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