum(df[name].isnull().su
For a python class I am taking..
In this challenge, you'll be working with a DataFrame that contains data
about artworks, and it contains many missing values.
Your task is to create a variable called na_sum that contains the total
number of missing values in the DataFrame. When that's completed,
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DFS wrote:
> Typical cases:
> lines = [('one\ntwo\nthree\n')]
> print(str(lines[0]).splitlines())
> ['one', 'two', 'three']
>
> lines = [('one two three\n')]
> print(str(lines[0]).split())
> ['one', 'two', 'three']
>
>
> That's the result I'm wanting, but I get data in a slightly differen
On 9/4/2021 5:55 PM, DFS wrote:
Typical cases:
lines = [('one\ntwo\nthree\n')]
print(str(lines[0]).splitlines())
['one', 'two', 'three']
lines = [('one two three\n')]
print(str(lines[0]).split())
['one', 'two', 'three']
That's the result I'm wanting, but I get data in a slightly di
Typical cases:
lines = [('one\ntwo\nthree\n')]
print(str(lines[0]).splitlines())
['one', 'two', 'three']
lines = [('one two three\n')]
print(str(lines[0]).split())
['one', 'two', 'three']
That's the result I'm wanting, but I get data in a slightly different
format:
lines = [('one\ntwo\
See here for a discussion around this issue:
https://github.com/seomoz/reppy/issues/90
This project requires a C++ build environment to be setup on your computer.
The fact that your compiler is reporting that `std=c++11` as an unknown
option shows that you don't have a C++ build environment set up
Oops, forgot the link to the standard library robots.txt parser. Here are
the docs!
https://docs.python.org/3/library/urllib.robotparser.html
*sorry for the noise*
On Thu, Jul 22, 2021 at 11:34 PM Jack DeVries
wrote:
> See here for a discussion around this issue:
> https://github.com/seomoz/r
I get an error so please help.
I don't know what to do.
Windows 10
Python 3.9.6
from takashi in Japan
Microsoft Windows [Version 10.0.19042.1110]
(c) Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
C:\Users\user>pip3 install reppy
Looking in indexes: https://pypi.python.org/simple/
Collecting reppy
I am using Google co lab.
Guide me how to set the path.
# Error: SwissEph file 'se13681s.se1' not found in PATH '/usr/share/ephe/' is
coming, how to overcome this problem.
pip install pyswisseph
import swisseph as swe
swe.set_ephe_path ('/usr/share/ephe')
# set path to ephemeris files
jd = swe
Hi all
I hope all are doing well
please help me how to convert CSV to NetCDF. Im trying but its not working
#!/usr/bin/env ipython
import pandas as pd
import numpy as np
import netCDF4
import pandas as pd
import xarray as xr
stn_precip='ts_sept.csv'
orig_precip='ts_sep
PS C:\Users\amanb\OneDrive\Desktop\jarvis> pip install pyttsx3
Collecting pyttsx3
Using cached pyttsx3-2.87-py3-none-any.whl (39 kB)
Collecting comtypes; platform_system == "Windows"
Using cached comtypes-1.1.7.zip (180 kB)
Installing collected packages: comtypes, pyttsx3
Running setup.py i
Did you send a screenshot? If so then understand that this mailing list
does not support photos so you cannot send that. Try giving us a verbal
description. And if you write anything other that the sub then sorry that
is my Gmail's fault.
Souvik flutter dev
On Sat, Apr 11, 2020, 8:32 PM khuchee
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
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Pieter van Oostrum writes:
> Joseph Nail writes:
>
>> Hello,
>> I have one problem. Somehow in my function when I wrote y=x, they are the
>> same variable and then it also changes age or height (which were x) in the
>> main program. See more in attached file.
>> Maybe it is bug or maybe it shoul
Joseph Nail writes:
> Hello,
> I have one problem. Somehow in my function when I wrote y=x, they are the
> same variable and then it also changes age or height (which were x) in the
> main program. See more in attached file.
> Maybe it is bug or maybe it should run that way.
If you write y = x,
Hi,
On Mon, Mar 16, 2020 at 4:26 PM Joseph Nail wrote:
>
> Hello,
> I have one problem. Somehow in my function when I wrote y=x, they are the
> same variable and then it also changes age or height (which were x) in the
> main program. See more in attached file.
> Maybe it is bug or maybe it shoul
Hello,
I have one problem. Somehow in my function when I wrote y=x, they are the
same variable and then it also changes age or height (which were x) in the
main program. See more in attached file.
Maybe it is bug or maybe it should run that way.
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On Friday, 6 September 2019 20:15:40 UTC+2, MRAB wrote:
> On 2019-09-06 18:11, Spencer Du wrote:
> > Hi
> >
> > I want to print yes in gui.py but it does not get printed because of the
> > json. How do I fix this. Execute embedded.py and then gui.py to test.
> >
> > def on_message(client, userd
On Friday, 6 September 2019 20:15:40 UTC+2, MRAB wrote:
> On 2019-09-06 18:11, Spencer Du wrote:
> > Hi
> >
> > I want to print yes in gui.py but it does not get printed because of the
> > json. How do I fix this. Execute embedded.py and then gui.py to test.
> >
> > def on_message(client, userd
On Friday, 6 September 2019 20:15:40 UTC+2, MRAB wrote:
> On 2019-09-06 18:11, Spencer Du wrote:
> > Hi
> >
> > I want to print yes in gui.py but it does not get printed because of the
> > json. How do I fix this. Execute embedded.py and then gui.py to test.
> >
> > def on_message(client, userd
On 2019-09-06 18:11, Spencer Du wrote:
Hi
I want to print yes in gui.py but it does not get printed because of the json.
How do I fix this. Execute embedded.py and then gui.py to test.
def on_message(client, userdata, msg):
print("message recieved= " + msg.payload.decode())
# p
Hi
I want to print yes in gui.py but it does not get printed because of the json.
How do I fix this. Execute embedded.py and then gui.py to test.
embedded.py
import paho.mqtt.client as mqtt
from mqtt import *
client = mqtt.Client()
client.connect("broker.hivemq.com",1883,60)
client.on_connec
On Mon, 2019-08-05 at 21:10 +0430, arash kohansal wrote:
> Hello ive just installed python on my pc and ive already check the
> path
> choice part but microsoft visual code can not find it and it does not
> have
> the reload item
Check out: https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/languages/python
or
On 2019-08-05 17:40, arash kohansal wrote:
Hello ive just installed python on my pc and ive already check the path
choice part but microsoft visual code can not find it and it does not have
the reload item
1. Open Visual Studio Code.
2. Press F1, type "Python: Select Interpreter", and then pre
Hello ive just installed python on my pc and ive already check the path
choice part but microsoft visual code can not find it and it does not have
the reload item
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It’s pretty darn slow. I don’t think it’s optimizing the Nvidia Tesla v100
power. It uses some openCv , and it just screams for paral/acceleration. I’d
also love to learn and see how it’s done
import cv2
import numpy as np
import os
import pickle
import sys
from cgls import cgls
from filterplot
On Saturday, November 24, 2018 at 1:44:21 AM UTC-5, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Sat, Nov 24, 2018 at 5:36 PM wrote:
> >
> > hello all,
> > please hepl me in the above program. python to implement Railway
> > Reservation System using file handling technique.
> >
> > System should perform below ope
On Nov 24, 2018 1:35 AM, wrote:
>
> hello all,
> please hepl me in the above program.
What do you mean by "the above program"? I don't see any.
python to implement Railway Reservation System using file handling
technique.
>
> System should perform below operations.
> a. Reserve a ticket for a p
On Saturday, 24 November 2018 14:33:29 UTC+8, jasmin amrutia wrote:
> hello all,
> please hepl me in the above program. python to implement Railway Reservation
> System using file handling technique.
>
> System should perform below operations.
> a. Reserve a ticket for a passenger.
> b. List in
On Sat, Nov 24, 2018 at 5:36 PM wrote:
>
> hello all,
> please hepl me in the above program. python to implement Railway Reservation
> System using file handling technique.
>
> System should perform below operations.
> a. Reserve a ticket for a passenger.
> b. List information all reservations d
hello all,
please hepl me in the above program. python to implement Railway Reservation
System using file handling technique.
System should perform below operations.
a. Reserve a ticket for a passenger.
b. List information all reservations done for today’s trains.
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We would be glad to help. I can't tell from your question what kind of help
you need so please give us more information.
Have you tried to install python?
If so has the installation succeeded?
What do you mean by "open the programming"?
What have you tried?
What do you expect to see?
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on / 2.0
>
> epsilon = 2 * epsilon
>
> help me!
>
This list is not here to solve every single step of what is
(presumably) your homework for you. Everything you present right here
is what I helped you with in "how to convert this psuedo code to
python".
You will have to at least try
Calculate the true, relative and approximate errors, and Relate the absolute
relative approximate error to the number of significant digits.
epsilon = 1
while epsilon + 1 > 1:
epsilon = epsilon / 2.0
epsilon = 2 * epsilon
help me!
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I can not find an example with this function:
https://docs.scipy.org/doc/scipy/reference/generated/scipy.integrate.RK45.html#scipy.integrate.RK45.
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On Thursday, March 1, 2018 at 5:37:28 AM UTC+5:30, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 09:58:24 -0800, Aktive wrote:
>
> > what the hell do you care about cheating..
> >
> > the world doest care about cheating.
> >
> > its about skill.
>
> Because cheaters don't have skill. That's why
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 09:58:24 -0800, Aktive wrote:
> what the hell do you care about cheating..
>
> the world doest care about cheating.
>
> its about skill.
Because cheaters don't have skill. That's why they cheat.
> You guys been too much in school
Ah, spoken like a cheater.
--
Steve
On Wednesday, 28 February 2018 06:00:07 UTC+1, Lawrence D’Oliveiro wrote:
> On Wednesday, February 28, 2018 at 4:44:04 PM UTC+13, jlad...@itu.edu wrote:
> > This is part of the reason why interviews for software developer jobs
> > have gotten so crazy.
>
> This is why you need to have a CV that b
On Tuesday, February 27, 2018 at 12:56:52 PM UTC-6, Grant Edwards wrote:
[...]
> The fun part is giving them a solution that's so obscure and "clever"
> that it technically meets the stated requirement but is so far from
> what the instructor wanted that they don't get credit for it (and
> there's
On 02/27/2018 06:54 PM, Grant Edwards wrote:
> The fun part is giving them a solution that's so obscure and "clever"
> that it technically meets the stated requirement but is so far from
> what the instructor wanted that they don't get credit for it (and
> there's no way the student will be able
On Tuesday, February 27, 2018 at 10:56:52 AM UTC-8, Grant Edwards wrote:
> If the student is actively trying to avoid learning something, there's
> nothing you can do to help them. They're just wasting their own time
> and money.
This is part of the reason why interviews for software developer jo
On 2018-02-26 07:17, Stefan Ram wrote:
Percival John Hackworth quoted:
Define 2 lists. The first one must contain the integer values 1, 2 and 3
a =[ 1, 2, 3 ]
and the second one the string values a, b and c.
b =[ 'a', 'b', 'c']
Iterate through both lists to create another list that
cont
On Tue, 27 Feb 2018 10:56:18 -0700, Ian Kelly wrote:
> Cheaters are gonna cheat. In the unlikely event they don't get the
> answer here, they'll probably just manage to convince somebody to do the
> work for them somewhere else. Honestly, I don't know if it's even worth
> the bother to engage.
It
On Tue, Feb 27, 2018 at 2:50 PM, Andre Müller wrote:
> Hello,
>
> it's a duplicate:
> https://python-forum.io/Thread-Working-with-lists-homework-2
>
> I have seen this more than one time. We don't like it. You keep people busy
> with one question at different places.
You assume that it was posted
Hello,
it's a duplicate:
https://python-forum.io/Thread-Working-with-lists-homework-2
I have seen this more than one time. We don't like it. You keep people busy
with one question at different places.
You need two lists and one empty list. One outer loop iterating over the
first list and one inn
On 2018-02-27, Ian Kelly wrote:
> On Tue, Feb 27, 2018 at 10:16 AM, Igor Korot wrote:
>> Congratulations!
>> You have an "A" for solving the problem and "F" for helping the guy cheat.
>> You should be expelled from the course.
>
> In my experience, this is what happens pretty much every time.
> S
On 2018-02-26, sotaro...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> Help me !
a=[1,2,3,]
b=["a","b","c"]
x=[]
z=[]
bonus=[]
for digits in a:
for letters in b:
x.append(str(digits) + letters)
bonus.append(letters + str(digits))
for
On Tue, Feb 27, 2018 at 12:56 PM, Ian Kelly wrote:
> On Tue, Feb 27, 2018 at 10:16 AM, Igor Korot wrote:
>> Congratulations!
>> You have an "A" for solving the problem and "F" for helping the guy cheat.
>> You should be expelled from the course.
>
> In my experience, this is what happens pretty m
On Tue, Feb 27, 2018 at 10:16 AM, Igor Korot wrote:
> Congratulations!
> You have an "A" for solving the problem and "F" for helping the guy cheat.
> You should be expelled from the course.
In my experience, this is what happens pretty much every time.
Somebody posts a homework question asking fo
l possible combinations : [1a, a1, 1b,
>>b1, 1c, c1, 2a, a2, 2b, b2, 2c, c2, 3a, a3, 3b, b3, 3c, c3]
>>
>>Help me !
>
> #a list of integers
> nums = [1, 2, 3]
>
> #a list of letters
> ltrs = ['a', 'b', 'c']
>
> #a list to ho
e A and B
>elements. The final list should look like one of the 2 lists:
>1. [1a, 1b, 1c, 2a, 2b, 2c, 3a, 3b, 3c]
>2. [a1, a2. a3, b1, b2, b3, c1, c2, c3]
>BONUS: Make the final list contain all possible combinations : [1a, a1, 1b,
>b1, 1c, c1, 2a, a2, 2b, b2, 2c, c2, 3a, a3, 3b,
lements. The final list should look like one of the 2 lists:
> 1. [1a, 1b, 1c, 2a, 2b, 2c, 3a, 3b, 3c]
> 2. [a1, a2. a3, b1, b2, b3, c1, c2, c3]
> BONUS: Make the final list contain all possible combinations : [1a, a1,
> 1b, b1, 1c, c1, 2a, a2, 2b, b2, 2c, c2, 3a, a3, 3b, b3, 3c, c3]
>
e A and B
> elements. The final list should look like one of the 2 lists:
> 1. [1a, 1b, 1c, 2a, 2b, 2c, 3a, 3b, 3c]
> 2. [a1, a2. a3, b1, b2, b3, c1, c2, c3]
> BONUS: Make the final list contain all possible combinations : [1a, a1, 1b,
> b1, 1c, c1, 2a, a2, 2b, b2, 2c, c2, 3a, a3, 3b
Define 2 lists. ...
[...]
Help me !
Sounds like homework. Have you tried anything? Does it work?
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Christian Gollwitzer wrote:
> Am 26.02.18 um 10:40 schrieb sotaro...@gmail.com:
>> Define 2 lists. The first one must contain the integer values 1, 2 and 3
>> and the second one the string values a, b and c. Iterate through both
>> lists to create another list that contains all the combinations of
Am 26.02.18 um 10:40 schrieb sotaro...@gmail.com:
Define 2 lists. The first one must contain the integer values 1, 2 and 3 and
the second one the string values a, b and c. Iterate through both lists to
create another list that contains all the combinations of the A and B elements.
The final li
, 1c, 2a, 2b, 2c, 3a, 3b, 3c]
2. [a1, a2. a3, b1, b2, b3, c1, c2, c3]
BONUS: Make the final list contain all possible combinations : [1a, a1, 1b, b1,
1c, c1, 2a, a2, 2b, b2, 2c, c2, 3a, a3, 3b, b3, 3c, c3]
Help me !
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> (?s)struct (.+?)\s*\{\s*(.+?)\s*\};
Thank you Vlastimil Brom for regexp and for explanation!
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szykc...@gmail.com writes:
> Please help me with this regexp or tell me that I neeed do this in other way.
I think that using regexps to parse those structures is fragile and difficult
to get right[0], as there are lots of corner cases (comments, complex types,
...).
I'd suggest usin
W dniu wtorek, 26 grudnia 2017 21:53:14 UTC+1 użytkownik Lawrence D’Oliveiro
napisał:
> On Wednesday, December 27, 2017 at 2:15:21 AM UTC+13, szyk...@gmail.com wrote:
> > struct (.+)\s*{\s*(.+)\s*};
>
> You realize that “.” matches anything? Whereas I think you want to match
> non-whitespace in
On Tue, 26 Dec 2017 05:14:55 -0800 (PST), szykc...@gmail.com wrote:
[snip]
> So: I develop regexp which to my mind should work, but it doesn't and
> I don't know why. The broken regexp is like this:
> struct (.+)\s*{\s*(.+)\s*};
[snip]
You'll probably get better help faster if you can present you
has two groups: struct name and struct definition.
> It fails even for such simple structure:
> struct Structure
> {
> int mVariable1;
> QString mVariable2;
> bool mVariable3
> };
>
> Please help me with this regexp or tell me that I neeed do this in other
>
The broken regexp is like this:
struct (.+)\s*{\s*(.+)\s*};
As you can see it has two groups: struct name and struct definition.
It fails even for such simple structure:
struct Structure
{
int mVariable1;
QString mVariable2;
bool mVariable3
};
Please help me with this regexp or tell me
ksatish@gmail.com wrote:
[snip code]
Wasn't there any documentation to go with that script? That's the preferable
method to use software written by someone else ;)
Anyway -- First you have to undo what was probably changed by yourself:
$ diff -u json2csv_orig.py json2csv.py
--- json2csv_o
try:
import unicodecsv as csv
except ImportError:
import csv
import json
import operator
import os
from collections import OrderedDict
import logging
logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG)
class Json2Csv(object):
"""Process a JSON object to a CSV file"""
collection = None
On 09/11/2016 21:25, breamore...@gmail.com wrote:
On Wednesday, November 9, 2016 at 7:34:41 PM UTC, BartC wrote:
However according to your mindset nothing matters provided it's fast,
> accuracy does not matter to users.
Hence your recent comment on another thread about converting invalid in
On Thursday 10 November 2016 18:23, Andrea D'Amore wrote:
> On 10 November 2016 at 00:15, Steve D'Aprano
> wrote:
>> py> import collections
> […]
>> py> import os
>> py> os.listdir('/usr/local/lib/python3.5/collections/')
>
> Not
>
> os.listdir(collections.__path__[0])
>
> since it's alrea
On 10 November 2016 at 00:15, Steve D'Aprano wrote:
> py> import collections
[…]
> py> import os
> py> os.listdir('/usr/local/lib/python3.5/collections/')
Not
os.listdir(collections.__path__[0])
since it's already there?
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On 11/09/2016 04:30 PM, Michael Torrie wrote:
On 11/09/2016 04:21 PM, Ethan Furman wrote:
On 09/11/2016 21:25, breamore...@gmail.com wrote:
[...filtered...]
Mark, you do not need to be insulting nor condescending.
Agreed. Is he still being filtered on the mailing list? He's still in
my ki
On 11/09/2016 04:21 PM, Ethan Furman wrote:
>> On 09/11/2016 21:25, breamore...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> [...filtered...]
>
> Mark, you do not need to be insulting nor condescending.
Agreed. Is he still being filtered on the mailing list? He's still in
my killfile.
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On 09/11/2016 21:25, breamore...@gmail.com wrote:
[...filtered...]
Mark, you do not need to be insulting nor condescending.
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On Thu, 10 Nov 2016 10:01 am, BartC wrote:
> I haven't ruled out that collections is written in Python. But I can't
> find a 'collections.py' module in my Python 3.4; the nearest is
> "__init__.py". And there /is/ a lot of code there.
And that's exactly right.
py> import collections
py> collecti
On 09/11/2016 21:25, breamore...@gmail.com wrote:
On Wednesday, November 9, 2016 at 7:34:41 PM UTC, BartC wrote:
All the real work is done inside the Collections module. If that was
written in Python, then you'd have to Cythonise that, and there might be
quite a lot of it!
But I think 'collec
On 05/11/2016 04:11, DFS wrote:
It reads in a text file of the Bible, and counts the Top 20 most common
words.
http://www.truth.info/download/bible.htm
import time; start=time.clock()
import sys, string
from collections import Counter
#read fil
On 10/16/2016 05:25 AM, k.adema...@gmail.com wrote:
> Help me!, I would like to find split where the split sums are close
> to each other?
>
> I have a list is
>
> test = [10,20,30,40,50,60,70,80,90,100]
>
> and I would like to find split where the split sums are
On Sunday, October 16, 2016 at 12:27:00 PM UTC+1, k.ade...@gmail.com wrote:
> Help me!, I would like to find split where the split sums are close to each
> other?
>
> I have a list is
>
> test = [10,20,30,40,50,60,70,80,90,100]
>
> and I would like to find split where
Help me!, I would like to find split where the split sums are close to each
other?
I have a list is
test = [10,20,30,40,50,60,70,80,90,100]
and I would like to find split where the split sums are close to each other by
number of splits = 3 that all possible combinations and select the split
On 03/30/2016 06:10 AM, srinivas devaki wrote:
ahh, this is the beginning of a conspiracy to waste my time.
PS: just for laughs. not to offend any one.
It's fair: you waste ours, we waste yours. :) A fair, if not good, trade.
--
~Ethan~
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-
ahh, this is the beginning of a conspiracy to waste my time.
PS: just for laughs. not to offend any one.
Regards
Srinivas Devaki
Junior (3rd yr) student at Indian School of Mines,(IIT Dhanbad)
Computer Science and Engineering Department
ph: +91 9491 383 249
telegram_id: @eightnoteight
On Mar 30,
Smith writes:
> Il 29/03/2016 11:17, Ben Finney ha scritto:
> > You'll get better help if you:
> >
> > * Summarise the problem briefly in the Subject field.
> >
> > * Actually say anything useful in the message body.
> >
> thanks a lot
You're welcome. Feel free to ask about the Python language h
Il 29/03/2016 11:17, Ben Finney ha scritto:
Smith writes:
[a URL]
You'll get better help if you:
* Summarise the problem briefly in the Subject field.
* Actually say anything useful in the message body.
thanks a lot
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Smith writes:
> [a URL]
You'll get better help if you:
* Summarise the problem briefly in the Subject field.
* Actually say anything useful in the message body.
--
\ “My house is on the median strip of a highway. You don't really |
`\notice, except I have to leave the driveway
https://github.com/githubdavide/ip-pubblico-send/blob/master/ip-pubblico.py
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On 18/03/2016 17:04, Qurrat ul Ainy wrote:
help required !!!
For what, house cleaning?
--
My fellow Pythonistas, ask not what our language can do for you, ask
what you can do for our language.
Mark Lawrence
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help required !!!
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