Ben Finney wrote:
> I hope that, instead, it's possible to perform the research needed to
> describe the requested change, submit it as an email or online form
are you perhaps volunteering to help setup and monitoring such a sub-
mission channel ?
it's a certain amount of work to keep out the s
Hi
I was wondering whether the del statment was going to stay in Python3000?
It is a bit awkward to use the del statement where a method call would do
the same without the need for a new keyword.
del list[elem]
del map[elem]
Where
list.del(elem)
map.del(elem)
would achieve the same result (
Marco Aschwanden wrote:
> Where
>
> list.del(elem)
> map.del(elem)
>
> would achieve the same result (and I think, this is what happens in the
> backend).
so what about
del x
?
> The same discussion was done for the "external" len-function (list.len()
> vs. len(list)).
for the curi
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> For some reason the _db2 module cannot be imported. Have you had this
> issue before?
my guess is that _db2 is a binary driver module used by the DB2.py
module. did you follow the installation instructions carefully ?
have you looked for _db2.so or _db2module.so files
- Forwarded Message
From: Josiah Carlson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: f rom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, December 4, 2006 10:03:28 PM
Subject: Re: [wxPython-users] 1>make_buildinfo.obj : error LNK2019: unresolved
external symbol [EMAIL PROTECTED] referenced in functio
Fredrik Lundh wrote:
> import os
> for line in os.popen("grep pattern *.txt"):
> print line,
>
> also see os.system and subprocess.
>
> note that if you want to write portable code, you can implement your own
> "grep" using the "re" module:
>
Also, for a wrapper a
Craig wrote:
> I'm trying to open colour BMPs using PIL and I'm getting the following
> errors.
what program did you use to produce those BMP files? can you prepare
reasonably small samples using the same program and post them somewhere?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-lis
Larry Bates wrote:
> Ant wrote:
...
> > Is there any way of doing this without having to post-process the file
> > in binary mode (a-la the crlf.py script)
...
> You can write to a new file and create your own line endings.
> When done, delete the original file and rename the output file.
How ca
f rom wrote:
>> 1>make_buildinfo.obj : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol [EMAIL
>> PROTECTED] referenced in function _make_buildinfo2
>> 1>make_buildinfo.obj : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol [EMAIL
>> PROTECTED] referenced in function _make_buildinfo2
you need to link with Ad
> so what about
>
> del x
Ups. I never used it for an object. So far I only used it for deletion of
elements of a container. In that case del has two purposes:
1. Deletes an item from a container (and of course destructs it) -->
list.remove(elem)
2. Calls the destructor of an object -->
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Also, for a wrapper around popen, try commands:
>
> import commands
>
> pattern = raw_input('pattern to search? ')
> print commands.getoutput('grep %s *.txt' % pattern)
that's not quite as portable as the other alternatives, though. "grep"
is at least availabl
"king kikapu" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hmmm...ok...it calls the decorator but when ?? It (the runtime) loads
> the .py file and start to call every decorator
> it finds on it, regardless of the existance of code that actually calls
> the decorated functions ??
> I understand thet Python does n
Ant wrote:
> How can I create my own line endings? I've tried setting os.linesep =
> "\n", (and to \x0a). I've tried things like:
>
> print "xxx yyy \n",
> print "xxx uuu \x0a",
> filehandle.write("xxx \n")
> filehandle.write("xxx \x0a")
>
> and all of these give me a nice windows-style crlf!
>
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Or, just always send the function a list. If you have one string, send
> it a list containing that one string.
Or, if a single string is more common and the lists are short or generated
only for the function call, have the function accept a variable number of
arguments:
Marco Aschwanden wrote:
> 2. Calls the destructor of an object --> list.destruct()
"del name" only removes the name from the current namespace, it doesn't
destroy the object:
http://effbot.org/pyref/del
the actual destruction is handled by the garbage collector, when the
time is right.
[Moqtar]
| I am trying to walk a directory and print the file and its modified
| time. When the path is longer then 259 characters i get an error
| "Filename too long". I guess these is because windows limitation on
| path length.
|
| My code:
|
[... snip code ...]
|
| Traceback (most recent
Ant wrote:
> Larry Bates wrote:
>
> > Ant wrote:
> ...
> > > Is there any way of doing this without having to post-process the file
> > > in binary mode (a-la the crlf.py script)
> ...
> > You can write to a new file and create your own line endings.
> > When done, delete the original file and ren
> do you find the x[i] syntax for calling the getitem/setitem methods a
> bit awkward too? what about HTTP's use of "GET" and "POST" for most
> about everything ? ;-)
No. I like the x[i] syntax. I use it in every second row of my code and
getting an item like:
x.getitem(i)
would be a viable (
Hi,
As I understand it, python uses a pcre engine to work with regular
expression.
My question is, then, why expressions like :
>>> re.compile('asd|(?-i:QWE)', re.I)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "", line 1, in ?
File "/usr/lib/python2.4/sre.py", line 180, in compile
return _com
Dennis Lee Bieber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On 04 Dec 2006 12:41:59 +, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (John J. Lee) declaimed the
> following in comp.lang.python:
>
> > digits, through complicated encodings (my colleague Robin tells me US
> > postal bar codes were a particular pain), up to funny-looki
sturlamolden wrote:
> Little is as efficient as well-written ISO C99 (not to be confused with
> C++ or ANSI C).
OCaml and F# are almost as fast as C++ in this case. I suspect most other
modern languages are.
> So I assume you make sure that the cache is
> prefetched and exploited optimally for yo
Hi Dennis, to answer your questions:
1) So far as I can see ipython generates .pyc files.
2) This morning I ran the scripts, and got the same problem using
ipython as in my earlier post. I then deleted the .pyc file, ran the
calling script and this time it works. I then replaced the .pyc file I
[EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Also, for a wrapper around popen, try commands:
>
>import commands
>
>pattern = raw_input('pattern to search? ')
>print commands.getoutput('grep %s *.txt' % pattern)
What if I entered "; rm -rf * ;" as my pattern?
Don't ever pass user
Terry Reedy wrote:
> "Paul Boddie" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >The One Laptop Per Child developers and testers briefly consider Python
> >development environments (in the context of things Alan Kay presented at
> >EuroPython 2006):
> >
> > http://mai
I've got a slight problem when running an excel macro from python using
the win32.com.client module, in that it says it can't load the DLL file
(it doesn't say which one)
and gives me the following error message
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "", line 93, in ?
File ">", line 14, in R
I am looking for a Python Developer for a 1 year long contract. The
role will be based in the South West - UK.
I will consider candidates with either personal or commercial experience
of Python.
Please do not hesitate to contact if you require any further
information.
___
Rakesh
Mike P wrote:
> I've got a slight problem when running an excel macro from python using
> the win32.com.client module, in that it says it can't load the DLL file
Does it? All I see is a message that it can't find a macro.
> (it doesn't say which one)
What happens when you run the macro from the
Thanks for the quick reply,
the code i am running is the following
import win32com.client
xl = win32com.client.Dispatch("Excel.Application")
ppt = win32com.client.Dispatch("PowerPoint.Application")
ppt.Visible = 1 #open MS Powerpoint
xl.Visible = 1 #open MS Excel
xl.Workbooks.Open('%s/working_out
Mike P wrote:
> Thanks for the quick reply,
>
> the code i am running is the following
>
> import win32com.client
> xl = win32com.client.Dispatch("Excel.Application")
> ppt = win32com.client.Dispatch("PowerPoint.Application")
> ppt.Visible = 1 #open MS Powerpoint
> xl.Visible = 1 #open MS Excel
>
Wehrdamned wrote:
> As I understand it, python uses a pcre engine to work with regular
> expression.
[...]
> My question is, then, why expressions like :
re.compile('asd|(?-i:QWE)', re.I)
[...]
> don't work? They are ok in perl...
>From http://docs.python.org/lib/module-re.html:
This mo
On Dec 4, 2006, at 5:41 PM, Gabriel Genellina wrote:
>> I'm starting to program in python, i need a soft "interface
>> designer" and adapt this interface to python. Somebody can help me
>> with this?
>> Sorry, my english is very bad.
>
> Mine too. I don't understand what you want - what do yo
John Machin wrote:
> Ant wrote:
...
> > filehandle.write("xxx \n")
> > filehandle.write("xxx \x0a")
> >
> > and all of these give me a nice windows-style crlf!
> >
> > Surely there must be a way to do this ...
>
> and there is: open your output file in binary mode; then it won't
> convert every \
Marco Aschwanden wrote:
> > do you find the x[i] syntax for calling the getitem/setitem methods a
> > bit awkward too? what about HTTP's use of "GET" and "POST" for most
> > about everything ? ;-)
>
> No. I like the x[i] syntax. I use it in every second row of my code and
> getting an item like:
A recent poll asked if programming standards are used by development
organisations... and if they are controlled.
None: 20%
Yes, but without control: 49%
Yes, with control: 31%
Participants: 369
Source: Methods & Tools (http://www.methodsandtools.com)
A majority of the participating organisatio
Filip Wasilewski wrote:
> Besides of that this code is irrelevant to the original one and your
> further conclusions may not be perfectly correct. Please learn first
> about the topic of your benchmark and different variants of wavelet
> transform, namely difference between lifting scheme and dwt,
Nick Craig-Wood wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I am sure this is a basic math issue, but is there a better way to
> > ensure an int variable is divisible by 4 than by doing the following;
> >
> > x = 111
> > x = (x /4) * 4
>
> You should use // for future compatibilit
editormt wrote:
> A majority of the participating organisations have coding standards...
> and a majority does not control them ;o) What is the situation at your
> location? Does this lack of control really hurt?
"""A Foolish Consistency is the Hobgoblin of Little Minds"""
from: http://www.python
Hi,
I am using matplotlib with python to generate a bunch of charts. My
code works fine for a single iteration, which creates and saves 4
different charts. The trouble is that when I try to run it for the
entire set (about 200 items) it can run for 12 items at a time. On the
13th, I get an erro
It is hard to know what is wrong when we do not know how the
wrapper around the function works. The error could also be in
ConstructFigName or ConstructFigPath. Also please send the
specific error message when asking for help as that significantly
helps in tracking down the error.
Cheers
Tommy
Usually, when I make some coding mistake (index out of range - in this
case) I just care to fix the mistake and I usually don't mind to
inspect by how much the index was overflowed. It really seems like a
feature that should be embedded in some Python debugger than a feature
in the interpreter itse
stdazi wrote:
> It really seems like a
> feature that should be embedded in some Python debugger than a feature
> in the interpreter itself.
+1
--
Soni Bergraj
http://www.YouJoy.org/
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
[EMAIL PROTECTED] skrev:
> Nick Craig-Wood wrote:
>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>> I am sure this is a basic math issue, but is there a better way to
>>> ensure an int variable is divisible by 4 than by doing the following;
>>>
>>> x = 111
>>> x = (x /4) * 4
X *= 4
;-)
--
Max M <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] skrev:
>> Nick Craig-Wood wrote:
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I am sure this is a basic math issue, but is there a better way to
ensure an int variable is divisible by 4 than by doing the following;
x
It works using ftp.microsoft.com. But where does it put the downloaded
files? can I specify a download folder location?
Justin Ezequiel wrote:
> johnny wrote:
> > When I run the following script, with host and password and username
> > changed, I get the following errors:
> > raise error_temp, res
It places the ftp downloaded contents on the same folder as the this
ftp python script. How do I set a diffrent download folder location?
johnny wrote:
> It works using ftp.microsoft.com. But where does it put the downloaded
> files? can I specify a download folder location?
>
> Justin Ezequiel w
stdazi wrote:
> Usually, when I make some coding mistake (index out of range - in this
> case) I just care to fix the mistake and I usually don't mind to
> inspect by how much the index was overflowed. It really seems like a
> feature that should be embedded in some Python debugger than a feature
>
That went well. PythonTidy has been looked at at least 10**2 times,
and I have received a couple of complaints, which I hope I have
addressed satisfactorily -- plenty good enough for a beta test. The
basic concept stands.
PythonTidy.py cleans up, regularizes, and reformats the text of
Python scr
Hello
question about copy vs deepcopy used in multithreaded context:
suppose the following program below:
the original dictionary is modified after the thread is started, the
thread works on a copied and deepcopied version of the original
dictionary. Is the dictionary named "originalcopy" iso
I doubt that anyone would dispute that even as boosted by Numpy/Scipy,
Python will almost certainly be notably slower than moderately
well-written code in a compiled language. The reason Numpy exists,
however, is not to deliver the best possible speed, but to deliver
enough speed to make it possib
Hans >Langtangen<, rather.
Mark Morss wrote:
> I doubt that anyone would dispute that even as boosted by Numpy/Scipy,
> Python will almost certainly be notably slower than moderately
> well-written code in a compiled language. The reason Numpy exists,
> however, is not to deliver the best possible
Logo LISP
Xah Lee, 2006-12
Ken Tilton wrote:
«Small problem. You forget that Ron Garret wants us to change the
name of Common Lisp as the sure-fire way to make it more popular (well,
hang on, he says it is necessary, not sufficient. Anyway...) I do not
think we can safely pick a new logo unt
johnny wrote:
> It places the ftp downloaded contents on the same folder as the this
> ftp python script. How do I set a diffrent download folder location?
by prepending a directory name to the filename in the open(p, 'wb') call.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Evan wrote:
> A few questions: Why does python use the double underscore (__main__ or
> if __name__)? I've only been using python for about 3 weeks, and I see
> this syntax a lot, but haven't found an explanation for it so far?
to quote the language reference, "System-defined names. These names
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Fredrik Lundh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>(maybe I should stop using a threaded newsreader to read this group;
>it's obvious that nobody else ever bothers to check what subthread a
>message is appearing in.)
Hey! I've been using trn3.6 for more than fifteen ye
BTW, I noticed a bunch of new line characters in your test message.
If you ever send mail to a qmail server it will be rejected because rfc 821
says that new line characters cannot occur without a carriage return. So
change all those \n's to \r\n's ;)
--
We are all slave to our own paradigm. --
Ant wrote:
> Is it worth me submitting a patch to fileinput which can take an
> optional write mode parameter?
absolutely.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I have added advapi32 &user32. This is my current result :
I am quite surprised there are so many issues with the solution file
that comes with python25.
I remember py23 built out of the box :(
1>-- Build started: Project: make_versioninfo, Configuration: Debug
Win32 --
2>-- Build sta
etaoinbe wrote:
> I have added advapi32 &user32. This is my current result :
>
> I am quite surprised there are so many issues with the solution file
> that comes with python25.
> I remember py23 built out of the box :(
python 2.5 also builds out of the box, if you're using an ordinary
visual s
Hi,
I'm developing mixed Python/C app which runs on WinNT server. When
something fails in Python, that´s not a problem, prints a traceback to
the log and thats it. When something fails within the C code, the error
message window pops up. To kill it I´ve got to access server with VNC.
I´ve tried to
I've got a python GUI working with Tkinter, and I need to package it as
an executable file, preferably a single file. I've got py2exe working
without the 'bundle_files' option, but when I add that option in
("bundle_files": 1), the built executable gives me the following error:
--
>you're not listening.
Be sure that i do...The fact that i come from another world does not
mean that i am not listening, just that i find as strange some (new)
things.
Thank you all guys, i know what is happening now...
Thanks again!
kikapu
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-
Marco Aschwanden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[ ... ]
>> so what about
>>
>> del x
>
>Ups. I never used it for an object. So far I only used it for deletion of
>elements of a container. In that case del has two purposes:
>
>1. Deletes an item from a container (and of course destructs it) -->
No Problem,
Thanks for your help so far, i've sent this problem off to SPSS as it
seems it doesn't work on a work colleagues machine either
Thanks for your time though
Mike
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
=
PyPy Leysin Winter Sports Sprint (8-14th January 2007)
=
.. image:: http://www.ermina.ch/002.JPG
The next PyPy sprint will
stdazi wrote:
> Usually, when I make some coding mistake (index out of range - in this
> case) I just care to fix the mistake and I usually don't mind to
> inspect by how much the index was overflowed. It really seems like a
> feature that should be embedded in some Python debugger than a feature
>
Carl,
I agree with practically everything you say about the choice between
Python and functional languages, but apropos of Ocaml, not these
remarks:
>
> In the same way that a screwdriver can't prevent you from driving a
> nail. Give me a break, we all know these guys (Haskell especially) are
>
Announcing argparse 0.3
---
argparse home:
http://argparse.python-hosting.com/
argparse single module download:
http://argparse.python-hosting.com/file/trunk/argparse.py?format=raw
argparse bundled downloads at PyPI:
http://www.python.org/pypi/argparse/
About thi
Hello, Guys,
I have a question about the linear_least_squares in Numpy.
My linear_least_squares cannot give me the results.
I use Numpy1.0. The newest version. So I checked online and get your
guys some examples.
I did like this.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 77] ~ >> py
Python 2.4.3 (#1, May 18 2006,
Dennis Lee Bieber ha scritto:
> Ah, sorry... Warned you that I didn't test...
>
> Duplicate the block of lines with the .join() calls. Put this block
> just before them, but after the threading.Thread calls, and change the
> .join() to .start()
Tnx Dennis I resolved yesterday after th
Russ wrote:
> Folks,
>
> I'm truly sorry that so many feathers got ruffled in this thread. Let's
> see if I can put this thing to rest gracefully.
I too am tired of this and I apologize to you
(Russ) for jumping into it and for this (hopefullly
last) followup. But the same thing happened here
a
As I study Python, I am trying to develop good, Pythonic, habits. For
one thing, I am trying to keep Guido's the style guide in mind.
And I know that it starts out saying that it should not be applied in
an absolute fashion.
However, I am finding that the 79 character line prescription is not
op
Chuck Rhode schrieb:
> That went well. PythonTidy has been looked at at least 10**2 times,
> and I have received a couple of complaints, which I hope I have
> addressed satisfactorily -- plenty good enough for a beta test. The
> basic concept stands.
Sure.
There is still one major issue. python
Steve Bergman wrote:
> As I study Python, I am trying to develop good, Pythonic, habits. For
> one thing, I am trying to keep Guido's the style guide in mind.
>
> And I know that it starts out saying that it should not be applied in
> an absolute fashion.
>
> However, I am finding that the 79 cha
I am getting the following error:
raise error_temp, resp
error_temp: 421 Unable to set up secure anonymous FTP
Here is the code:
import ftplib, posixpath, threading
from TaskQueue import TaskQueue
def worker(tq):
while True:
host, e = tq.get()
c = ftplib.FTP(host)
>
> Web-badges serve slightly different purpose than logos. It is more for
> the purpose of promotion, than representation. For the same reason,
> there are mascots. For example, Java the language, has a official logo
> of a smoking coffee cup, but also has a mascot of a penguin named
> “Duke”.
h
On 5 Dec 2006 09:55:20 -0800, Steve Bergman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
However, I am finding that the 79 character line prescription is not
optimal for readability.
For me, 79 characters per line... would basically make my code a LOT
harder for me to read and manage.
I mean, a basic structur
> I have a question about the linear_least_squares in Numpy.
Not quite sure what is going on, it looks like there could be some
confusion as to linear_least_squares is expecting as an argument of
some Numeric arrays and what you are supplying (a Matrix) is perhaps
not close enough to being the sam
No matter what I do I cant get the following code to do what I expect.
I hadn't used subprocess t o read and write to pipes of a
still-running app, and I just can't seem to get it right. What gives?
import subprocess
p = subprocess.Popen("python", stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stdin=subprocess.PIPE)
p.
Calvin Spealman wrote:
> No matter what I do I cant get the following code to do what I expect.
> I hadn't used subprocess t o read and write to pipes of a
> still-running app, and I just can't seem to get it right. What gives?
>
> import subprocess
>
> p = subprocess.Popen("python", stdout=subp
Steve Bergman wrote:
[snip]
> However, I am finding that the 79 character line prescription is not
> optimal for readability.
>
> Certainly, cutting back from the length of lines that I used to use has
> *helped* readability. But if I triy very hard to apply 79, I think
> readability suffers. If
Jianzhong Liu wrote:
> Hello, Guys,
>
> I have a question about the linear_least_squares in Numpy.
>
> My linear_least_squares cannot give me the results.
>
> I use Numpy1.0. The newest version. So I checked online and get your
> guys some examples.
The package name for numpy 1.0 is "numpy", no
Paul Rudin wrote:
> Max M <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] skrev:
> >> Nick Craig-Wood wrote:
> >>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I am sure this is a basic math issue, but is there a better way to
> ensure an int variable is divisible by 4 than by do
On 12/5/06, Fredrik Lundh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Calvin Spealman wrote:
>
> > No matter what I do I cant get the following code to do what I expect.
> > I hadn't used subprocess t o read and write to pipes of a
> > still-running app, and I just can't seem to get it right. What gives?
> >
> >
Calvin Spealman wrote:
> No matter what I do I cant get the following code to do what I expect.
> I hadn't used subprocess t o read and write to pipes of a
> still-running app, and I just can't seem to get it right. What gives?
>
> import subprocess
>
> p = subprocess.Popen("python", stdout=subpr
Xah Lee wrote:
> Logo LISP
>
> Xah Lee, 2006-12
>
> Ken Tilton wrote:
>
> «Small problem. You forget that Ron Garret wants us to change the
> name of Common Lisp as the sure-fire way to make it more popular (well,
> hang on, he says it is necessary, not sufficient. Anyway...) I do not
> th
Steve Bergman wrote:
> As I study Python, I am trying to develop good, Pythonic, habits. For
> one thing, I am trying to keep Guido's the style guide in mind.
>
> And I know that it starts out saying that it should not be applied in
> an absolute fashion.
>
> However, I am finding that the 79 char
Hi,
There was a coding standard where I worked and the intention behind this
requirement was to make the code printer friendly. Printing code source
with lines longer than 80 chars greatly hinder readability on paper.
Greetings,
Olivier Langlois
http://www.olivierlanglois.net
>
> I also think th
You can use the modulous "%" to check for a remainder of division. If no
remainder is found you know the number is divisible by 4.
Ex:
x = 111
if x%4 == 0:
print "X is divisible by 4"
-- Forwarded message --
From: "John Machin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: python-list@python.org
D
Ok I fixed it. Needed to put in username, and password in the c.login
inside while True loop.
while True:
host, e = tq.get()
c = ftplib.FTP(host)
c.connect()
try:
c.login()
p = posixpath.basename(e)
fp = open('H:/eclipse/workspac
At Tuesday 5/12/2006 12:04, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
question about copy vs deepcopy used in multithreaded context:
suppose the following program below:
the original dictionary is modified after the thread is started, the
thread works on a copied and deepcopied version of the original
dictio
Thanks for the responses.
The point about 132 columns is good. Pretty much any printer will
handle that today, though I reserve the right to change my mind about
the utility of 17cpi print after I'm 50. Hopefully, all printers will
be at least 1200dpi by then. ;-)
---
Yes, I dislike "\" for co
Helloquestion about copy vs deepcopy used in multithreaded context:suppose the following program below:the original dictionary is modified after the thread is started, the thread works on a copied and deepcopied version of the original dictionary. Is the dictionary named "originalcopy" isolated fro
I have updated my script to use wx.RadioButton instead, which works
perfectly on my mac again, but now the submit button doesn't show up on
the pc and I can't click in the netid field on the pc either. any
ideas?
# BEGIN CODE
import wx;
SUBMIT_BUTTON = wx.ID_HIGHEST + 10;
class regFrame(wx.Fram
In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Steve Bergman
wrote:
> While I'm on this general topic, the guide mentions a pet peeve about
> inserting more than one space to line up the "=" in assignment
> statements. To me, lining them up, even if it requires quite a few
> extra spaces, helps readability quite a bit.
Hi all,
I think this is ctypes related but how can I call the glShaderSourceARB
function?
The function have this header:
glShaderSourceARB( GLhandleARB(shaderObj), GLsizei(count),
POINTER(arrays.GLcharARBArray)(string), GLintArray(length) ) -> None
I call the function with someting like: glShad
Greetings,
I came across your ad via Google Search and wanted to inquire about your
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Please Contact me as soon as possible
Regards,
Steve Egan
Disclaimer
"The inf
Jonathan Smith wrote:
> > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> > news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >> I am sure this is a basic math issue, but is there a better way to
> >> ensure an int variable is divisible by 4 than by doing the following;
> >>
> >> x = 111
> >> x = (x /4) * 4
> >>
> >> Just seems a
How do I join two string variables?
I want to do: download_dir + filename.
download_dir=r'c:/download/'
filename =r'log.txt'
I want to get something like this:
c:/download/log.txt
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi
I'm still a newbie when it comes to web applications, so would like
some help in choosing a solution to write apps with Python: What's the
difference between using running it through mod_python vs. building an
application server using Python-based tools like CherryPy, Quixote,
Draco, etc.?
Tha
johnny wrote:
> How do I join two string variables?
> I want to do: download_dir + filename.
That should do it. :-)
You can concatenate strings using the plus operator. For large number
of strings it is very inefficient. (Particularly in versions of Python
pre 2.4 or in IronPython.)
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