On 10/08/2019 10:45, Peter J. Holzer wrote:
On 2019-08-10 09:10:12 +1000, Cameron Simpson wrote:
On 09Aug2019 22:28, Paul St George wrote:
On 09/08/2019 16:29, Rhodri James wrote:
(Actually I would probably use outstream.write() and do my own
formatting, but let's not get side-tracked ;-)
I
On 10/08/2019 17:35, Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
On Sat, 10 Aug 2019 11:45:43 +0200, "Peter J. Holzer"
declaimed the following:
There are of course many variants to all three methods.
And then one can get downright nasty...
X = 3.14
Y = 2.78
Z = 6.226E23
print("".join(["Plane rotation
On 2019-08-10 09:10:12 +1000, Cameron Simpson wrote:
> On 09Aug2019 22:28, Paul St George wrote:
> > On 09/08/2019 16:29, Rhodri James wrote:
> > > (Actually I would probably use outstream.write() and do my own
> > > formatting, but let's not get side-tracked ;-)
> > >
> > I would love to hear yo
On 09Aug2019 22:28, Paul St George wrote:
On 09/08/2019 16:29, Rhodri James wrote:
The 'sep="\n"' parameter to print() means "put a newline between each
item." So don't do that. Put the newlines you do want in explicitly,
or use separate calls to print():
(I'm abbreviating because I really
On 09/08/2019 16:29, Rhodri James wrote:
On 09/08/2019 15:13, Paul St George wrote:
In the code (below) I want a new line like this:
Plane rotation X: 0.0
Plane rotation Y: 0.0
Plane rotation Z: 0.0
But not like this:
Plane rotation X:
0.0
Plane rotation Y:
0.0
Plane rotation Z:
0.0
Is it p
Paul St George wrote:
> In the code (below) I want a new line like this:
>
> Plane rotation X: 0.0
> Plane rotation Y: 0.0
> Plane rotation Z: 0.0
>
> But not like this:
>
> Plane rotation X:
> 0.0
> Plane rotation Y:
> 0.0
> Plane rotation Z:
> 0.0
>
> Is it possible?
> print(
>
> "Plane ro
On 09/08/2019 15:13, Paul St George wrote:
In the code (below) I want a new line like this:
Plane rotation X: 0.0
Plane rotation Y: 0.0
Plane rotation Z: 0.0
But not like this:
Plane rotation X:
0.0
Plane rotation Y:
0.0
Plane rotation Z:
0.0
Is it possible?
(I am using Python 3.5 within Blen
On 8/9/19 10:13 AM, Paul St George wrote:
In the code (below) I want a new line like this:
Plane rotation X: 0.0
Plane rotation Y: 0.0
Plane rotation Z: 0.0
But not like this:
Plane rotation X:
0.0
Plane rotation Y:
0.0
Plane rotation Z:
0.0
Is it possible?
(I am using Python 3.5 within Blend
Thanks to all who pointed my wrong understanding of how string slices are
defined.
Bye,
Ron.
From: Barak, Ron [mailto:ron.ba...@lsi.com]
Sent: Tuesday, December 16, 2008 15:35
To: python-list@python.org
Subject: String slices work only for first string character ?
Hi Mr. Cain,
Mae culpa: obviously, I erroneously understood the number after the ':' as the
string length.
Thanks,
Ron.
-Original Message-
From: D'Arcy J.M. Cain [mailto:da...@druid.net]
Sent: Tuesday, December 16, 2008 15:45
To: Barak, Ron
Cc: python-list@python.org
Subj
On Tue, 16 Dec 2008 13:35:27 +
"Barak, Ron" wrote:
> Can any one explain why the following string slice works only for the first
> character, but not for any other ?
I think that you need to reread the docs on slices.
> print "|"+data[0:1]+"|"
> print "|"+data[1:1]+"|"
If you want the seco
Can any one explain why the following string slice works only for the first
character, but not for any other ?
$ cat /tmp/tmp.py
#!/usr/bin/env python
data = 'F0023209006-0101'
print data
print "|"+data[0:1]+"|"
print "|"+data[1:1]+"|"
print "|"+data[2:1]+"|"
$ python `cygpath -w /tmp/tmp.py`
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