Re: Hello I want help get rid of that message and help install Python properly and thank you

2023-03-22 Thread Igor Korot
Hi, On Wed, Mar 22, 2023 at 11:37 AM Mohammed nour Koujan wrote: > > > -- What message? Please don't post screenshots - copy and paste the errors from your machine... Thank you. > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Hello I want help get rid of that message and help install Python properly and thank you

2023-03-22 Thread Mohammed nour Koujan
-- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: I'm finally disentangled from Python 2, thank you everyone

2020-12-30 Thread Christian Gollwitzer
Am 30.12.20 um 11:58 schrieb Chris Green: Could I ask you to write up a post on what you did here? I've never used cx-freeze but it sounds like a useful thing for keeping legacy stuff functioning. A writeup from someone who's actually used it for that would be welcome. Of course, here is what I

Re: I'm finally disentangled from Python 2, thank you everyone

2020-12-30 Thread Chris Green
> Could I ask you to write up a post on what you did here? I've never used > cx-freeze but it sounds like a useful thing for keeping legacy stuff > functioning. A writeup from someone who's actually used it for that > would be welcome. > Of course, here is what I wrote in my 'self help' Dokuwik

Re: I'm finally disentangled from Python 2, thank you everyone

2020-12-29 Thread Cameron Simpson
On 29Dec2020 21:20, Chris Green wrote: >Well, it has taken me a while, but I now seem to have finally detached >myself from any Python 2 dependencies on my various systems. [...] >On my desktop machine it was a bit more difficult because of the Oki >scanner utility which I have asked about quite a

I'm finally disentangled from Python 2, thank you everyone

2020-12-29 Thread Chris Green
Well, it has taken me a while, but I now seem to have finally detached myself from any Python 2 dependencies on my various systems. Firstly may I say thank you to everyone who has helped me with this (and with other issues) here on the Python list, you are a friendly and helpful group of people

Re: Thank you Larry Hastings!

2020-10-08 Thread 황병희
d so much more. For details, see: > > * https://docs.python.org/3/whatsnew/3.4.html > * https://docs.python.org/3/whatsnew/3.5.html > > Larry’s first official release of 3.4.0a1 was on 2013-08-03 and his > last Python 3.5.10 release was 2020-09-05. That’s 7 years of > exemplary

Re: [python-committers] Thank you Larry Hastings!

2020-10-06 Thread Nick Coghlan
Thank you, Larry! Cheers, Nick. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: [python-committers] Thank you Larry Hastings!

2020-10-06 Thread Cameron Simpson
On 05Oct2020 22:14, Tal Einat wrote: >You have my thanks as well, Larry. And mine. - Cameron Simpson -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: [python-committers] Thank you Larry Hastings!

2020-10-05 Thread Łukasz Langa
> On 5 Oct 2020, at 20:38, Barry Warsaw wrote: > > Larry, from all of us, and from me personally, thank you so much for your > invaluable contributions to Python. Yes, definitely! Thank you. > Enjoy your retirement! Not so fast! Now you have all that extra free time t

Re: [python-committers] Thank you Larry Hastings!

2020-10-05 Thread Tal Einat
2020-09-05. That’s 7 years of exemplary release > managing! > > Larry, from all of us, and from me personally, thank you so much for your > invaluable contributions to Python. Enjoy your retirement! > > Cheers, > -Barry (on behalf of the PSC and PSF) These praises are certa

Re: [python-committers] Thank you Larry Hastings!

2020-10-05 Thread Guido van Rossum
Thank you Larry! On Mon, Oct 5, 2020 at 11:39 AM Barry Warsaw wrote: > They say being a Python Release Manager is a thankless job, so the Python > Secret Underground (PSU), which emphatically does not exist, hereby > officially doesn’t thank Larry for his years of diligent servi

Thank you Larry Hastings!

2020-10-05 Thread Barry Warsaw
.html Larry’s first official release of 3.4.0a1 was on 2013-08-03 and his last Python 3.5.10 release was 2020-09-05. That’s 7 years of exemplary release managing! Larry, from all of us, and from me personally, thank you so much for your invaluable contributions to Python. Enjoy your retirement

thank you for inventing python

2018-06-27 Thread Kike Rocamora
Enviado desde Correo para Windows 10 -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Thank you Python community!

2018-03-20 Thread Gregory Ewing
John Ladasky wrote: Yeah, it's either Python or that horrifying street drug PHP. I know which one I'm choosing. Python is definitely the best language for getting high on: https://xkcd.com/353/ -- Greg -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Sig monster agency (was: Thank you Python community!)

2018-03-20 Thread Ben Finney
Alister via Python-list writes: > maybe [Ben's signatures are not sarcasm] - I use fortune to generate > mine & it can be supprisingly apt at times Yes. They are randomly chosen by my sig monster when I compose a message; I have some option to ask for another, but no direct input in the selectio

Re: Thank you Python community!

2018-03-20 Thread John Ladasky
On Monday, March 19, 2018 at 9:28:09 AM UTC-7, Etienne Robillard wrote: > I would like to thank you guys sincerely for helping a lot of people to > stay clean, and focus on programming high-level stuff in Python instead > of doing some really nasty drugs. Yeah, it's either

Re: [OT] Re: Thank you Python community!

2018-03-20 Thread Ned Batchelder
On 3/20/18 12:08 PM, Rick Johnson wrote: On Tuesday, March 20, 2018 at 7:03:11 AM UTC-5, Adriaan Renting wrote: (on the subject of the opioid epidemic) The [OT] in the subject line is right: let's not get off on a political tangent. --Ned. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-

Re: [OT] Re: Thank you Python community!

2018-03-20 Thread Rick Johnson
On Tuesday, March 20, 2018 at 7:03:11 AM UTC-5, Adriaan Renting wrote: (on the subject of the opioid epidemic) > That sounds more like a conspiracy theory than a real > analysis of the problem. Looking at it from here in > Europe, most of the analysis I've been able to read and > watch about it

Re: [OT] Re: Thank you Python community!

2018-03-20 Thread Larry Martell
On Tue, Mar 20, 2018 at 6:19 AM, Adriaan Renting wrote: > > That sounds more like a conspiracy theory than a real analysis of the > problem. Follow the money. > > > Looking at it from here in Europe, most of the analysis I've been able to > read and watch about it, points to a different cause: >

Re: Thank you Python community!

2018-03-20 Thread Etienne Robillard
Le 2018-03-19 à 22:21, Rick Johnson a écrit : On Monday, March 19, 2018 at 6:37:21 PM UTC-5, Ben Finney wrote: -- \ "Success is going from one failure to the next without a loss | `\ of enthusiasm." -- Winston Churchill | _o__)

[OT] Re: Thank you Python community!

2018-03-20 Thread Adriaan Renting
That sounds more like a conspiracy theory than a real analysis of the problem. Looking at it from here in Europe, most of the analysis I've been able to read and watch about it, points to a different cause: A lack of security: People flee to drugs (alcohol, tobacco, coffee and other (illeg

Re: Thank you Python community!

2018-03-20 Thread Alister via Python-list
On Mon, 19 Mar 2018 19:21:04 -0700, Rick Johnson wrote: > On Monday, March 19, 2018 at 6:37:21 PM UTC-5, Ben Finney wrote: > >> -- >> \ "Success is going from one failure to the next without a loss >> | >> `\ of enthusiasm." -- Winston Churchill >> | >> _o

Re: Thank you Python community!

2018-03-19 Thread Rick Johnson
On Monday, March 19, 2018 at 6:37:21 PM UTC-5, Ben Finney wrote: > -- > \ "Success is going from one failure to the next without a loss | > `\ of enthusiasm." -- Winston Churchill | > _o__) | > B

Re: Thank you Python community!

2018-03-19 Thread Etienne Robillard
Le 2018-03-19 à 19:36, Ben Finney a écrit : Etienne Robillard writes: I would like to make such an experimental research/investigation on the effects of Python software programming on opioid addiction. :-) Okay. The wording of your message implied that you know this already happens now, tho

Re: Thank you Python community!

2018-03-19 Thread Ben Finney
Etienne Robillard writes: > I would like to make such an experimental research/investigation on > the effects of Python software programming on opioid addiction. :-) Okay. The wording of your message implied that you know this already happens now, though. How did you come to know this? -- \

Re: Thank you Python community!

2018-03-19 Thread Etienne Robillard
Hi Ben, Thank you for your reply. I would like to make such an experimental research/investigation on the effects of Python software programming on opioid addiction. :-) Probably studying the learning of Python in people with cocaine and heroin addiction would be significant and interesting

Re: Thank you Python community!

2018-03-19 Thread Ben Finney
Etienne Robillard writes: > I would like to thank you guys sincerely for helping a lot of people > to stay clean, and focus on programming high-level stuff in Python > instead of doing some really nasty drugs. Thank you for the kind words. I'd love to believe the Python com

Re: Thank you Python community!

2018-03-19 Thread Etienne Robillard
Le 2018-03-19 à 15:21, Larry Martell a écrit : On Mon, Mar 19, 2018 at 12:08 PM, Etienne Robillard wrote: You guys just made me realize something very obvious. :-) I'm in the process right now of watching the excellent documentary named "Drugs Inc." on Netflix and I'm basically stunned and d

Re: Thank you Python community!

2018-03-19 Thread Rob Gaddi
On 03/19/2018 12:40 PM, Tim Daneliuk wrote: On 03/19/2018 02:05 PM, bartc wrote: I've often wondered what the guys who invented C (around 1970) must have been  smoking to have come up with some of those ideas. I dunno, but I do know that - if they were smoking something - it was rolled in gree

Re: Thank you Python community!

2018-03-19 Thread Tim Daneliuk
On 03/19/2018 02:05 PM, bartc wrote: > I've often wondered what the guys who invented C (around 1970) must have been  > smoking to have come up with some of those ideas. I dunno, but I do know that - if they were smoking something - it was rolled in greenbar paper ... -- https://mail.python.org/m

Re: Thank you Python community!

2018-03-19 Thread Larry Martell
On Mon, Mar 19, 2018 at 12:08 PM, Etienne Robillard wrote: > You guys just made me realize something very obvious. :-) > > I'm in the process right now of watching the excellent documentary named > "Drugs Inc." on Netflix and I'm basically stunned and deeply concerned about > the major opioid epid

Re: Thank you Python community!

2018-03-19 Thread bartc
d epidemic in the US. I would like to thank you guys sincerely for helping a lot of people to stay clean, and focus on programming high-level stuff in Python instead of doing some really nasty drugs. I'm also wondering, could we exploit this strategy even further to help people willi

Thank you Python community!

2018-03-19 Thread Etienne Robillard
You guys just made me realize something very obvious. :-) I'm in the process right now of watching the excellent documentary named "Drugs Inc." on Netflix and I'm basically stunned and deeply concerned about the major opioid epidemic in the US. I would like to thank yo

Thank you for the multipart/mixed

2016-10-04 Thread Jussi Piitulainen
Thank you, Python! I got important and urgent mail in a format that my rather-out-of-date Gnus (on a server that I don't control) failed to show me, except in its raw form. A search for tools to parse the raw multipart/mixed MIME formatted message, now in a file, turned out one promising

EuroPython 2016: Thank you to all our organizers and volunteers

2016-08-09 Thread M.-A. Lemburg
EuroPython 2016 is now over and was an overwhelming success thanks to everyone who helped make it happen. Since EuroPython would not be possible without the help of our volunteers and organizers, we’d like to say Thank You !!! to all the individuals who invested

EuroPython 2015: Thank you to all volunteers

2015-07-30 Thread M.-A. Lemburg
without being registered as volunteer, e.g. during tear down at the conference venue. We’d like to thank you and acknowledge you as well. If you have helped and are not on the above list, please write to i...@europython.eu. For next year, we will seek to use a better system for volunteer management

** UPDATE ** ~ The Perfect Guide To Actionable Programming & Thank You ~

2013-03-04 Thread Claira
Thanks for the few answers, though those few were very Helpful. The problem was that some people (even after 4 or more years of university), especially including almost all beginners, do not know how to start building something that does something helpful for soceity and everyone around them -- and

Re: Previous Question Answered - Thank You All For Your Replies

2013-01-09 Thread Dave Angel
On 01/09/2013 12:11 PM, Reed, Kevin wrote: > Hello, > > My question concerning wiki.python.org unavailability has been answered. > Thank you all for your assistance! You guys are awesome! > > For those of you who don't know, here's the info. > > http://mail.pyt

Previous Question Answered - Thank You All For Your Replies

2013-01-09 Thread Reed, Kevin
Hello, My question concerning wiki.python.org unavailability has been answered. Thank you all for your assistance! You guys are awesome! For those of you who don't know, here's the info. http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-list/2013-January/638182.html Thanks again, Kevin

Re: Using poplib to parse headers - Thank You All!

2012-12-10 Thread asklucas
Hello Jean-Claude! Thank you for your post, it helped me a lot! I'm not too new to Python but still struggling to make use of that great language's features. I haven't tested it but since you are interested in syntactic subtleties, I think you can save one iterator

Thank You Re: use of index (beginner's question)

2011-04-29 Thread Rusty Scalf
An overdue Thank You to everyone who responded. I got well more than I bargained for, including needed reinforcement (beyond the beginner's guides) of how Python actually works and some good programming habits. I am grateful. I liked Steven D'Aprano comment: Define &quo

Thank-you (Re: Iterate through a single iterator from multiple places in a loop)

2010-09-21 Thread python
MRAB, > it = iter(some_long_string) Well, that was easy! :) Thanks for your help. Malcolm - Original message - From: "MRAB" To: python-list@python.org Date: Wed, 22 Sep 2010 00:27:25 +0100 Subject: Re: Iterate through a single iterator from multiple places in a loop On 22/09/2010

Re: FYI: ConfigParser, ordered options, PEP 372 and OrderedDict + big thank you

2009-11-20 Thread Scott David Daniels
waiting for me when I move to Python3. So a big thank you is in order. And thank you for, having done that, not simply smiling because your work was lighter. Instead you described a great work path and handed an attaboy to a pair of people that richly deserve attaboys. --Scott David Daniels

FYI: ConfigParser, ordered options, PEP 372 and OrderedDict + big thank you

2009-11-17 Thread Jonathan Fine
been done already, and will be waiting for me when I move to Python3. So a big thank you is in order. -- Jonathan -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Thank you, Tkinter. (easy to use)

2009-02-14 Thread Terry Reedy
DLitgo wrote: Does anyone know of a quick and easy install for > PIL + JPEG for Mac OS X (10.5)? If you don't get an answer, try a thread with the above as the title. There may be a python-mac list somewhere too. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Thank you, Tkinter. (easy to use)

2009-02-14 Thread DLitgo
On Feb 12, 12:39 am, r wrote: > Hello, > > Tkinter is a great GUI toolkit, for what it lacks in prettiness it > more than makes up for in simple and quick GUI building. I think this > is the main reason Tkinter continues to be Python's built-in GUI > toolkit. It is a great place to start for those

Re: Thank you, Tkinter. (easy to use)

2009-02-12 Thread argo785
On Feb 12, 4:29 am, "Eric Brunel" wrote: > On Thu, 12 Feb 2009 06:06:06 +0100, wrote: > > [snip] > > > My only (minor) complaint is that Tk > > doesn't draw text antialiased in the various widgets (menus, labels, > > buttons, etc.). > >  From version 8.5 of tcl/tk, it's supposed to do it. See thi

Re: Thank you, Tkinter. (easy to use)

2009-02-12 Thread argo785
On Feb 12, 4:29 am, "Eric Brunel" wrote: > On Thu, 12 Feb 2009 06:06:06 +0100, wrote: > > [snip] > > > My only (minor) complaint is that Tk > > doesn't draw text antialiased in the various widgets (menus, labels, > > buttons, etc.). > >  From version 8.5 of tcl/tk, it's supposed to do it. See thi

Re: Thank you, Tkinter. (easy to use)

2009-02-12 Thread Eric Brunel
On Thu, 12 Feb 2009 06:06:06 +0100, wrote: [snip] My only (minor) complaint is that Tk doesn't draw text antialiased in the various widgets (menus, labels, buttons, etc.). From version 8.5 of tcl/tk, it's supposed to do it. See this page: http://www.tcl.tk/software/tcltk/8.5.tml under 'Highlig

Re: Thank you, Tkinter. (easy to use)

2009-02-11 Thread r
Hello, Tkinter is a great GUI toolkit, for what it lacks in prettiness it more than makes up for in simple and quick GUI building. I think this is the main reason Tkinter continues to be Python's built-in GUI toolkit. It is a great place to start for those with no GUI experience. Sure it will neve

Thank you, Tkinter. (easy to use)

2009-02-11 Thread argo785
Tonight I needed to draw a series of simple shapes in a window using a bit of math but didn't have much time to do it. I've got very little GUI toolkit experience. Briefly had a look at the usually-recommended heavyweight GUI toolkits, but I didn't want to inherit from widget classes or override pa

Re: Questions on 64 bit versions of Python (Thank-you!)

2008-07-29 Thread Tim Golden
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Thanks for everyone's feedback - excellent detail - all my questions have been answered. BTW: Roel was correct that I got confused over the AMD and Intel naming conventions regarding the 64 bit versions of Python for Windows. (I missed that nuance that the Intel build re

Re: Questions on 64 bit versions of Python (Thank-you!)

2008-07-28 Thread python
Dear List, Thanks for everyone's feedback - excellent detail - all my questions have been answered. BTW: Roel was correct that I got confused over the AMD and Intel naming conventions regarding the 64 bit versions of Python for Windows. (I missed that nuance that the Intel build refered to the It

Re: Using poplib to parse headers - Thank You All!

2008-07-06 Thread Jean-Claude Neveu
Tim Roberts wrote: You've received some very confusing advice in this thread. Alex had the right answer, but I want to expand it a bit. [...] poplib.retr gives you a string. You need to hand that string to the email module, and you do that using "email.message_from_string". This is just to

Re: Generate labels for a multi-level outline (THANK-YOU!)

2008-05-08 Thread python
Dennis, > I was a touch bored in the last hour at work today so... Thank you!! Malcolm -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Generate labels for a multi-level outline (THANK-YOU!)

2008-05-07 Thread python
Castironpi and Dennis, WOW! Thank you very much for your examples!!! I wasn't trolling for free development, just whether such a library existed and/or design ideas (basic object or generator). I had started to develop my own solution which was much more complicated (re: ugly) than your 2

Thank you, Martin, Wang and Colin

2007-01-26 Thread siggi
Thanks for your answers, Martin, Wang and Colin! siggi "siggi" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> schrieb im Newsbeitrag news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Hi all, > > installing a package with 'setup.py' is easy. But how do I uninstall the > package, once I want to get rid of it again? > > Thanks, > > siggi > > > --

Thank you

2006-11-08 Thread Farraige
Thank you all for your very valuable clues! Thanks to you I got nearly 97% perfomance improvement !!! I can't believe it :))) Once again thank you Best wishes Farraige -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Data smoothing algorithms? - Thank you all

2005-05-04 Thread Bengt Richter
On Wed, 04 May 2005 16:01:07 GMT, Dennis Lee Bieber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >On Tue, 03 May 2005 16:28:34 GMT, Dennis Lee Bieber ><[EMAIL PROTECTED]> declaimed the following in comp.lang.python: > > >> It's not going to be easy, though... > > Yes, talking to myself... I crawled thro

Re: Data smoothing algorithms? - Thank you all

2005-05-03 Thread Anthra Norell
To contribute to this interesting discussion, which after having provided practical solutions, has become academic, I believe we are dealing with a particularly innocuous case of noise infection, innocuous on account of the noise being conspicuously distinct from the signal. The signal is the orbta

Re: Important please read this Thank you `°º·...·º°`°º·...·º°`°º·.†..·º°`°º·...·º°`°º·..·º°` `°º·...·º°`°º·...·º°`°º·.†..·º°`°º·...·º°`°º·..·º°` `°º·...·º°`°º·...·º°`°º·.†..·º°`°º·...·º°`°º·..·º°` `°º·...·º°`°º·...·º°`°º·.†..·º°`°º·...·º°`°º·..·º°` `°º·...·º°`°º·...·º°`°º·.†..·º°`°º·...·º°`°º·..·º°` `°º·...·º°`°º·...·º°`°º·.†..·º°`°º·...·º°`°º·..·º°` `°º·...·º°`°º·...·º°`°º·.†..·º°`°º·...·º°`°º·..·º°` `°º·...·º°`°º·...·º°`°º·.†..·º°`°º·...·º°`°º·..·º°` GOOGLE·NEWSGROUP·POST·155

2005-05-02 Thread Please
Reports to [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED] And do not feed the troll! -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Data smoothing algorithms? - Thank you all

2005-04-30 Thread Anthra Norell
Thank you all for your solutions! The moving average filter will surely do. I will take a closer look at SciPy, though. The doc is impressive. I believe it's curve fitting I am looking for rather than interpolation. There's a chapter on that too. Frederic - Original Message

Re: Thank you. New question concerning text encoding

2005-03-13 Thread Andy Dustman
The default character set used by MySQL for the connection is latin1. If you control the server, you can configure this in the system my.cnf. Otherwise, it is possible to set it in a local configuration file and use the read_default_file option to connect to set it. http://dev.mysql.com/doc/mysql/

Thank you. New question concerning text encoding

2005-03-12 Thread grumfish
Patrick Useldinger wrote: Just a guess "in the dark" (I don't use MySQL): is "commit" implicit, or do you have to add it yourself? Thank you. Inserts work fine now. Another question. I'm trying to insert Japanese text into the table. I created the database using &#x