Hi Rami, Stefan, Bruno.
First a big thanks for your replies.
On 07/09/2010 20:54, Rami Chowdhury wrote:
Hi Ian,
I think I see where you're going wrong -- this bit me too when I was
learning Python, having come from PHP. Unlike PHP, when you import a
module in Python it does *not* inherit th
Hi Ian,
On 2010-09-07 12:18, Ian Hobson wrote:
> f = open('d:\logfile.txt','a')
Just a note: Using a backslash in a non-raw string will get
you in trouble as soon as the backslash is followed by a
character which makes a special character sequence, like "\n".
For example,
f = open('d:\nice_
Hi Ian,
On Tue, Sep 7, 2010 at 20:00, Ian wrote:
> On 07/09/2010 11:50, Bruno Desthuilliers wrote:
>
> note the order of the above - log is defined before the import.
>
> And ? Do you think it will affect the imported module in any way ? Like,
> say, magically "inject" your log function in the
Hi Bruno,
Thanks for your quick response. I still do not understand.
On 07/09/2010 11:50, Bruno Desthuilliers wrote:
Ian Hobson a écrit :
Hi all you experts,
This has me beat. Has anyone any ideas about what might be going wrong?
This is code from within a windows service (hence no print s
Ian Hobson a écrit :
(snip)
you may also want to read the recent "using modules" thread...
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Ian Hobson a écrit :
Hi all you experts,
This has me beat. Has anyone any ideas about what might be going wrong?
This is code from within a windows service (hence no print statements -
no sys.stdout to print on!).
I am trying to trace through to find where the code is not working. No
stdout
Hi all you experts,
This has me beat. Has anyone any ideas about what might be going wrong?
This is code from within a windows service (hence no print statements -
no sys.stdout to print on!).
I am trying to trace through to find where the code is not working. No
stdout so I have to log to a