I imagine pygame could do this, if you give it:
https://freesound.org/people/pinkyfinger/packs/4409/
On Sun, Mar 25, 2018 at 1:31 PM, Bernard via Python-list
wrote:
>
> Pyton Friends,
> Do you have any code that will play the notes "ABCDEFG" from my computer
> keyboard
Pyton Friends,
Do you have any code that will play the notes "ABCDEFG" from my computer
keyboard when a key is pressed ? For example if I press the "a" key the note
"a" will sound out of my speaker.
Thanks,
BigB
--
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Il giorno lunedì 20 aprile 2015 10:29:42 UTC+2, gianluc...@gmail.com ha scritto:
> Hi,
>
> i am having a problem when i try to access lotus notes with python, think i
> do all ok but it seems something is going wrong because i can't print any db
> title even if i
On 04/20/2015 04:29 AM, gianluca.pu...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
Hi and welcome.
I don't know Lotus Notes, but i can at least comment on some of your
code, pointing out at least some problems.
i am having a problem when i try to access lotus notes with python, think i do
all ok but it
Hi,
i am having a problem when i try to access lotus notes with python, think i do
all ok but it seems something is going wrong because i can't print any db title
even if i've opened the .nsf file.
My code:
import win32com.client
from win32com.client import Dispatch
notesServer=&#x
ojects.org/eric-documentation.html
Please send notes to: Studio-PM hotmail com. Thanks.
See you.
- P.M.
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
igurable,
Eric APIs, PEP 8 Compliance Syntax and Tabnanny Checks, …
– Any other feature of your choice you deem as not adequately documented by
the “Eric Tech. Reports”
as currently available at URL:
http://eric-ide.python-projects.org/eric-documentation.html
Please send notes to: Studio-P
-
Unicode <== Coding of the characters (all schemes) <== math.
For those who are interested in that field, I recommand to
try to understand why we (the world) have to live with
all these coding schemes.
jmf
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Le dimanche 13 avril 2014 22:13:36 UTC+2, Terry Reedy a écrit :
> Everyone, please ignore Jim's unicode/fsr trolling, which started in
>
> July 2012. Don't quote it, don't try to answer it.
>
>
>
> --
>
> Terry Jan Reedy
---
FYI:
I was waiting for the final 3.4 release.
I'm only now ma
Everyone, please ignore Jim's unicode/fsr trolling, which started in
July 2012. Don't quote it, don't try to answer it.
--
Terry Jan Reedy
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Saturday, April 12, 2014 5:55:22 PM UTC+5:30, wxjm...@gmail.com wrote:
> --
>
> Regarding the Flexible String Representation, I have always
> been very coherent in the examples I gave (usually with and/or
> from an interactive intepreter - not relevant).
> I never seen once somebody pointin
Le samedi 12 avril 2014 14:53:15 UTC+2, Ned Batchelder a écrit :
> On 4/12/14 8:25 AM, wxjmfa...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> > --
>
> >
>
> > Regarding the Flexible String Representation, I have always
>
> > been very coherent in the examples I gave (usually with and/or
>
> > from an interactive
On 4/12/14 8:25 AM, wxjmfa...@gmail.com wrote:
--
Regarding the Flexible String Representation, I have always
been very coherent in the examples I gave (usually with and/or
from an interactive intepreter - not relevant).
I never seen once somebody pointing or beeing able to point
what is wro
--
Regarding the Flexible String Representation, I have always
been very coherent in the examples I gave (usually with and/or
from an interactive intepreter - not relevant).
I never seen once somebody pointing or beeing able to point
what is wrong in those examples.
jmf
--
https://mail.pyth
On 11/04/2014 17:02, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Sat, Apr 12, 2014 at 1:57 AM, Mark Lawrence wrote:
If you wish to interpret my words as baiting that's fine by me. From my
perspective I'm simply making a statement of fact.
It's almost now debatable whether you were metabaiting Steven into
telli
On 4/11/14 11:02 AM, Chris Angelico wrote:
It's almost now debatable whether you were metabaiting Steven into
telling you off for trolling the resident troll...
QOTW
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Sat, Apr 12, 2014 at 1:57 AM, Mark Lawrence wrote:
> If you wish to interpret my words as baiting that's fine by me. From my
> perspective I'm simply making a statement of fact.
It's almost now debatable whether you were metabaiting Steven into
telling you off for trolling the resident troll.
On 11/04/2014 16:49, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Fri, 11 Apr 2014 13:48:50 +0100, Mark Lawrence wrote:
On 11/04/2014 10:25, wxjmfa...@gmail.com wrote:
Unicode!
Works perfectly in Python 3.3+ thanks to the excellent work done as a
result of http://legacy.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0393/, the Fle
On Fri, 11 Apr 2014 13:48:50 +0100, Mark Lawrence wrote:
> On 11/04/2014 10:25, wxjmfa...@gmail.com wrote:
>>
>> Unicode!
>>
>>
> Works perfectly in Python 3.3+ thanks to the excellent work done as a
> result of http://legacy.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0393/, the Flexible
> String Representation, as
On 11/04/2014 10:25, wxjmfa...@gmail.com wrote:
Unicode!
Works perfectly in Python 3.3+ thanks to the excellent work done as a
result of http://legacy.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0393/, the Flexible
String Representation, as we, with one noticable exception, are
perfectly well aware of.
--
M
Unicode!
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Steven D'Aprano writes:
> Today in Montreal Canada, there was a Language Summit to discuss the
> future of Python. Some highlights: […]
> More in this email thread here:
> https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2014-April/133873.html
Thanks very much for this! Core development is importa
Today in Montreal Canada, there was a Language Summit to discuss the
future of Python. Some highlights:
PyPy is only three bug fixes away from shipping support for Python 3.2!
Guido confirms that easing the transition from 2.x to 3.x code is a major
priority. Version 2.7 is alive and in good he
"David Bernier" wrote in message
news:in7cs201...@news6.newsguy.com...
Joe Snodgrass wrote:
On Apr 1, 10:54 am, David Bernier wrote:
haha doh wrote:
On Mar 31, 3:15 pm, Joe Snodgrasswrote:
[...]
As to which crime was being committed, I'm going with numbers running
or loan sharki
Joe Snodgrass wrote:
On Apr 1, 10:54 am, David Bernier wrote:
haha doh wrote:
On Mar 31, 3:15 pm, Joe Snodgrasswrote:
[...]
As to which crime was being committed, I'm going with numbers running
or loan sharking. There's no reason for any crook to keep any record
of any other crime,
On Apr 1, 10:54 am, David Bernier wrote:
> haha doh wrote:
> > On Mar 31, 3:15 pm, Joe Snodgrass wrote:
>
> [...]
>
>
>
> >> As to which crime was being committed, I'm going with numbers running
> >> or loan sharking. There's no reason for any crook to keep any record
> >> of any other crime, ex
haha doh wrote:
On Mar 31, 3:15 pm, Joe Snodgrass wrote:
[...]
As to which crime was being committed, I'm going with numbers running
or loan sharking. There's no reason for any crook to keep any record
of any other crime, except prostitution, where phone books come in
handy.
Thievery is not
On Wednesday 2011 March 30 13:56, Fons Adriaensen wrote:
> [LINK] ???
http://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2011/march/cryptanalysis_032911/image/gallery
--
I have seen the future and I am not in it.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Mar 31, 3:15 pm, Joe Snodgrass wrote:
> On Mar 30, 10:18 pm, "Stretto" wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > "Joe Snodgrass" wrote in message
>
> >news:c37e8e0b-a825-4ac5-9886-8828ab1fa...@x8g2000prh.googlegroups.com...
>
> > > FBI cryptana
On Mar 30, 10:18 pm, "Stretto" wrote:
> "Joe Snodgrass" wrote in message
>
> news:c37e8e0b-a825-4ac5-9886-8828ab1fa...@x8g2000prh.googlegroups.com...
>
>
>
>
>
> > FBI cryptanalysis hasn’t decrypted notes from 1999 murder mystery
>
>
Stretto wrote:
"Joe Snodgrass" wrote in message
news:c37e8e0b-a825-4ac5-9886-8828ab1fa...@x8g2000prh.googlegroups.com...
FBI cryptanalysis hasn’t decrypted notes from 1999 murder mystery
http://tinyurl.com/4d56zsz
The FBI is seeking the public's help in breaking the encry
On Mar 31, 12:18 pm, "Stretto" wrote:
> "Joe Snodgrass" wrote in message
>
> news:c37e8e0b-a825-4ac5-9886-8828ab1fa...@x8g2000prh.googlegroups.com...
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > FBI cryptanalysis hasn’t decrypted notes from 1999 murder mystery
>
"Joe Snodgrass" wrote in message
news:c37e8e0b-a825-4ac5-9886-8828ab1fa...@x8g2000prh.googlegroups.com...
FBI cryptanalysis hasn’t decrypted notes from 1999 murder mystery
http://tinyurl.com/4d56zsz
The FBI is seeking the public's help in breaking the encrypted code
fou
Joe Snodgrass wrote:
FBI cryptanalysis hasn’t decrypted notes from 1999 murder mystery
http://tinyurl.com/4d56zsz
The FBI is seeking the public's help in breaking the encrypted code
found in two notes discovered on the body of a murdered man in 1999.
The FBI says that officers in St.
Fons Adriaensen wrote:
[LINK] ???
http://www.net-security.org/secworld.php?id=10823
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 01:25:54PM -0700, Joe Snodgrass wrote:
> For larger images of the notes go here. [LINK]
[LINK] ???
--
FA
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
FBI cryptanalysis hasn’t decrypted notes from 1999 murder mystery
http://tinyurl.com/4d56zsz
The FBI is seeking the public's help in breaking the encrypted code
found in two notes discovered on the body of a murdered man in 1999.
The FBI says that officers in St. Louis, Missouri discovere
Hi!
In several cases, Notes is not registred as COM server.
Depending of installation.
@-salutations
--
MCi
--
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Hello All,
I am trying to send email using Lotos notes. When I run following
commands to establish a COM connection, Python crashes with a error
saying "Runtime Error.Pythonwin.exe abnormal termination".
import win32com.client
session = win32com.client.Dispatch('Lotus.Note
Aaron Watters wrote:
> I implemented a Google Wave Robot which annotates
> BNF syntax rules using railroad diagram images.
> I put notes about the implementation process
> here for the benefit of posterity.
>
> http://listtree.appspot.com/firstWaveRobot
>
> The ro
I implemented a Google Wave Robot which annotates
BNF syntax rules using railroad diagram images.
I put notes about the implementation process
here for the benefit of posterity.
http://listtree.appspot.com/firstWaveRobot
The robot Id is
whiff-gae-tutor...@appspot.com
-- if you are
On 15 Nov, 05:41, r wrote:
> On Nov 14, 6:21 pm, James Harris
> wrote:
>
> > Is there a simple way to play musical notes in Python? Something like
> > voice.play("c4")
>
> Uhh, tksnack is pretty easy to use IMO, see this link...
> http://www.daniweb.c
On Nov 14, 6:21 pm, James Harris
wrote:
> Is there a simple way to play musical notes in Python? Something like
> voice.play("c4")
Uhh, tksnack is pretty easy to use IMO, see this link...
http://www.daniweb.com/code/snippet216655.html
No python does not have access t
On 15 Nov, 00:12, James Harris wrote:
> Is there a simple way to play musical notes in Python? Something like
>
> voice.play("c4")
>
> to play C in octave 4 would be ideal. I included a voice parameter as
> I'd like to play proper notes, not just beeps. This i
Is there a simple way to play musical notes in Python? Something like
voice.play("c4")
to play C in octave 4 would be ideal. I included a voice parameter as
I'd like to play proper notes, not just beeps. This is for recognition
of pitch. For example, the program plays a note and
Hi Everybody,
Hope someone can point me some direction...
I got python linking to lotus notes, under Eclipse IDE. The code is:
import pythoncom
import pywintypes
from win32com.client import Dispatch
session=Dispatch("Lotus.NotesSession")
session
print pythoncom.CreateG
On Sep 2, 9:27 pm, "kiithsa...@gmail.com"
wrote:
> Requires ImageMagick and Python (coded in python 2.x, I'm running 2.6
> but it might run on older python as well)
Sorry, got confused by Google Groups interface and posted a new topic
instead of just replying
--
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Requires ImageMagick and Python (coded in python 2.x, I'm running 2.6
but it might run on older python as well)
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Pythoscope, the Python unit test generator, is growing and maturing.
Over the last three months we've made pretty incredible progress.
We've had a full time developer and part time project manager.
Where we are:
Technical:
* Static analysis of code. With this we can generate and maintain unit
test
On Jul 16, 2:11 pm, KDawg44 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> We have a Lotus Notes Database that tracks time spent on projects.
> What I would like to do is develop a Time Tracker in Python that
> communicates with the server. This would pull projects in and allow a
>
Hi,
We have a Lotus Notes Database that tracks time spent on projects.
What I would like to do is develop a Time Tracker in Python that
communicates with the server. This would pull projects in and allow a
use to start a timer as he/she works on a given project. The user
would then be able to
Heiko Wundram wrote:
> Am Mittwoch, 26. März 2008 18:54:29 schrieb Michael Ströder:
>> Heiko Wundram wrote:
>>> Am Mittwoch, 26. März 2008 17:33:43 schrieb John Nagle:
> I didn't say it was unusual or frowned upon (and I was also taught this at
> uni
> IIRC as a means to "easily" distribute syst
Am Mittwoch, 26. März 2008 18:54:29 schrieb Michael Ströder:
> Heiko Wundram wrote:
> > Am Mittwoch, 26. März 2008 17:33:43 schrieb John Nagle:
> >> ...
> >>
> >> Using MySQL as a queueing engine across multiple servers is unusual,
> >> but it works well. It has the nice feature that the queue
Heiko Wundram wrote:
> Am Mittwoch, 26. März 2008 17:33:43 schrieb John Nagle:
>> ...
>>
>> Using MySQL as a queueing engine across multiple servers is unusual,
>> but it works well. It has the nice feature that the queue ordering
>> can be anything you can write in a SELECT statement. So we p
Am Mittwoch, 26. März 2008 17:33:43 schrieb John Nagle:
> ...
>
> Using MySQL as a queueing engine across multiple servers is unusual,
> but it works well. It has the nice feature that the queue ordering
> can be anything you can write in a SELECT statement. So we put "fair
> queueing" in the
I run SiteTruth (sitetruth.com), which rates web sites for
legitimacy, based on what information it can find out about
the business behind the web site. I'm going to describe here
how the machinery behind this is organized, because I had to
solve some problems in Python that I haven't seen solv
On 19 Jan, 17:06, John Nagle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Paul Boddie wrote:
> > Unlike your approach, pprocess employs the fork system call.
>
> Unfortunately, that's not portable. Python's "fork()" is
> "Availability: Macintosh, Unix." I would have preferred
> to use "fork()".
There was a
Paul Boddie wrote:
> Unlike your approach, pprocess employs the fork system call.
Unfortunately, that's not portable. Python's "fork()" is
"Availability: Macintosh, Unix." I would have preferred
to use "fork()".
John Nagle
--
http://mail.python.org/mailma
On 18 Jan, 07:32, John Nagle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> "Processing" is useful, but it uses named pipes and sockets,
> not ordinary pipes. Also, it has C code, so all the usual build
> and version problems apply.
The pprocess module uses pickles over sockets, mostly because the
asynchrono
Carl Banks wrote:
> On Jan 17, 2:28 pm, John Nagle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> It's also necessary to call Pickle's "clear_memo" before each "dump"
>> call, since objects might change between successive "dump" calls.
>> "Unpickle" doesn't have a "clear_memo" function. It should, because
>> i
On Jan 17, 2:28 pm, John Nagle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> It's possible to use "pickle" for interprocess communication over
> pipes, but it's not straightforward.
>
> First, "pickle" output is self-delimiting.
> Each dump ends with ".", and, importantly, "load" doesn't read
> any characters after
John Nagle wrote:
> Irmen de Jong wrote:
>> Christian Heimes wrote:
>>> John Nagle wrote:
It's possible to use "pickle" for interprocess communication over
pipes, but it's not straightforward.
Another "gotcha". The "pickle" module seems to be OK with the
translations of "universal n
Irmen de Jong wrote:
> Christian Heimes wrote:
>> John Nagle wrote:
>>> It's possible to use "pickle" for interprocess communication over
>>> pipes, but it's not straightforward.
>>
>> IIRC the processing module uses pickle for IPC. Maybe you can get some
>> idea by reading its code?
>>
>> http://p
Christian Heimes wrote:
> John Nagle wrote:
>> It's possible to use "pickle" for interprocess communication over
>> pipes, but it's not straightforward.
>
> IIRC the processing module uses pickle for IPC. Maybe you can get some
> idea by reading its code?
>
> http://pypi.python.org/pypi/processin
John Nagle wrote:
> It's possible to use "pickle" for interprocess communication over
> pipes, but it's not straightforward.
IIRC the processing module uses pickle for IPC. Maybe you can get some
idea by reading its code?
http://pypi.python.org/pypi/processing/0.40
Christian
--
http://mail.pyt
It's possible to use "pickle" for interprocess communication over
pipes, but it's not straightforward.
First, "pickle" output is self-delimiting.
Each dump ends with ".", and, importantly, "load" doesn't read
any characters after the "." So "pickle" can be used repeatedly
on the same pipe, and on
Something I forgot to emphasize in the announcement, knowing that not
everyone reads the release notes - if you are upgrading from a previous
version of IPython, you must either:
- Delete your ~/ipython (or ~/_ipython) directory OR
- Run %upgrade once IPython starts.
--
http://mail.python.org
Ville Vainio wrote:
> Something I forgot to emphasize in the announcement, knowing that not
> everyone reads the release notes - if you are upgrading from a previous
> version of IPython, you must either:
>
> - Delete your ~/ipython (or ~/_ipython) directory OR
> - Run %up
Ville Vainio wrote:
> Something I forgot to emphasize in the announcement, knowing that not
> everyone reads the release notes - if you are upgrading from a previous
> version of IPython, you must either:
>
> - Delete your ~/ipython (or ~/_ipython) directory OR
> - Run %up
Something I forgot to emphasize in the announcement, knowing that not
everyone reads the release notes - if you are upgrading from a previous
version of IPython, you must either:
- Delete your ~/ipython (or ~/_ipython) directory OR
- Run %upgrade once IPython starts.
--
http://mail.python.org
I'll just use Plone, thanks.
ompaniess wrote:
> Just like everybody else nowadays, you are facing infinite amount of
> information everyday. how can you keep those that truly matters to you?
> MemoDepot allows you to do just that, and much more!
>
> - Capture any informatio
"ompaniess" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[spam snipped]
> Any comments or suggestions, send to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[cc'ed]
Don't spam random technical newsgroups with completely off-topic posts.
Such constitute anti-advertising.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/
Just like everybody else nowadays, you are facing infinite amount of
information everyday. how can you keep those that truly matters to you?
MemoDepot allows you to do just that, and much more!
- Capture any information, store as notes in your MemoDepot account,
and access from anywhere
I would like to interact with Lotus Notes. I wrote following:
>>> from win32com.client.dynamic import Dispatch
>>> ln=Dispatch('Lotus.Notessession')
then, following exception come out:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "", line 1, in ?
File "C:
Hi
Since my upgrade from Notes 5.X to Notes 6.X I can't access Notes anymore.
The third line of the following code is already a show stopper in my case:
from win32com.client import Dispatch
session = Dispatch('Lotus.NotesSession')
session.Initialize('my_secret_passwort&#
I have had success with jython using the notes.jar classes, for
example:
import lotus.domino
import java.io
import java.net
import java.lang
import java.util
lotus.notes.NotesThread.sinitThread()
S = lotus.notes.Session.newInstance();
db=S.getDatabase("server/domain","domlog.nsf")
agent=db.getAge
started, ends:
> [snip]
> AttributeError: Lotus.NotesSession.Initialize
>
> It worked before though with Version 5.x of Notes. In Notes Version 6.X
> they introduced the session.Initialize() - that was the point, when I
> couldn't create an instance anymore. I found no hint on the net... Do you
> hav
9, in __getattr__
raise AttributeError, "%s.%s" % (self._username_, attr)
AttributeError: Lotus.NotesSession.Initialize
It worked before though with Version 5.x of Notes. In Notes Version 6.X
they introduced the session.Initialize() - that was the point, when I
couldn't create an ins
thank you Graham
Now I know how to get it thru
And i have last question is it possible send mail from Lotus via
Python/COM?
Once Again Thanks
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Grzegorz Slusarek wrote:
> Hello everyone. I have to get data from Lotus Notes and i curious is it
> possible doing it with Python. I heard that Lotus Notes using COM, so
> the Python does so maybe it can be done? Anyone have any experiences
> doing that?
> Ane help will by apreci
Hello everyone. I have to get data from Lotus Notes and i curious is it
possible doing it with Python. I heard that Lotus Notes using COM, so
the Python does so maybe it can be done? Anyone have any experiences
doing that?
Ane help will by apreciated
Gregor
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman
Back from Europython 2005 - I'd just like to thank all the organisers of
Europython this year - it was probably the best conference I've been to -
for developers, by developers.
Also, for anyone who wasn't able to attend (come next year!), I've taken the
majority of the notes
Peter Dembinski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> "Sateesh" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> Hi,
>> Is it possible to access Lotus notes using Python? Can anyone
>> provide me some pointers?
>
> jython + LN Java bindings may be usable
Yes. I do t
Lotus Domino Designer 6.5.1 Help (instaled by notesdesigner)
see section LotusScript/COM/OLE Classes & LotusScript Classes A-Z
--
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Hi,
Thanks very much for the input. Could you please tell me where I could get
the API reference for these COM classes to access Lotus Notes?
Thanks again
Sateesh
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> try this
>
> import win32com.client
> session = win32c
try this
import win32com.client
session = win32com.client.Dispatch('Lotus.NotesSession')
session.Initialize(r'')
db = session.GetDatabase('',r'.nsf')
view = db.GetView(r'')
doc = view.GetFirstDocument()
print doc.GetFirstItem('ii').Values
domino return string as unicod
try this
import win32com.client
session = win32com.client.Dispatch('Lotus.NotesSession')
session.Initialize(r'')
db = session.GetDatabase('',r'.nsf')
view = db.GetView(r'')
doc = view.GetFirstDocument()
print doc.GetFirstItem('ii').Values
domino return string as unicod
Sateesh wrote:
> Hi,
> Is it possible to access Lotus notes using Python? Can anyone provide me
> some pointers?
>
> Thanks
> Sateesh
>
>
NotesSQL is an ODBC driver for Notes.
Using NotesSQL and a python odbc connection you can use the standard
python db-api2 to acce
Hi,
What I am trying to do is to retrieve data from Lotus Notes Domino server
and display the results in some specific format. I initially thought of
doing it using Java JDBC (specifically thru JdbcDomino.jar file), but was
not successful in getting the jar file (looks like IBM has removed the
> >>The Great 'Sateesh' uttered these words on 5/23/2005 7:14 AM:
> >>>Is it possible to access Lotus notes using Python? Can anyone provide
me
> >>>some pointers?
This might help you get started once you've installed the win32 modules.
http:/
The Great 'Michael Ströder' uttered these words on 5/23/2005 2:43 PM:
> Kartic wrote:
>
>>The Great 'Sateesh' uttered these words on 5/23/2005 7:14 AM:
>>
>>
>>>Is it possible to access Lotus notes using Python? Can anyone provide me
>>
Kartic wrote:
> The Great 'Sateesh' uttered these words on 5/23/2005 7:14 AM:
>
>> Is it possible to access Lotus notes using Python? Can anyone provide me
>> some pointers?
>
> Yes, you can... You need the win32all distribution installed and you can
>
"Sateesh" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hi,
> Is it possible to access Lotus notes using Python? Can anyone
> provide me some pointers?
jython + LN Java bindings may be usable
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The Great 'Sateesh' uttered these words on 5/23/2005 7:14 AM:
> Hi,
> Is it possible to access Lotus notes using Python? Can anyone provide me
> some pointers?
>
> Thanks
> Sateesh
>
>
Yes, you can... You need the win32all distribution installed and y
On 5/23/05, Sateesh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
> Is it possible to access Lotus notes using Python? Can anyone provide me
> some pointers?
http://www.google.com/search?q=python+lotus+notes&btnI=Lucky
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Cheers,
Simon B,
[EMAIL PROTECTED],
http://www.brunningonline.net/s
Hi,
Is it possible to access Lotus notes using Python? Can anyone provide me
some pointers?
Thanks
Sateesh
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http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Kay Schluehr wrote:
> Hi Marc,
>
> I was a bit surprised to find the very slow Farey approximation by
> means of the class in the mxNumber package. If the goal
> was to reconstruct a rational from a float it is not a good choice and
> should be replaced by a continued fractions approximation.
T
Hi Mark,
I was a bit surprised to find the very slow Farey approximation by
means of the class in the mxNumber package. If the goal
was to reconstruct a rational from a float it is not a good choice and
should be replaced by a continued fractions approximation. Some time
ago I implemented it by m
Bengt Richter wrote:
>OTOH, there is precedent in e.g. fortran (IIRC) for named operators of
the
>form .XX. -- e.g., .GE. for >= so maybe there could be room for both.
Yes, but in Fortran 90 "==", ">=" etc. are equivalent to ".EQ." and
".GE.". It is also possible to define operators on native an
On Sat, 08 Jan 2005 18:22:53 +1000, Nick Coghlan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Bengt Richter wrote:
>> IOW, I think there is a fix: keep tokenizing greedily and tokenize floating
>> point as
>> a sequence of integers and operators, and let be
>> translated by
>> the compiler to floating point, an
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