Luis M. González wrote:
> This is one of these times when I feel so dumb and ashamed that I
> wished I never dared to ask...
> Well, that did the trick. Thanks!
>
> luis
>
> On Feb 24, 3:41 am, 7stud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Yes, define your functions so that they get all the input they need
This is one of these times when I feel so dumb and ashamed that I
wished I never dared to ask...
Well, that did the trick. Thanks!
luis
On Feb 24, 3:41 am, 7stud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Yes, define your functions so that they get all the input they need
> from the arguments that are passed i
On Feb 23, 11:41 pm, 7stud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Feb 23, 10:06 pm, "Luis M. González" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > I apologize for this very basic question, but I can't understand how
> > this works...
> > I want to import a function from module B into my main script A, so
> > thi
On Feb 23, 10:06 pm, "Luis M. González" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I apologize for this very basic question, but I can't understand how
> this works...
> I want to import a function from module B into my main script A, so
> this function can see and use the locals from A.
>
> For example:
>
> de
I apologize for this very basic question, but I can't understand how
this works...
I want to import a function from module B into my main script A, so
this function can see and use the locals from A.
For example:
def auto():
urls = ['/', 'index']
for k,v in __main__.locals().items():