Re: [CrowdStrike/falconpy] Why I recieved this output: (Discussion #760)

2022-08-25 Thread נתי שטרן
בתאריך יום חמישי, 25 באוגוסט 2022, מאת Joshua Hiller < notificati...@github.com>: > Hi @NSH531 - > > If passing an index doesn't help, you can probably get more assistance > from the Pandas issue board located here: https://github.com/pandas-dev/ > pandas/issues > > — >

Re: [CrowdStrike/falconpy] Why I recieved this output: (Discussion #760)+pandas DataFrame error

2022-08-25 Thread נתי שטרן
2022-08-25 17:53 GMT‎+03:00‎, נתי שטרן : > Someone here is understanding at pandas? > > בתאריך יום חמישי, 25 באוגוסט 2022, מאת Joshua Hiller < > notificati...@github.com>: > >> This is pretty far out of scope, but reviewing the error message in your >> IDE it appears you are passing scalars to the

Re: [CrowdStrike/falconpy] Why I recieved this output: (Discussion #760)+pandas DataFrame error

2022-08-25 Thread נתי שטרן
Someone here is understanding at pandas? בתאריך יום חמישי, 25 באוגוסט 2022, מאת Joshua Hiller < notificati...@github.com>: > This is pretty far out of scope, but reviewing the error message in your > IDE it appears you are passing scalars to the Dataframe. Since there is no > index, you're given

Discussion forum for typing Q&A and review requests

2021-09-13 Thread Sebastian Rittau
Typing with Python is hard and constantly evolving. This is why we set up a forum to help users with typing at https://github.com/python/typing/discussions . It's fairly new, but at the moment we have two categories for general Q&A and for asking fo

Re: OT: Autism in discussion groups

2021-05-10 Thread Mirko via Python-list
Am 09.05.2021 um 02:34 schrieb Michael Torrie: > On 5/8/21 3:28 PM, Mirko via Python-list wrote: >> >> I apologize for this OT post, especially because it's in reply to an >> at least partly troll post, but I just can't resist. Sorry. >> >> P.S.: *NOT* among the core symptoms of (the high-function

Re: OT: Autism in discussion groups (was: Re: Proposal: Disconnect comp.lang.python from python-list)

2021-05-09 Thread Michael Torrie
On 5/9/21 11:26 AM, Abdur-Rahmaan Janhangeer wrote: > Out of curiosity, how do people without a Code of Conduct > manage and prevent abuse in between people? I was about > to organise something last year but did not find a better solution > than a code of conduct to ensure smoothness. Well the idea

Re: OT: Autism in discussion groups (was: Re: Proposal: Disconnect comp.lang.python from python-list)

2021-05-09 Thread Abdur-Rahmaan Janhangeer
Greetings, Out of curiosity, how do people without a Code of Conduct manage and prevent abuse in between people? I was about to organise something last year but did not find a better solution than a code of conduct to ensure smoothness. Well the idea was a before-hand signed code of conduct. It be

Re: OT: Autism in discussion groups (was: Re: Proposal: Disconnect comp.lang.python from python-list)

2021-05-09 Thread Jason C. McDonald
> I disagree. Many people are opposed to CoCs for a variety of reasons > including the fact that many CoCs are political in nature. Others > oppose them for legal liability reasons. On his radio show Ask Noah (a > radio show about Linux), Noah has interviewed several people who oppose > CoCs for

Re: OT: Autism in discussion groups (was: Re: Proposal: Disconnect comp.lang.python from python-list)

2021-05-09 Thread Abdur-Rahmaan Janhangeer
evertheless, when the Linux Foundation announced a discussion looking > into such (largely) US-concerning terms as Master/Slave in computing > contexts, the same newsletter blatantly localised events which were > publicised, and intended to draw, world-wide participation. > (and has ye

Re: OT: Autism in discussion groups (was: Re: Proposal: Disconnect comp.lang.python from python-list)

2021-05-09 Thread dn via Python-list
h to write what needs to be said in a cogent fashion, without having to double-guess how multiple cultures might prefer things be done. That said, there is nothing to be gained by upsetting people... Nevertheless, when the Linux Foundation announced a discussion looking into such (largely) US-concern

Re: OT: Autism in discussion groups (was: Re: Proposal: Disconnect comp.lang.python from python-list)

2021-05-09 Thread Abdur-Rahmaan Janhangeer
I meant to quote this part actually: I'm not saying that the previous situation was GOOD, but I'm far from sure that the current situation is any better - look at the arguments regarding branch naming, which completely sidelined all technical considerations in favour of one single political motiva

Re: OT: Autism in discussion groups (was: Re: Proposal: Disconnect comp.lang.python from python-list)

2021-05-09 Thread Abdur-Rahmaan Janhangeer
On Sun, May 9, 2021 at 5:29 AM Chris Angelico wrote: > > Probably the same reason it has never worked. The only thing that's > changed is the social acceptability of vilifying those you don't like. > Once upon a time, there were those in the community who had all the > power, and those on the fri

Re: OT: Autism in discussion groups (was: Re: Proposal: Disconnect comp.lang.python from python-list)

2021-05-08 Thread Chris Angelico
On Sun, May 9, 2021 at 11:10 AM Michael Torrie wrote: > > On 5/8/21 6:23 PM, Jason C. McDonald wrote: > > Usually, I find when people dump on CoCs, they're just angry at > > accountability. I haven't known anyone yet who was a productive > > member of Python and opposed to the CoC, at least in pri

Re: OT: Autism in discussion groups (was: Re: Proposal: Disconnect comp.lang.python from python-list)

2021-05-08 Thread Michael Torrie
On 5/8/21 6:23 PM, Jason C. McDonald wrote: > Usually, I find when people dump on CoCs, they're just angry at > accountability. I haven't known anyone yet who was a productive > member of Python and opposed to the CoC, at least in principle > and aim. I disagree. Many people are opposed to CoCs f

Re: OT: Autism in discussion groups (was: Re: Proposal: Disconnect comp.lang.python from python-list)

2021-05-08 Thread Michael Torrie
On 5/8/21 3:28 PM, Mirko via Python-list wrote: > > I apologize for this OT post, especially because it's in reply to an > at least partly troll post, but I just can't resist. Sorry. > > P.S.: *NOT* among the core symptoms of (the high-functioning levels) > of ASS is the inability to learn. Mind

Re: OT: Autism in discussion groups (was: Re: Proposal: Disconnect comp.lang.python from python-list)

2021-05-08 Thread Jason C. McDonald
ll post, but I just can't resist. Sorry. > > > Am 08.05.2021 um 14:09 schrieb Talkie Toaster: >> On 06/05/2021 18:56, Mark Lawrence wrote: > >>> Quite frankly I don't care how this discussion goes as the Python >>> community discriminates against Asperger&

OT: Autism in discussion groups (was: Re: Proposal: Disconnect comp.lang.python from python-list)

2021-05-08 Thread Mirko via Python-list
I apologize for this OT post, especially because it's in reply to an at least partly troll post, but I just can't resist. Sorry. Am 08.05.2021 um 14:09 schrieb Talkie Toaster: > On 06/05/2021 18:56, Mark Lawrence wrote: >> Quite frankly I don't care how this discu

Re: Student can't get if elif final statement to print for discussion post for python

2017-11-22 Thread Rick Johnson
Richard Damon wrote: > Cheri Castro wrote: > > I've tried several variations but haven't been able to > > figure out why my final if elif statement won't print. I > > tried using return, I tried using 1's and 0's rather than > > yes and no. Not sure what the issue is. Please, help. > > > > > > #Thi

Re: Student can't get if elif final statement to print for discussion post for python

2017-11-19 Thread Richard Damon
On 11/19/17 1:10 PM, Cheri Castro wrote: I've tried several variations but haven't been able to figure out why my final if elif statement won't print. I tried using return, I tried using 1's and 0's rather than yes and no. Not sure what the issue is. Please, help. #This function will print ho

Re: Student can't get if elif final statement to print for discussion post for python

2017-11-19 Thread MRAB
ed using return, I tried using 1's and 0's rather than yes and no. Not sure what the issue is. Please, help. Your questions are welcome here, but you may also be interested in http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor> the “tutor” discussion forum especially for Python beginners.

Re: Student can't get if elif final statement to print for discussion post for python

2017-11-19 Thread Ben Finney
1's and 0's rather than yes and > no. Not sure what the issue is. Please, help. Your questions are welcome here, but you may also be interested in http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor> the “tutor” discussion forum especially for Python beginners. > #This function will

Student can't get if elif final statement to print for discussion post for python

2017-11-19 Thread Cheri Castro
I've tried several variations but haven't been able to figure out why my final if elif statement won't print. I tried using return, I tried using 1's and 0's rather than yes and no. Not sure what the issue is. Please, help. #This function will print how many yes answers the user has and a mess

Re: Moderation and off-topic discussion [was Re: Bigotry and hate speech...]

2017-04-18 Thread Chris Angelico
On Wed, Apr 19, 2017 at 1:35 AM, Steve D'Aprano wrote: > In the meantime, people can help by posting their own new threads. If you > don't have a question to ask, you could always post an observation. What's > the coolest feature of Python you use? Got some good stories of brilliant > Python code

Moderation and off-topic discussion [was Re: Bigotry and hate speech...]

2017-04-18 Thread Steve D'Aprano
ed, and the mailing list administrators don't moderate each and every message. Besides, this forum does have a higher tolerance for off-topic discussions. (At least collectively -- individuals, of course, vary in their tolerance to off-topic discussion.) The best we can do is ask people to ch

Re: Pre-pep discussion material: in-place equivalents to map and filter

2016-11-06 Thread Chris Angelico
On Sun, Nov 6, 2016 at 12:50 AM, Arthur Havlicek wrote: > 2016-11-05 12:47 GMT+01:00 Chris Angelico : > >> On Sat, Nov 5, 2016 at 9:50 PM, Arthur Havlicek >> >> But here's the thing. For everyone who writes a decorator function, >> there could be dozens who use it. >> > > The day that one guy leav

Re: Pre-pep discussion material: in-place equivalents to map and filter

2016-11-06 Thread Arthur Havlicek
2016-11-05 12:47 GMT+01:00 Chris Angelico : > On Sat, Nov 5, 2016 at 9:50 PM, Arthur Havlicek > > But here's the thing. For everyone who writes a decorator function, > there could be dozens who use it. > The day that one guy leaves the team, suddenly you have code that's become a bit tricky to ma

Re: Pre-pep discussion material: in-place equivalents to map and filter

2016-11-05 Thread Chris Angelico
On Sat, Nov 5, 2016 at 9:50 PM, Arthur Havlicek wrote: > Pick 10 programmers for hire and count how many know how to write a > decorator. If you have specified you needed python specialists, you may > have 3-4. If not, you are lucky to find even one. By "write a decorator", I presume you mean imp

Re: Pre-pep discussion material: in-place equivalents to map and filter

2016-11-05 Thread Arthur Havlicek
2016-11-05 9:42 GMT+01:00 Steve D'Aprano : > > I don't know who you are quoting there. It is considered impolite to quote > people without giving attribution, and makes it harder to respond. > My bad. I was unaware of that. This was quoted from Ned Batchelder's mali. 2016-11-05 9:42 GMT+01:00 S

Re: Pre-pep discussion material: in-place equivalents to map and filter

2016-11-05 Thread Steve D'Aprano
I've been giving your proposal a bit more thought, and while I can't say I'm really keep on the idea, I have warmed slightly to it. On Fri, 4 Nov 2016 07:29 am, Arthur Havlicek wrote: > I understand that, the cost of change is such that it's very unlikely > something like this ever goes into Pyt

Re: Pre-pep discussion material: in-place equivalents to map and filter

2016-11-04 Thread arthurhavlicek
> I don't think that justifies the claim of "especially > bad", which to me implies something much worse. Quicksort has built its popularity by performing better by "a mere factor two" better than mergesort and heapsort. It became the reference sorting algorithm even though its worst case comple

Re: Pre-pep discussion material: in-place equivalents to map and filter

2016-11-04 Thread Chris Angelico
On Sat, Nov 5, 2016 at 11:42 AM, Steve D'Aprano wrote: > On Fri, 4 Nov 2016 08:34 am, Chris Angelico wrote: > > [...] >> List comps themselves involve one function call (zero in Py2). What >> you do inside the expression is your business. Do you agree that list >> comps don't have the overhead of

Re: Pre-pep discussion material: in-place equivalents to map and filter

2016-11-04 Thread Steve D'Aprano
On Fri, 4 Nov 2016 08:34 am, Chris Angelico wrote: [...] > List comps themselves involve one function call (zero in Py2). What > you do inside the expression is your business. Do you agree that list > comps don't have the overhead of opening and closing files? /tongue firmly in cheek I'd like to

Re: Pre-pep discussion material: in-place equivalents to map and filter

2016-11-04 Thread Arthur Havlicek
> If slice assignment is done as I hope it will optimize remain memory operations. Bad news. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4948293/python-slice-assignment-memory-usage/4948508#4948508 > If you want something like C++ move semantics, use C++. I don't see anything like this in my proposal. I

Re: Pre-pep discussion material: in-place equivalents to map and filter

2016-11-03 Thread Terry Reedy
On 11/3/2016 2:56 AM, arthurhavli...@gmail.com wrote: lst = [ item for item in lst if predicate(item) ] lst = [ f(item) for item in lst ] Both these expressions feature redundancy, lst occurs twice and item at least twice. Additionally, the readability is hurt, because one has to dive through

Re: Pre-pep discussion material: in-place equivalents to map and filter

2016-11-03 Thread Paul Rubin
arthurhavli...@gmail.com writes: > I would gladly appreciate your returns on this, regarding: > 1 - Whether a similar proposition has been made > 2 - If you find this of any interest at all > 3 - If you have a suggestion for improving the proposal Bleccch. Might be ok as a behind-the-scenes optim

Re: Pre-pep discussion material: in-place equivalents to map and filter

2016-11-03 Thread Chris Angelico
On Fri, Nov 4, 2016 at 4:00 AM, Steve D'Aprano wrote: > On Fri, 4 Nov 2016 01:05 am, Chris Angelico wrote: > >> On Thu, Nov 3, 2016 at 7:29 PM, Steven D'Aprano >> wrote: lst = map (lambda x: x*5, lst) lst = filter (lambda x: x%3 == 1, lst) And perform especially bad in CPython comp

Re: Pre-pep discussion material: in-place equivalents to map and filter

2016-11-03 Thread Arthur Havlicek
I understand that, the cost of change is such that it's very unlikely something like this ever goes into Python, but I feel like the interest of the proposition is being underestimated here, that's why I'm going to argue a few points and give a bit more context as needed. > While mapping and filte

Re: Pre-pep discussion material: in-place equivalents to map and filter

2016-11-03 Thread Steve D'Aprano
On Fri, 4 Nov 2016 01:05 am, Chris Angelico wrote: > On Thu, Nov 3, 2016 at 7:29 PM, Steven D'Aprano > wrote: >>> lst = map (lambda x: x*5, lst) >>> lst = filter (lambda x: x%3 == 1, lst) >>> And perform especially bad in CPython compared to a comprehension. >> >> I doubt that. >> > > It's entir

Re: Pre-pep discussion material: in-place equivalents to map and filter

2016-11-03 Thread Terry Reedy
On 11/3/2016 4:29 AM, Steven D'Aprano wrote: Nonsense. It is perfectly readable because it is explicit about what is being done, unlike some magic method that you have to read the docs to understand what it does. Agreed. A list comprehension or for-loop is more general and can be combined so

Re: Pre-pep discussion material: in-place equivalents to map and filter

2016-11-03 Thread Chris Angelico
On Thu, Nov 3, 2016 at 7:29 PM, Steven D'Aprano wrote: >> lst = map (lambda x: x*5, lst) >> lst = filter (lambda x: x%3 == 1, lst) >> And perform especially bad in CPython compared to a comprehension. > > I doubt that. > It's entirely possible. A list comp involves one function call (zero in Py2)

Pre-pep discussion material: in-place equivalents to map and filter

2016-11-03 Thread arthurhavlicek
Hi everybody, I have an enhancement proposal for Python and, as suggested by PEP 1, am exposing a stub to the mailing list before possibly starting writing a PEP. This is my first message to python mailing list. I hope you will find this content of interest. Python features a powerful and fast

Re: Pre-pep discussion material: in-place equivalents to map and filter

2016-11-03 Thread Ned Batchelder
On Thursday, November 3, 2016 at 4:30:00 AM UTC-4, Steven D'Aprano wrote: > On Thursday 03 November 2016 17:56, arthurhavli...@gmail.com wrote: > > I would propose this syntax. (TODO: find appropriate keywords I guess): > > > > lst.map x: x*5 > > lst.filter x: x%3 == 1 > > I think the chances of

Re: Pre-pep discussion material: in-place equivalents to map and filter

2016-11-03 Thread Steven D'Aprano
On Thursday 03 November 2016 17:56, arthurhavli...@gmail.com wrote: [...] > Python features a powerful and fast way to create lists through > comprehensions. Because of their ease of use and efficiency through native > implementation, they are an advantageous alternative to map, filter, and > more

discussion group for Python in finance?

2016-03-18 Thread beliavsky--- via Python-list
Is there an active online group discussing the use of Python in finance? Here are some resources for Python in finance I know of. Numpy, scipy, pandas, and matplotlib are useful packages discussed in the books "Python for Finance" by Hilpisch and "Python for Data Analysis" by McKinney. Quandl is

Re: discussion group for Python in finance?

2016-03-18 Thread jogaserbia
unicode support in Python 3 is better than in python2 https://docs.python.org/3/howto/unicode.html What does this refer to (what are you getting at): > I was also told, a lot of code has been ported to > the Go language. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Interleaved posting style for text discussion forums (was: Python 3 is killing Python)

2014-07-16 Thread Ben Finney
Abhiram R writes: > ​Aah. Understood. Apologies for the "noobishness" :) ​ Thanks for understanding. Here is a good explanation of “Interleaved style” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posting_style#Interleaved_style> which is the proper etiquette for text-based discussions. -- \ “I used

Discussion problems of monoculture (was: What's the "right" way to abandon an open source package?)

2014-07-01 Thread Ben Finney
Ian Kelly writes: > On Tue, Jul 1, 2014 at 1:05 PM, Paul Sokolovsky wrote: > > On 01 Jul 2014 18:40:23 GMT > > Steven D'Aprano wrote: > >> http://nedbatchelder.com/blog/201405/github_monoculture.html > > > > Everyone who (re)posts stuff like that should have mandatory N.B. of "I > > just bought

Official discussion forum for a project (was: Packaging a proprietary Python library for multiple OSs)

2013-12-05 Thread Ben Finney
^H^H thread about “Managing Google Groups > headaches”? In addition to the fact that “rusi” evidently does not hold that position, the Virtualenv project http://www.virtualenv.org/> has its official discussion forum hosted at Google Groups, and the above quote merely points that out. One can

Re: Tkinter: winfo_screenmmwidth discussion

2013-12-03 Thread josefg
On Tuesday, November 26, 2013 2:13:57 PM UTC-8, jos...@gmail.com wrote: > I am currently using Windows 7 Sp1, Tkinter 8.5, Python 2.7.4 on a laptop > with no attached monitor. I am attempting to use winfo_screenmmwidth, but the > returned value is incorrect. Specs state 280 mm. Physical measureme

Re: Tkinter: winfo_screenmmwidth discussion

2013-11-26 Thread josefg
On Tuesday, November 26, 2013 2:55:52 PM UTC-8, Dennis Lee Bieber wrote: > On Tue, 26 Nov 2013 14:13:57 -0800 (PST), jos...@gmail.com declaimed the > > following: > > > > >I am currently using Windows 7 Sp1, Tkinter 8.5, Python 2.7.4 on a laptop > >with no attached monitor. I am attempting to

Re: Tkinter: winfo_screenmmwidth discussion

2013-11-26 Thread josefg
On Tuesday, November 26, 2013 2:55:52 PM UTC-8, Dennis Lee Bieber wrote: > On Tue, 26 Nov 2013 14:13:57 -0800 (PST), jos...@gmail.com declaimed the > > following: > > > > >I am currently using Windows 7 Sp1, Tkinter 8.5, Python 2.7.4 on a laptop > >with no attached monitor. I am attempting to

Tkinter: winfo_screenmmwidth discussion

2013-11-26 Thread josefg
I am currently using Windows 7 Sp1, Tkinter 8.5, Python 2.7.4 on a laptop with no attached monitor. I am attempting to use winfo_screenmmwidth, but the returned value is incorrect. Specs state 280 mm. Physical measurement is 275 mm. EDID states 280 mm. Tkinter's winfo_screenmmwidth returns 361 m

Re: Most discussion on comp.lang.python is about developing with Python

2013-11-14 Thread Peter Pearson
On Wed, 13 Nov 2013 15:35:56 -0500, bob gailer wrote: > I joined a week or so ago. > > The subject line was copied from the description of comp.lang.python aka > python-list@python.org. > > I am very disappointed to see so much energy and bandwidth going to > conversations that bash individuals.

Re: Most discussion on comp.lang.python is about developing with Python

2013-11-14 Thread Nobody
On Wed, 13 Nov 2013 15:35:56 -0500, bob gailer wrote: > I joined a week or so ago. > > The subject line was copied from the description of comp.lang.python aka > python-list@python.org. > > I am very disappointed to see so much energy and bandwidth going to > conversations that bash individual

Re: Most discussion on comp.lang.python is about developing with Python

2013-11-14 Thread Antoon Pardon
Op 14-11-13 00:48, Steven D'Aprano schreef: > On Wed, 13 Nov 2013 15:35:56 -0500, bob gailer wrote: > >> Is there a moderator for this list? > > Sadly no. > > >> Is there some other place for discussions that are completely OT and >> also full of flames? > > Yes, there is private email. Unfor

Re: Most discussion on comp.lang.python is about developing with Python

2013-11-13 Thread Steven D'Aprano
On Thu, 14 Nov 2013 10:29:03 +1100, Chris Angelico wrote: > On Thu, Nov 14, 2013 at 7:35 AM, bob gailer wrote: >> I am very disappointed to see so much energy and bandwidth going to >> conversations that bash individuals. >> >> > I agree, and there've been times when I've been part of the problem

Re: Most discussion on comp.lang.python is about developing with Python

2013-11-13 Thread Cameron Simpson
hurting my brain I think etiquette criticism that is a small aside in a technical response, if not done frequently, should be useful; it is a bit of push back without derailing the discussion. Etiquette criticism on its own, if on-list, I think derails the discussion and leads more readily t

Re: Most discussion on comp.lang.python is about developing with Python

2013-11-13 Thread Terry Reedy
On 11/13/2013 6:48 PM, Steven D'Aprano wrote: On Wed, 13 Nov 2013 15:35:56 -0500, bob gailer wrote: Or would you be willing to stop the bashing? I don't see that it helps anyone, and could be very offputting to other newbies. That's what I have been saying for a long time. I believe that wha

Re: Most discussion on comp.lang.python is about developing with Python

2013-11-13 Thread Steven D'Aprano
On Thu, 14 Nov 2013 10:47:35 +1000, alex23 wrote: > On 14/11/2013 9:48 AM, Steven D'Aprano wrote: >> I believe that whatever >> negative effect Nikos the help-vampire is having, it is long ago >> overwhelmed by the negative of the anti-Nikos vigilantes. > > I don't know, the anti-Nikos-vigilante

Re: Most discussion on comp.lang.python is about developing with Python

2013-11-13 Thread Terry Reedy
On 11/13/2013 6:27 PM, Rhodri James wrote: On Wed, 13 Nov 2013 22:53:46 -, Terry Reedy wrote: On 11/13/2013 3:35 PM, bob gailer wrote: Is there a moderator for this list? Posts from new addresses go to moderators for spam deletion. There are a couple a day that are discarded. Posts wit

Re: Most discussion on comp.lang.python is about developing with Python

2013-11-13 Thread Chris Angelico
On Thu, Nov 14, 2013 at 11:41 AM, Rick Johnson wrote: > "POWER CORRUPTS: ABSOLUTE POWER CORRUPTS ABSOLUTELY." http://xkcd.com/643/ ChrisA -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Most discussion on comp.lang.python is about developing with Python

2013-11-13 Thread alex23
On 14/11/2013 9:48 AM, Steven D'Aprano wrote: I believe that whatever negative effect Nikos the help-vampire is having, it is long ago overwhelmed by the negative of the anti-Nikos vigilantes. I don't know, the anti-Nikos-vigilante vigilantes are beginning to give them a run for their money, e

Re: Most discussion on comp.lang.python is about developing with Python

2013-11-13 Thread Rick Johnson
Hello Bob, I understand your concern but you need to realize there is not much that can (or should) be done *IF* we want to live in societies that are free from oppression. The minute we start drawing lines in the sand and punishing people for exercising their freedom of speech, is when we start

Re: Most discussion on comp.lang.python is about developing with Python

2013-11-13 Thread Chuck Quast
On Thursday, November 14, 2013 3:35:56 AM UTC+7, bob gailer wrote: > I joined a week or so ago. > > > > The subject line was copied from the description of comp.lang.python aka > > python-list@python.org. > > > > I am very disappointed to see so much energy and bandwidth going to > > conv

Re: Most discussion on comp.lang.python is about developing with Python

2013-11-13 Thread Ben Finney
bob gailer writes: > I joined a week or so ago. Welcome! Please feel free to start a new thread of dicussion about the Python programming language. > I am very disappointed to see so much energy and bandwidth going to > conversations that bash individuals. As am I. Let's talk about Python more

Re: Most discussion on comp.lang.python is about developing with Python

2013-11-13 Thread Steven D'Aprano
On Wed, 13 Nov 2013 17:53:46 -0500, Terry Reedy wrote: >> Is there a moderator for this list? > > Posts from new addresses go to moderators for spam deletion. There are a > couple a day that are discarded. Posts with 'suspicious headers' also > get checked. Non-suspicious posts from known people

Re: Most discussion on comp.lang.python is about developing with Python

2013-11-13 Thread Steven D'Aprano
On Wed, 13 Nov 2013 15:35:56 -0500, bob gailer wrote: > Is there a moderator for this list? Sadly no. > Is there some other place for discussions that are completely OT and > also full of flames? Yes, there is private email. Unfortunately private email doesn't give the culprits the audience

Re: Most discussion on comp.lang.python is about developing with Python

2013-11-13 Thread Rhodri James
On Wed, 13 Nov 2013 22:53:46 -, Terry Reedy wrote: On 11/13/2013 3:35 PM, bob gailer wrote: Is there a moderator for this list? Posts from new addresses go to moderators for spam deletion. There are a couple a day that are discarded. Posts with 'suspicious headers' also get checked.

Re: Most discussion on comp.lang.python is about developing with Python

2013-11-13 Thread Chris Angelico
On Thu, Nov 14, 2013 at 7:35 AM, bob gailer wrote: > I am very disappointed to see so much energy and bandwidth going to > conversations that bash individuals. > I agree, and there've been times when I've been part of the problem (usually in the form of trying to help Nikos, which results in stup

Re: Most discussion on comp.lang.python is about developing with Python

2013-11-13 Thread Terry Reedy
On 11/13/2013 3:35 PM, bob gailer wrote: I am very disappointed to see so much energy and bandwidth going to conversations that bash individuals. Me too. Is there a moderator for this list? Posts from new addresses go to moderators for spam deletion. There are a couple a day that are disc

Most discussion on comp.lang.python is about developing with Python

2013-11-13 Thread bob gailer
I joined a week or so ago. The subject line was copied from the description of comp.lang.python aka python-list@python.org. I am very disappointed to see so much energy and bandwidth going to conversations that bash individuals. Is there a moderator for this list? Is there some other place

Improving community discussion (was: JUST GOT HACKED)

2013-10-01 Thread Ben Finney
Mark Lawrence writes: > Nah, sadly part of it is due to me failing to keep Asperger Syndrome > under control. Marks out of 10, -5, must try harder :( Thank you for acknowledging this. I sincerely wish you strength in limiting antisocial behaviour. We need more people who can recognise and overc

A Discussion on Python and Data Visualization

2012-12-03 Thread subhabangalore
Dear Group, I am trying to work out a data visualization module. Here, I am taking raw corpus,and processing it linguistically(tokenization,tagging,NED recognition) and then trying to link the NED's with Latent Semantic Analysis or Relationship Mining or Network graph theory or cluster analysis

Re: Discussion on some Code Issues

2012-07-16 Thread subhabangalore
On Sunday, July 8, 2012 10:47:00 PM UTC+5:30, Chris Angelico wrote: > On Mon, Jul 9, 2012 at 3:05 AM, wrote: > > On Sunday, July 8, 2012 1:33:25 PM UTC+5:30, Chris Angelico wrote: > >> On Sun, Jul 8, 2012 at 3:42 PM, > wrote: > >> > file_open

Re: Discussion on some Code Issues

2012-07-09 Thread Chris Angelico
On Mon, Jul 9, 2012 at 10:24 PM, Steven D'Aprano wrote: > But it does depend on context. Sometimes you need more detail than just > "Python looks". You need to know precisely *how* Python looks, and how it > decides whether it has found or not. Agreed. So, looking back at the original context: A

Re: Discussion on some Code Issues

2012-07-09 Thread Steven D'Aprano
On Mon, 09 Jul 2012 18:41:28 +1000, Chris Angelico wrote: > Does it really hurt to anthropomorphize Don't anthropomorphise computers. They don't like it when you do. > and say that "Python looks for > modules in the directories in sys.path" instead of "Module lookup > consists of iterating bla

Re: Discussion on some Code Issues

2012-07-09 Thread Chris Angelico
On Mon, Jul 9, 2012 at 10:57 AM, Steven D'Aprano wrote: > On Mon, 09 Jul 2012 07:54:47 +1000, Chris Angelico wrote: > >> It's like >> the difference between reminder text on a Magic: The Gathering card and >> the actual entries in the Comprehensive Rules. Perfect example is the >> "Madness" abilit

Re: Discussion on some Code Issues

2012-07-08 Thread Steven D'Aprano
On Mon, 09 Jul 2012 07:54:47 +1000, Chris Angelico wrote: > It's like > the difference between reminder text on a Magic: The Gathering card and > the actual entries in the Comprehensive Rules. Perfect example is the > "Madness" ability - the reminder text explains the ability, but uses > language

Re: Discussion on some Code Issues

2012-07-08 Thread Chris Angelico
On Mon, Jul 9, 2012 at 4:17 AM, Roy Smith wrote: > In article , > Chris Angelico wrote: > >> open("doc1.txt","r") >> >> Python will look for a file called doc1.txt in the directory you run >> the script from (which is often going to be the same directory as your >> .py program). > > Well, to pic

Re: Discussion on some Code Issues

2012-07-08 Thread MRAB
On 08/07/2012 18:17, Chris Angelico wrote: On Mon, Jul 9, 2012 at 3:05 AM, wrote: On Sunday, July 8, 2012 1:33:25 PM UTC+5:30, Chris Angelico wrote: On Sun, Jul 8, 2012 at 3:42 PM, wrote: > file_open=open("/python32/doc1.txt","r") Also, as has already been mentioned: keeping your data files

Re: Discussion on some Code Issues

2012-07-08 Thread Roy Smith
In article , Chris Angelico wrote: > open("doc1.txt","r") > > Python will look for a file called doc1.txt in the directory you run > the script from (which is often going to be the same directory as your > .py program). Well, to pick a nit, the file will be looked for in the current working d

Re: Discussion on some Code Issues

2012-07-08 Thread Chris Angelico
On Mon, Jul 9, 2012 at 3:05 AM, wrote: > On Sunday, July 8, 2012 1:33:25 PM UTC+5:30, Chris Angelico wrote: >> On Sun, Jul 8, 2012 at 3:42 PM, wrote: >> > file_open=open("/python32/doc1.txt","r") >> Also, as has already been mentioned: keeping your data files in the >> Python binaries directory

Re: Discussion on some Code Issues

2012-07-08 Thread subhabangalore
On Sunday, July 8, 2012 1:33:25 PM UTC+5:30, Chris Angelico wrote: > On Sun, Jul 8, 2012 at 3:42 PM, wrote: > > Thanks for pointing out the mistakes. Your points are right. So I am trying > > to revise it, > > > > file_open=open("/python32/doc1.txt","r") > > for line in file_open: > > l

Re: Discussion on some Code Issues

2012-07-08 Thread Chris Angelico
On Sun, Jul 8, 2012 at 3:42 PM, wrote: > Thanks for pointing out the mistakes. Your points are right. So I am trying > to revise it, > > file_open=open("/python32/doc1.txt","r") > for line in file_open: > line_word=line.split() > print (line_word) Yep. I'd be inclined to renam

Re: Discussion on some Code Issues

2012-07-07 Thread subhabangalore
On Sunday, July 8, 2012 2:21:14 AM UTC+5:30, Dennis Lee Bieber wrote: > On Sat, 7 Jul 2012 12:54:16 -0700 (PDT), subhabangal...@gmail.com > declaimed the following in gmane.comp.python.general: > > > But I am bit intrigued with another question, > > > > suppose I say: > > file_open=open("/pytho

Re: Discussion on some Code Issues

2012-07-07 Thread subhabangalore
On Thursday, July 5, 2012 4:51:46 AM UTC+5:30, (unknown) wrote: > Dear Group, > > I am Sri Subhabrata Banerjee trying to write from Gurgaon, India to discuss > some coding issues. If any one of this learned room can shower some light I > would be helpful enough. > > I got to code a bunch of do

Re: Discussion on some Code Issues

2012-07-06 Thread Peter Otten
subhabangal...@gmail.com wrote: [Please don't top-post] >> start = 0 >> for match in re.finditer(r"\$", data): >> end = match.start() >> print(start, end) >> print(data[start:end]) >> start = match.end() > That is a nice one. I am thinking if I can write "for lines in f" sort of

Re: Discussion on some Code Issues

2012-07-05 Thread subhabangalore
Dear Peter, That is a nice one. I am thinking if I can write "for lines in f" sort of code that is easy but then how to find out the slices then, btw do you know in any case may I convert the index position of file to the list position provided I am writing the list for the same file we are read

Re: Discussion on some Code Issues

2012-07-05 Thread Peter Otten
subhabangal...@gmail.com wrote: > On Thursday, July 5, 2012 4:51:46 AM UTC+5:30, (unknown) wrote: >> Dear Group, >> >> I am Sri Subhabrata Banerjee trying to write from Gurgaon, India to >> discuss some coding issues. If any one of this learned room can shower >> some light I would be helpful eno

Re: Discussion on some Code Issues

2012-07-04 Thread subhabangalore
On Thursday, July 5, 2012 4:51:46 AM UTC+5:30, (unknown) wrote: > Dear Group, > > I am Sri Subhabrata Banerjee trying to write from Gurgaon, India to discuss > some coding issues. If any one of this learned room can shower some light I > would be helpful enough. > > I got to code a bunch of do

Re: Discussion on some Code Issues

2012-07-04 Thread Rick Johnson
On Jul 4, 6:21 pm, subhabangal...@gmail.com wrote: > [...] > To detect the document boundaries, I am splitting them into a bag > of words and using a simple for loop as, > > for i in range(len(bag_words)): >         if bag_words[i]=="$": >             print (bag_words[i],i) Ignoring that you are a

Re: Discussion on some Code Issues

2012-07-04 Thread Steven D'Aprano
On Wed, 04 Jul 2012 16:21:46 -0700, subhabangalore wrote: [...] > I got to code a bunch of documents which are combined together. [...] > The task is to separate the documents on the fly and to parse each of > the documents with a definite set of rules. > > Now, the way I am processing is: > I a

Discussion on some Code Issues

2012-07-04 Thread subhabangalore
Dear Group, I am Sri Subhabrata Banerjee trying to write from Gurgaon, India to discuss some coding issues. If any one of this learned room can shower some light I would be helpful enough. I got to code a bunch of documents which are combined together. Like, 1)A Mumbai-bound aircraft with

Re: Accessing matplotlib-users discussion group?

2011-09-17 Thread John Ladasky
On Sep 16, 10:29 am, Martin Schöön wrote: > On 2011-09-15, John Ladasky wrote: > > > Hate to bump this, but... I found Sourceforge's IRC, and tried to ask > > for help there, and it doesn't look like I can get any help until > > business hours tomorrow.  Anyone? > > No help really but I 'joined'

Re: Accessing matplotlib-users discussion group?

2011-09-16 Thread Martin Schöön
On 2011-09-15, John Ladasky wrote: > Hate to bump this, but... I found Sourceforge's IRC, and tried to ask > for help there, and it doesn't look like I can get any help until > business hours tomorrow. Anyone? No help really but I 'joined' Sourceforge about a year ago and had no problems whatsoe

Re: Accessing matplotlib-users discussion group?

2011-09-15 Thread John Ladasky
Hate to bump this, but... I found Sourceforge's IRC, and tried to ask for help there, and it doesn't look like I can get any help until business hours tomorrow. Anyone? -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Accessing matplotlib-users discussion group?

2011-09-14 Thread John Ladasky
e the matplotlib-users discussion group. Matplotlib- users appears to be hosted on sourceforge.net (and is not mirrored anywhere else?), so I tried to sign up for an account (at https://sourceforge.net/user/registration). Yesterday, after filling out the registration page, Sourceforge reject

Re: Discussion board software?

2010-10-28 Thread Andreas Waldenburger
On Fri, 29 Oct 2010 01:28:12 + brad...@hotmail.com wrote: [fixed top posting] > --Original Message-- > From: Gnarlodious > Sender: python-list-bounces+bradenf=hotmail@python.org > To: Python List > Subject: Discussion board software? > Sent: Oct 28, 2010 9:12

Re: Discussion board software?

2010-10-28 Thread Tim Harig
On 2010-10-29, Gnarlodious wrote: > On Oct 28, 7:20 pm, Tim Harig wrote: >> On 2010-10-29, Gnarlodious wrote: >> >> > Is there such a thing as website discussion board software written in >> > Python? >> >> Yes. > > OK I'll play, what and

Re: Discussion board software?

2010-10-28 Thread Gnarlodious
On Oct 28, 7:20 pm, Tim Harig wrote: > On 2010-10-29, Gnarlodious wrote: > > > Is there such a thing as website discussion board software written in > > Python? > > Yes. OK I'll play, what and where? -- Gnarlie -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

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