Hi,
I'm trying to get xmlrpc working with usernames and passwords and
having some issues. This is on Linux (WBEL3.0R1).
First of all with python 2.2.3 which comes with WBEL the following
simple code fails (passwords & server names altered to protect the
innocent):
#!/usr/bin/python
import xml
David Isaac wrote:
If that is right, I still cannot extract it from the doc cited above.
So where should I have looked?
Ouch. The terminology's evolved, and it looks to me like the docs for the older
builtins haven't been updated to track it.
The terminology has pretty much settled to 'iterable'
Steven Bethard wrote:
> Hmmm... This does seem sensible. And sidesteps the issue about
> suggesting that subclasses use Namespace.update instead of
> namespaceinstance.update -- the latter just won't work! (This is a Good
> Thing, IMHO.)
Yeah, I thought so too. It also crystallised for me that t
Nick Coghlan wrote:
There *is* a problem with using __getattr__ though - any attribute in
the chained namespaces that is shadowed by a class attribute (like
'update') will be picked up from the class, not from the chained
namespaces. So we do need to use __getattribute__ to change that lookup
o
What are you talking about? The BOM and UTF-16 go hand-and-hand. Without
a Byte Order Mark, you can't unambiguosly determine whether big or
little endian UTF-16 was used.
In the old days, UCS-2 was *implicitly* big-endian. It was only
when Microsoft got that wrong that little-endian version of UC
Gabriel Cooper said the following on 2/11/2005 2:23 PM:
I've made UPS and FedEx shipping rate request modules in python using
XML. Is there an interest in putting this on the web?
I am interested in it for educational value, if not anything else.
Please post the web address from which to download
Hi,
I'm hoping someone on the list has connected to sybase/MsSQL with something
that works with DBAPI 2.0 from a linux box (SUSE 9.2) because I can't seem
to get it done. I found Object Craft's python code that uses FreeTDS. But
I can't get it compiled. The code is looking for "sybdb.h" (first e
Dan Perl wrote:
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Hello All,
> > What is the python equivalent of the following statement?
> >
> > while (n--)
>
> Like other posters said, you should give more details with your
question.
> What do you mean by equivalent? The foll
Erik Johnson wrote:
I am aware of ChartDirector (http://www.advsofteng.com/ ) which
explicitly supports python and seems to be about the right level of
sophistication. I don't really know of any other packages in this space, do
you? I am seeking feedback and reccomendations from people who have
I am reading an ASCII data file and converting some of the strings to
integers or floats. However, some of the data is corrupted and the
conversion doesn't work. I know that I can us exceptions, but they
don't seem like the cleanest and simplest solution to me. I would like
to simply perform a pre-
Cyril BAZIN wrote:
Hello,
I want to build a function which return values which appear two or
more times in a list:
This is very similar to removing duplicate items from a list which was the
subject of a long recent thread, full of suggested approaches.
Here's one way to do what you want:
>>> l
George Sakkis wrote:
For the record, here's the arbitrary and undocumented (?) order
among some main builtin types:
None < 0 == 0.0 < {} < [] < "" < ()
If you're curious, you can check the source code. Look for
default_3way_compare in object.c. Basically the rundown for dissimilar
types is:
*
Arich Chanachai wrote:
> I have never seen a commercial license for a library
which stated that you did not have to pay the license fee until you have
made that much money in sales from the software which you created, in
part, from that library. I would be in favor of such a license, but I
have
There are a lot of things about PHP I was not too keen on and hence why
my company is primarily doing Python these days, but one thing I was quite
impressed with was the ease with which it provided session functionality...
And then in another CGI script do basically the same thing and g
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If a function that normally returns N values raises an exception, what
should it return?
Depends on what you want to do with the result of the function.
N values of None seems reasonable to me, so I would
write code such as
def foo(x):
try:
# code setting y and z
On Sat, 12 Feb 2005 09:42:41 +0100
"Fredrik Lundh" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> the relevant part for this thread is *locale-*. if wctype depends on
> the locale, it cannot be used for generic build. (custom interpreters
> are an- other thing, but they shouldn't be shipped as "python").
You are
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I know that I can us exceptions, but they
don't seem like the cleanest and simplest solution to me.
Stop worrying and learn to love exceptions. :)
--
Michael Hoffman
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hello,
I want to build a function which return values which appear two or
more times in a list:
So, I decided to write a little example which doesn't work:
#l = [1, 7, 3, 4, 3, 2, 1]
#i = iter(l)
#for x in i:
#j = iter(i)
#for y in j:
#if x == y:
#print x
In thinked
Hi,
I am new to Python and coming from the EDA/VLSI Design background.
I wanted to know if there are some active projects going on EDA modules
written in Python.
Usually, use of scripting tools in VLSI Design is on a per-project
basis and rarely reaches the level of a general framework, mostly d
As I mention below, I mistook the function from my utilities file for a
Python built-in; here's the implementation:
#def isnumber(x):
#"Is x a number? We say it is if it has an __int__ method."
#return hasattr(x, '__int__')
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
# Python
# David Eppstein of the Geometry Junkyard fame gave this elegant
# version for returing all possible pairs from a range of n numbers.
def combo2(n):
return dict([('%d,%d'%(i+1,j+1),(i+1,j+1)) for j in range(n) for i
in range(j)])
print combo2(5)
# this constr
Nitin Chaumal said the following on 2/11/2005 5:41 PM:
I sarched the existing threads but didnt find an answer to this.
I am writing simple script which uses telentlib to open a session with
a unix machine and run "tail -f logfile.txt" on one of the logfiles.
import telnetlib
HOST = "192.X.X.X"
use
Gabriel Cooper wrote:
I've made UPS and FedEx shipping rate request modules in python using
XML. Is there an interest in putting this on the web?
I'd be interested in at least looking at them, hoping to learn
something of value, even if I don't have (or believe I don't have)
any current use for th
if the file you want to include is not txt, but instead py, it should
be easy.
for example you have fs.py
you just
-
fs=__import__("fs")
f=[a for a in dir(fs) if a[0:2]!='__']
#no you have f1(),f2(),f3() as f[0],f[1],f[2]
then excute desired function, for exampl
BOOGIEMAN wrote:
On Fri, 11 Feb 2005 18:00:08 +0100, den wrote:
Did you try this:
import msvcrt
msvcrt.getch()
Yes, that's what I need. Thank you.
BTW, sometimes program continues
without me pressing any button, why ?
Probably because you had already hit a key earlier, and
it was still in the k
Try this out, it works Turn $10 into $10,000 with PayPal, easy and
quick. PLEASE TAKE A MOMENT TO READ THIS INFORMATION. THIS REALLY
WORKS!!! " I WAS SHOCKED WHEN I SAW HOW MUCH MONEY CAME FLOODING INTO
MY PAYPAL ACCOUNT." -Mark 2004
Dear Friend,
This is a new program, as you will see. It can
Change the association for .pyc files to pythonw.exe
from python.exe.
Larry Bates
Philippe C. Martin wrote:
Hi,
For a few months now, I have been used .pyc script under XP without
getting the "DOS" box.
I just re-installed the scripts on another XP box and am now getting the
DOS box !
Something to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am reading an ASCII data file and converting some of the strings to
integers or floats. However, some of the data is corrupted and the
conversion doesn't work. I know that I can us exceptions, but they
don't seem like the cleanest and simplest solution to me.
You should r
Your mail to 'RT-Announce' with the subject
Delivery by mail
Is being held until the list moderator can review it for approval.
The reason it is being held:
Post by non-member to a members-only list
Either the message will get posted to the list, or you will receive
notification of the
If a function that normally returns N values raises an exception, what
should it return? N values of None seems reasonable to me, so I would
write code such as
def foo(x):
try:
# code setting y and z
return y,z
except:
return None,None
y,z = foo(x)
If I try to use y
Your mail to 'RT-Announce' with the subject
Delivery service mail
Is being held until the list moderator can review it for approval.
The reason it is being held:
Post by non-member to a members-only list
Either the message will get posted to the list, or you will receive
notification o
Steven Bethard wrote:
Should namespace chaining be supported? One suggestion would add a
NamespaceChain object to the module::
This does have the advantage of keeping the basic namespace simple.
However, it may also be worth having native chaining support in
Namespace:
I think I prefer the sep
Serge Orlov wrote:
> To summarize the discussion: either it's a bug in glibc or there is an
option to specify modern POSIX locale. POSIX locale consist of
characters from the portable character set, unicode is certainly
portable.
Yes, but U+00E4 is not in the portable character set. The portable
Yes, I suppose exceptions are the best way to handle this problem.
Thanks.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
"Martin v. Löwis" wrote:
> Serge Orlov wrote:
> > To summarize the discussion: either it's a bug in glibc or there
> is an
>> option to specify modern POSIX locale. POSIX locale consist of
>> characters from the portable character set, unicode is certainly
>> portable.
>
> Yes, but U+00E4 is not i
Steven Bethard wrote:
Is there a good way to determine if an object is a numeric type?
.
.
.
Ideas?
Maybe this can help?
def isnumber(x):
try:
return(x == x-0)
except:
return False
print '1:\t', isnumber(1)
print '1.25:\t', isnumber(1.25)
print '1.0 / 7:\t', isnumber(1.0 /
"Stefan Behnel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Hi!
>
> frozenset() doesn't behave as the other immutable empty data types in
> 2.4:
>
> .>>> '' is ''
> True
> .>>> () is ()
> True
I believe the reference manual describes this sort of behavior for
immutables as an
Check out GRACE. It's not specifically designed for Python, but I've
been using with Python for a couple of years or more. I'm very happy
with it, and it's free. It works both interactively and in batch mode.
Do a google on GRACE.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
marco wrote:
Steven Bethard wrote:
Is there a good way to determine if an object is a numeric type?
Maybe this can help?
def isnumber(x):
try:
return(x == x-0)
except:
return False
Not exactly foolproof:
>>> def isnumber(x):
... try: return (x == x-0)
... except: return
This is to inform those interested in compiling Python in MinGW that
an updated version of pyMinGW is now available.
Get it from here:
http://jove.prohosting.com/iwave/ipython/pyMinGW.html
Regards
Khalid
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
"John Fabiani" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> schrieb im Newsbeitrag
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Hi,
> I'm hoping someone on the list has connected to sybase/MsSQL with
> something
> that works with DBAPI 2.0 from a linux box (SUSE 9.2) because I can't seem
> to get it done. I found Object Craft's python cod
Jeremy Bowers wrote:
On Fri, 11 Feb 2005 14:45:09 -0800, Robert Kern wrote:
Until such matters are unequivocally determined in a court that has
jurisdiction over you, do you really want to open yourself to legal risk
and certain ill-will from the community?
Huh? What are you talking about?
I'm jus
Hi,
For a few months now, I have been used .pyc script under XP without
getting the "DOS" box.
I just re-installed the scripts on another XP box and am now getting the
DOS box !
Something to do with the registry ?
Regards,
Philippe
--
***
Philippe C. Martin
Snake
Jeremy Bowers wrote:
On Fri, 11 Feb 2005 18:24:22 +0100, Damjan wrote:
What you described is not ok according to the GPL - since you distributed
a binary thats derived from GPL software (and you didn't publish it source
code under the GPL too).
No you didn't. You distributed a binary completely fr
Hello,
Have a look at this recursive function:
def walkDirectory( directory, element ):
element = element.newChild( None, "directory", None ) # automatically
appends to parent
element.setProp( "name", os.path.basename(directory))
for root, dirs, files in os.walk( directory ):
Fredrik Lundh wrote:
Steven Bethard wrote:
Is there a good way to determine if an object is a numeric type?
assert operator.isNumberType(i)
Interesting, thanks! If I read the source right, PyNumber_Check (which
operator.isNumberType is an alias for) basically just returns True if
the object's ty
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> If I try to use y or z inappropriately when they are None, the program
> will stop. An alternative is to return an error flag in addition to y
> and z from function foo and check the value of the error flag in the
> calling program. Thi
On Feb 11, 2005, at 8:12 PM, John Fabiani wrote:
So is there a kind sole out there that can help with instructions on
what is
needed to get python talking to MsSQL.
Has anyone ever used this product:
http://www.object-craft.com.au/projects/mssql/
Any feedback, positive or negative?
Nick Coghlan wrote:
Py> class NS(namespaces.Namespace):
... x = prop
...
Oops - c&p error here. This was actually:
Py> class NS(namespaces.Namespace):
... x = prop
... __x__ = prop
...
Cheers,
Nick.
--
Nick Coghlan | [EMAIL PROTECTED] | Brisbane, Australia
John Lenton wrote:
On Fri, Feb 11, 2005 at 01:17:55PM -0700, Steven Bethard wrote:
George Sakkis wrote:
"Steven Bethard" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Is there a good way to determine if an object is a numeric type?
In your example, what does your application consider
Nick Coghlan wrote:
Steven Bethard wrote:
>>> ns = Namespace(eggs=1)
>>> Namespace.update(ns, [('spam', 2)], ham=3)
>>> ns
Namespace(eggs=1, ham=3, spam=2)
Note that update should be used through the class, not through the
instances, to avoid the confusion that might arise if an 'up
Erik Johnson wrote:
> There are a lot of things about PHP I was not too keen on and hence
> why
> my company is primarily doing Python these days, but one thing I was quite
> impressed with was the ease with which it provided session
> functionality...
Like you I think it is a big plus of
George Sakkis wrote:
George Sakkis wrote:
"Steven Bethard" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Is there a good way to determine if an object is a numeric type?
In your example, what does your application consider to be numeric?
Well, here's the basic code:
def f(max=None):
Oops, my bad. The utilities file I use gets loaded automatically when
I start my interpreter, so I mistook isnumber for a built-in function.
A battle-tested isnumber function is defined in Peter Norvig's utils.py
(http://aima.cs.berkeley.edu/python/utils.py):
#def isnumber(x):
#"Is x a number
Hi !
You can found few ideas here :
http://candygram.sourceforge.net
@-salutations
--
Michel Claveau
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Fri, Feb 11, 2005 at 01:17:55PM -0700, Steven Bethard wrote:
> George Sakkis wrote:
> >"Steven Bethard" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> >news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >
> >>Is there a good way to determine if an object is a numeric type?
> >
> >In your example, what does your application consi
> > So what you're saying is that 3 <= "3.0" should not be allowed, but
> > 3 <= SomeUserDefinedNumericClass(3) is ok, although your program knows
> > nothing a priori about SomeUserDefinedNumericClass. The idea suggested
> > before, try if "x+1" fails or not does not get you far; any class that
>
rzed wrote:
I would bet that subclassing is *still* going to be common, though,
as each of us individually roll our own version to get that one
vital feature the standard doesn't cover (for me, it's update with
numerous other types)
This is certainly what I expect to happen. It's the main reason
Fredrik Lundh wrote:
> Serge Orlov wrote:
>
>> re.compile(ur'\w+', re.U).findall(u'\xb5\xba\xe4\u0430')
>> [u'\xb5\xba\xe4\u0430']
>>
>> I can't find the strict definition of isalpha, but I believe average
>> C program shouldn't care about the current locale alphabet, so
>> isalpha is a uni
Fredrik Lundh wrote:
> Serge Orlov wrote:
>
>> re.compile(ur'\w+', re.U).findall(u'\xb5\xba\xe4\u0430')
>> [u'\xb5\xba\xe4\u0430']
>>
>> I can't find the strict definition of isalpha, but I believe average
>> C program shouldn't care about the current locale alphabet, so
>> isalpha is a uni
The original message was received at Sat, 12 Feb 2005 06:04:57 +0100
from [134.224.55.190]
- The following addresses had permanent fatal errors -
python-list@python.org
***
** A csatolmány Message.scr I-Worm.Mydoom.R virussal f
Cyril BAZIN wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I want to build a function which return values which appear two or
> more times in a list:
>
> So, I decided to write a little example which doesn't work:
> #l = [1, 7, 3, 4, 3, 2, 1]
> #i = iter(l)
> #for x in i:
> #j = iter(i)
> #for y in j:
> #if x
Serge Orlov wrote:
> The wide-character value for each member of the Portable
> Character Set will equal its value when used as the lone character
> in an integer character constant. Wide-character codes for other
> characters are locale- and *implementation-dependent*
>
> Emphasis is mine.
the r
On Fri, 11 Feb 2005 18:49:53 +0100
"Fredrik Lundh" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >> >>> re.compile(ur'\w+', re.U).findall(u'\xb5\xba\xe4\u0430')
> >> [u'\xb5\xba\xe4\u0430']
> >
> > I can't find the strict definition of isalpha, but I believe average
> > C program shouldn't care about the current l
Cyril,
Here's some code that (I think) does what you want:
l = [1, 7, 3, 4, 3, 2, 1]
s, dups = set(), set()
for x in i:
if x in s:
dups.add(x)
s.add(x)
print dups
I'm sure there are more elegant ways to do it, but this seemed to be the
most straightforward way I could think of.
Ho
A.B., Khalid <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> This is to inform those interested in compiling Python in MinGW that
> an updated version of pyMinGW is now available.
Ha anyone tried cross compiling python with mingw? At work we compile
our software for lots of platforms (including windows) on a linu
Can someone suggest me some good resources for learning how to use
unittests for web applications? Do we always have to cook up our own
webpage scrapers to test the code?
- Sandip
--
Sandip Bhattacharya*Puroga Technologies * [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Work: http://www.puroga.com *Home
On 11 Feb 2005, Xah Lee wrote:
> # this construct uses a irregular syntax to generate a expression
> # built by nested loops. Semantically, this expression generation is
> # akin to applying a function to a tree. Morons in the computing
> # industry and academia like to call this "list comprehens
On Fri, 11 Feb 2005, Dominic Fox wrote:
...
> http://www.codepoetics.com/code/concurrent.py
>
> Comments and constructive criticism welcome.
For an alternative approach (based on using generators forming a dataflow
component system) you might find our project interesting - the core
concurrency stu
On 11 Feb 2005 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am new to Python and coming from the EDA/VLSI Design background.
>
> I wanted to know if there are some active projects going on EDA modules
> written in Python.
You may want to take a look at MyHDL & APVM/Oroboro:
* http://jandecaluwe.com/To
Hi all,
I'm trying to get some ideas on the best way to do this.
In this particular coding snippet, I was thinking of creating a
dictionary of file objects and file names. These would be optional
files that I could open and parse. At the end, I would easily close off
the files by iterating thr
I am a newbye. I am looking for a multi-platform user interface solution
(windows, linux).
Untill now, I used wxPython which worked fine at the beginning (MDK9,
Windows NT4). Nevertheless, I was very disapointed when I noticed that my
applications did not work with recent linux distributions (MDK10
Luc wrote:
So I am looking for another solution with a web interface that should work
with linux and windows XP.
I had a look to zope but was afraid with the complexity and debug
difficulties.
Are there some other solutions?
Yes. A lot: http://www.python.org/moin/WebProgramming
I know someone who s
Got it. Thanks.I'm just curious.:)
"Trent Mick" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> mep wrote:
> > ActivePython-2.4.0-243-win32-ix86.msi : 29M
> > ActivePython-2.4.0-244-win32-ix86.msi : 18M
> > What make so much difference of the size of them, which distinct monir
> >
I believe there are xUnit clones named
Httpunit and Htmlunit, as well as a number
of variants. See the huge list of xUnit
clones on:
http://www.xprogramming.com/
in the downloads section. I don't think
any of them are Python based, though.
You might also want to look at some of
the Htmlunit integra
Julian Yap wrote:
In this particular coding snippet, I was thinking of creating a
dictionary of file objects and file names. These would be optional
files that I could open and parse. At the end, I would easily close off
the files by iterating through the dictionary.
Hi,
File objects as keys s
Walter Burleigh wrote:
> Erik Johnson wrote:
>
>> There are a lot of things about PHP I was not too keen on and hence
>> why
>> my company is primarily doing Python these days, but one thing I was quite
>> impressed with was the ease with which it provided session
>> functionality...
>
>
Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
[...]
My question is essentially:
How many of those constructs are already supported by python (and the
surrounding open-source-projects):
http://lazaridis.com/case/stack/index.html
[...]
The Signal/Noise ratio of this thread was very disapointing to me.
I've expected bette
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> Check out GRACE. It's not specifically designed for Python, but I've
> been using with Python for a couple of years or more. I'm very happy
> with it, and it's free. It works both interactively and in batch mode.
> Do a google on GRACE.
If you're generating lots of gra
Josef Meile <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > I'm looking for frameworks to make testing web applications -
> > i.e. parsing and filling out forms - easier. I found Puffin, which
> > looks good but not very usable in the current state. I know that I
> > once read about other nice frameworks, but coul
Terry Reedy schrieb:
frozenset() called without arguments (or on empty sequences)
should always return a singleton object.
If we interpret 'should' as 'preferably by me', ok.
It will take some programmer's time to add the special case check and run
the test suite, and check in the changes. Yours?
Skip Montanaro wrote:
How about modifying it to
raw_input("Press ENTER to continue ")
You want him to just capitalize ENTER in the current message?
--
Michael Hoffman
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Irmen de Jong a écrit:
> Luc wrote:
>
>> So I am looking for another solution with a web interface that should
>> work with linux and windows XP.
>> I had a look to zope but was afraid with the complexity and debug
>> difficulties.
>> Are there some other solutions?
>
> Yes. A lot: http://www.py
Erik Johnson wrote:
I am wanting to generate dynamic graphs for our website and ...
>I am aware of ChartDirector (http://www.advsofteng.com/ ) which
I have used ChartDirector extensively as an activeX (not from
python though). We found the API to be well-though and clean.
The tool is definitely wor
The documentation for SMTPHandler say "The toaddrs should be a list of
strings without domain names (That's what the mailhost is for)." which does
not seem to be correct. The toaddr should be a list of strings like
'[EMAIL PROTECTED]'.
Peter
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python
Peter Mott wrote:
> The documentation for SMTPHandler say "The toaddrs should be a list of
> strings without domain
> names (That's what the mailhost is for)." which does not seem to be correct.
> The toaddr should be
> a list of strings like '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'.
please report bugs and other
Ok, this is my problem:
With code below I get a red box with given width and height. When I
use that create_image, nothing happens. I only see that same red box.
Why is that?
The loop.bmp is working fine when I use show() method.
win = Toplevel()
canvas = Canvas(win, width=100, h
"Nick Coghlan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> A bug report on Sourceforge would help in getting the problem fixed for
the 2.5
> docs
Done.
> For the 'left-to-right' evaluation thing, that's technically an
implementation
> artifact of the CPython implementation, si
Antti Isomursu wrote:
> With code below I get a red box with given width and height. When I
> use that create_image, nothing happens. I only see that same red box.
> Why is that?
> The loop.bmp is working fine when I use show() method.
>
>win = Toplevel()
>
>canvas = Canvas(win, wi
There's another current thread on c.l.py talking about testing Web
applications. Somenone suggested Jython in conjunction with HttpUnit, a
combination that worked for me too -- but the name HttpUnit is
misleading, since it does functional/black box testing and not unit
testing. It beats scraping We
[Irmen de Jong]
Interestingly enough, I just ran across "Flatten":
http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=82591&package_id=91311
"...which aids in serializing/unserializing networked data securely,
without having to fear execution of code or the like."
Sounds promising!
Well, I'm a
The message could not be delivered
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** A csatolmány message.zip I-Worm.Mydoom.R virussal fertõzött,
** a csatolmány törölve lett.
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On 2005-02-12, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> If a function that normally returns N values raises an exception, what
> should it return?
Maybe it shouldn't return anything but instead of cathing the
exception it should let the caller handle it.
> N values of None seems reasonable
How does the speed of the Scons build tool compare with Ant? Right now with
out Ant builds take around an hour. Hoping to speed that up.
TIA,
Ted
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Alan Kennedy wrote:
[Irmen de Jong]
Interestingly enough, I just ran across "Flatten":
http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=82591&package_id=91311
"...which aids in serializing/unserializing networked data securely,
without having to fear execution of code or the like."
Sounds pr
On Sat, 12 Feb 2005 18:24:11 +0100, "Fredrik Lundh"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Antti Isomursu wrote:
>
>> With code below I get a red box with given width and height. When I
>> use that create_image, nothing happens. I only see that same red box.
>> Why is that?
>> The loop.bmp is working fine wh
[snip]
> Ha anyone tried cross compiling python with mingw? At work we
compile
> our software for lots of platforms (including windows) on a linux
> build host. The windows builds are done with a mingw cross compiler.
> It would be interesting if we could do this with python + extensions
> also.
On Thu, 10 Feb 2005, Antoon Pardon wrote:
Op 2005-02-09, Roman Suzi schreef <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
On Wed, 9 Feb 2005, Antoon Pardon wrote:
Op 2005-02-09, Roman Suzi schreef <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Just to be sure, is email package of Python 2.3 thread-safe or not
(to use, for example, in python-milter?
Simon John wrote:
Maybe I'll fork out the 100usd for Visual Studio .NET 2003 after all
$100? Where? Last time I looked it was closer to $800.
--Irmen
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Are the modules just accessing the published apis for their webservices?
I'm just wondering because I used to work for a logistics mgmt
company that paid money to be a strategic partner with
FedEx/UPS/Airborn etc so that they could information on how to return
rates/print labels/generate edi's/ca
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