I did eventually get the original code to run from the command line but not the
interpreter, so the new example does have a similar problem.
Of course it's not as simple as saying I can't run an imported parallelized
function from the interpreter because I can, as long as the parallelized
funct
On Jan 27, 2011, at 1:12 PM, Craig Yoshioka wrote:
> The code will be multi-platform. The OSXisms are there as an example, though
> I am developing on OS X machine.
>
> I've distilled my problem down to a simpler case, so hopefully that'll help
> troubleshoot.
>
> I have 2 files:
>
> test
The code will be multi-platform. The OSXisms are there as an example, though I
am developing on OS X machine.
I've distilled my problem down to a simpler case, so hopefully that'll help
troubleshoot.
I have 2 files:
test.py:
--
fro
On Jan 25, 2011, at 8:19 PM, Craig Yoshioka wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I could really use some help with a problem I'm having.
Hiya Craig,
I don't know if I can help, but it's really difficult to do without a full
working example.
Also, your code has several OS X-isms in it so I guess that's the
Hi all,
I could really use some help with a problem I'm having.
I wrote a function that can take a pattern of actions and it apply it to the
filesystem.
It takes a list of starting paths, and a pattern like this:
pattern = {
InGlob('Test/**'):{
MatchRemove('DS_Store'