Peter Otten wrote:
> Tim Daneliuk wrote:
>
>> IOW, is there a way to return a symlink-based path which contains
>> the symlink pointer as is was *defined* not as it expands?
>
> os.readlink()
>
> Peter
Thanks - I couldn't find it because it was right in front of my nose :)
--
---
Hi Frank,
Usually "Python" is installed in /usr/lib/python[VER] but you should be
able to call up /usr/bin/python without any difficulty.
Harlin Seritt
Frank Potter wrote:
> I installed fedora core 6 and it has python installed.
> But the question is, where is the executable python file?
> I ca
Will McGugan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>>
>> sys.exit() raises a SystemExit, see
>> http://docs.python.org/lib/module-sys.html
>>
> Oh I know. I was just wondering if there was some sort of subtle 'best
> practice' recommendation that I wasnt aware of for using sys.e
At Monday 8/1/2007 13:06, Alex wrote:
So far everything works fine, but I encounter a problem with commands
which require some sort of user input; i.e. they don't return
immediately.
Could someone point out the cause of this? It seems to me that the
interpreter is stuck at this line
data=fou
On Jan 8, 2007, at 12:22 PM, PAllen wrote:
> I am trying to get rid of a few of my old MS Access applications and
> move them to PostgreSQL and Python/wxpython. Does anyone have any
> suggestions on the easiest way to learn to program small database
> applications with python & wxpython? Does an
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Ziga Seilnacht" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
|>
|> > I think that you should. Where does it say that tuple's __str__ is
|> > the same as its __repr__?
|> >
|> > The obvious interpretation of the documentation is that a sequence
|> > type's __str__ would call __str
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Bjoern Schliessmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
|>
|> > The use of different precisions for the two cases is not, however,
|> > and it is that I was and am referring to.
|>
|> You mistake "precision" with "display".
Not at all. "Precision" has been used to indi
Private data in the C++ and Java OO worlds is so taught so much and
emphasized so often that people have started thinking of it as being
desirable for its own sake. But the primary motivation for it grew out
of the need to maintain compatible interfaces. These languages rely on
a great deal of shar
I am using fnmatch.fnmatch to find some files. The only problem I have
is that it only takes one pattern...so if I want to search using
multiple patterns I have to do something like
patterns = ['abc*.txt', 'foo*']
for p in patterns:
if fnmatch.fnmatch(some_file_name, p):
return T
Nick Maclaren wrote:
> Well, it's not felt necessary to distinguish those at top level, so
> why should it be when they are in a sequence?
Well, this probably wasn't the best example, see the links below
for a better one.
> But this whole thing is getting ridiculous. The current implementation
Thomas Liesner írta:
> Hi all,
>
> this may have been asked before, but as a newbie with xmlrpc i can't
> find any suitable info on that. Sorry.
> I am trying to write a simple xmlrpc-client in python and the server i
> am trying to receive data from requires http auth digest.
> The info on xmlrpcl
First possible solution:
def rloop(seqin, comb):
# xcross product recipe 302478 by David Klaffenbach
if seqin:
for item in seqin[0]:
newcomb = comb + [item]
for item in rloop(seqin[1:], newcomb):
yield item
else:
yield comb
data
I getting familiarised with python...can any one suggest me a good
editor available for python which runs on windows xpone more
request guys...can nyone tell me a good reference manual for python..
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 8 Jan 2007 16:03:53 +0100, Neil Cerutti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> len(dict.keys()).
>
Or
len(dict)
:)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Ziga Seilnacht" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
|>
|> There was a recent bug report identical to your complaints, which
|> was closed as invalid. The rationale for closing it was that things
|> like:
|>
|> print ("a, bc", "de f,", "gh), i")
|>
|> would be extremely
abcd wrote:
> I am using fnmatch.fnmatch to find some files. The only problem I have
> is that it only takes one pattern...so if I want to search using
> multiple patterns I have to do something like
>
> patterns = ['abc*.txt', 'foo*']
>
> for p in patterns:
> if fnmatch.fnmatch(some_fil
Robert Kern schrieb:
>>> Does anyone know if there's an actual free implementation of this?
>> For the dom module in it, xml.dom.minidom should work. Depending on
>> your processing needs, that might be sufficient.
>
> I don't think it quite fits what the OP is asking for. SVG defines some
> non-
Chris Mellon wrote:
> Private data in the C++ and Java OO worlds is so taught so much and
> emphasized so often that people have started thinking of it as being
> desirable for its own sake. But the primary motivation for it grew out
> of the need to maintain compatible interfaces.
This is general
At Monday 8/1/2007 15:10, abcd wrote:
I am using fnmatch.fnmatch to find some files. The only problem I have
is that it only takes one pattern...so if I want to search using
multiple patterns I have to do something like
patterns = ['abc*.txt', 'foo*']
for p in patterns:
if fnmatch.fnm
abcd wrote:
> I am using fnmatch.fnmatch to find some files. The only problem I have
> is that it only takes one pattern...so if I want to search using
> multiple patterns I have to do something like
>
> patterns = ['abc*.txt', 'foo*']
>
> for p in patterns:
> if fnmatch.fnmatch(some_file
Thank you for your guidelines and for changing my mind. I am trying to
do my best in generating good code and, in that attempt ... I only know
that nothing know.
Regards.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 2007-01-08, Jussi Salmela <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Neil Cerutti kirjoitti:
>> In C one uses the pointer to opaque struct idiom to hide data.
>> For example, the standard FILE pointer.
>
> To Neil Cerutti: If a programmer in C has got a pointer to some
> piece of memory, that piece is at the
lee wrote:
> I getting familiarised with python...can any one suggest me a good
> editor available for python which runs on windows xpone more
> request guys...can nyone tell me a good reference manual for python..
I think vim is a very good editor for python, and it's certainly
available for
"cesco" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have a dictionary of lists of tuples like in the following
> example: dict = {1: [(3, 4), (5, 8)],
> 2: [(5, 4), (21, 3), (19, 2)],
> 3: [(16, 1), (0, 2), (1, 2), (3, 4)]]
>
> In this case I have three lists inside the dict but this
Wow, I got a lot more feedback than I expected!
I can see both sides of the argument, both on technical merits, and
more philosophical merits. When I first learned C++ I felt
setters/getters were a waste of my time and extra code. When I moved
to C# I still felt that, and with their 'Property" s
[followups set to comp.lang.python]
[Danny]
> I am just getting into OOP using Python and
> because of the floating point of large integer (L)
> square roots all the decimal expansions are truncated.
> This has created a problem because I need these
> decimal expansions in my algorithm other wise
I remember something about it coming up in some of the discussions of
free lists and better behavior in this regard in 2.5, but I don't
remember the details.
Under Python 2.5, my original code posting no longer exhibits the bug - upon
calling del(a), python's size shrinks back to ~4 MB, which i
At Monday 8/1/2007 15:55, Wojciech =?ISO-8859-2?Q?Mu=B3a?= wrote:
pats = re.compile('|'.join(fnmatch.translate(p) for p in patterns))
Hmm, fnmatch.translate does not appear in the docs.
But it does on the module docstring, and in __all__, so certainly
it's supposed to be public.
I'll file a
Is it possible to execute a binary string stored within a python script
as executable code ?
The script is run under Windows, and the binary code (a full executable
file) is stored in a variable in the script.
I know I can use os.system() or os.popen() to run an external file, but
these functions
On 8 Jan 2007 10:59:23 -0800, "Thomas Nelson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>O'reilly has a book called Programming Python that covers much of the
>standard library and how to use it for complex tasks. It may be out of
>date by now, though.
Programming Python (by Mark Lutz) is now in it's 3rd edi
lee wrote:
> I getting familiarised with python...can any one suggest me a good
> editor available for python which runs on windows xp
Look here: http://wiki.python.org/moin/PythonEditors
> one more request guys...can nyone tell me a good reference manual
> for python..
Either the python ho
Nick Maclaren wrote:
> Not at all. "Precision" has been used to indicate the number of
> digits after the decimal point for at least 60 years,
Not only, remember: Computer memories can't think in powers of ten.
> probably 100; in 40 years of IT and using dozens of programming
> languages, I ha
Hynek Hanke wrote:
> Hello,
>
> please, how do I create a pythonic traceback from a python process that
> hangs and is not running in an interpreter that I executed manually
> or it is but doesn't react on CTRL-C etc? I'm trying to debug a server
> implemented in Python, so I need some analog of 'g
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Is it possible to execute a binary string stored within a python script
> as executable code ?
>
> The script is run under Windows, and the binary code (a full executable
> file) is stored in a variable in the script.
>
> I know I can use os.system() or os.popen() to ru
[EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit :
> Or, you might want to look at two packages:
>
> xlrd
>
> pyExcelerator
>
> The first can "read" .xls files, and the second can write them. I've had
> great results with both.
That's fine, but since the OP is mainly using Excel for reformating a
csv file and savin
[EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit :
> Sorry for my little knowledge on Python. Actually my knowledge is
> specific for automating geo-processing tasks within ESRI environment,
> but sometimes I need to automate some other tasks (like this one) which
> require more in-depth knowledge of this language.
I wo
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Is it possible to execute a binary string stored within a python script
> as executable code ?
>
> The script is run under Windows, and the binary code (a full executable
> file) is stored in a variable in the script.
>
> I know I can use os.system() or os.popen() to run
Klaas wrote:
> Hynek Hanke wrote:
>
>> Hello,
>>
>> please, how do I create a pythonic traceback from a python process that
>> hangs and is not running in an interpreter that I executed manually
>> or it is but doesn't react on CTRL-C etc? I'm trying to debug a server
>> implemented in Python, s
[EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit :
> Wow, I got a lot more feedback than I expected!
>
> I can see both sides of the argument, both on technical merits, and
> more philosophical merits. When I first learned C++ I felt
> setters/getters were a waste of my time and extra code. When I moved
> to C# I stil
Larry Bates wrote:
> What you are asking is a virus/trojan "like" program. There's no reason
> you shouldn't be able to write the code to TEMP directory and execute it.
>
> -Larry
No, it is not about a trojan, but I guess it's pointless to try to
convince you otherwise.
It's not about being ab
On 8 Jan 2007 12:45:45 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Larry Bates wrote:
>
> > What you are asking is a virus/trojan "like" program. There's no reason
> > you shouldn't be able to write the code to TEMP directory and execute it.
> >
> > -Larry
>
>
> No, it is not about a tro
vizcayno a écrit :
> Hello:
> Need your help in the "correct" definition of the next function. If
> necessary, I would like to know about a web site or documentation that
> tells me about best practices in defining functions, especially for
> those that consider the error exceptions management.
> I
Chris Mellon wrote:
> Writing to a temp file will be at least 3 times as easy and twice as
> reliable as any other method you come up with.
I'm not disputing that, but I want to keep a piece of code (a parser
for Oracle binary dumps, that I didn't wrote) out of foreign hands, as
much as possible.
Can someone explain me bitwise expression?
few examples for every expression will be nice
x << y Left shift
x >> y Right shift
x & y Bitwise AND
x | y Bitwise OR
x ^ y Bitwise XOR (exclusive OR)
~x Bitwise negation
thanks people
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I have a script that uses urllib2 to repeatedly lookup web pages (in a
spider sort of way). It appears to function normally, but if it runs
too long I start to get 404 responses. If I try to use the internet
through any other programs (Outlook, FireFox, etc.) it will also fail.
If I stop the scri
>>> (1.0/10.0) + (2.0/10.0) + (3.0/10.0)
0.60009
>>> 6.0/10.0
0.59998
Is using the decimal module the best way around this? (I'm expecting the first
sum to match the second). It seem anachronistic that decimal takes strings as
input, though.
Help much appreciated;
Rory
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I'm new to ipython, and i found it a very cool product.
Glad you like it, though in the future I recommend you post on the ipython
list. I very rarely scan c.l.py these days, unfortunately.
> $ ipython
> Python 2.5 (r25:51908, Sep 19 2006, 09:52:17) [MSC v.1310 32 bit
On Mon, 08 Jan 2007 22:32:12 +0100, Gigs_ wrote:
> Can someone explain me bitwise expression?
> few examples for every expression will be nice
>
http://wiki.python.org/moin/BitwiseOperators
--
Richard
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I am not that familiar with Crystal Reports, but having read some other
posts I know that the way to integrate the API with Python is through
the COM interface provide by win32all.
However, I have been unable to find any other information on how to get
started. I've used the COM interface before i
Rory Campbell-Lange wrote:
> Is using the decimal module the best way around this? (I'm
> expecting the first sum to match the second). It seem
> anachronistic that decimal takes strings as input, though.
What's your problem with the result, or what's your goal? Such
precision errors with floatin
Larry Bates wrote:
> What you are asking is a virus/trojan "like" program.
Why? For being a trojan horse it must fake something. For being a
virus it must replicate itself. Writing an executable doesn't imply
the will to replicate itself.
But you could technically achieve this with standard pyt
On Mon, 08 Jan 2007 13:11:14 +0200, Hendrik van Rooyen wrote:
> When you hear a programmer use the word "probability" -
> then its time to fire him, as in programming even the lowest
> probability is a certainty when you are doing millions of
> things a second.
That is total and utter nonsense
On Mon, 08 Jan 2007 13:55:40 +0100, Peter Otten wrote:
>> The precise results depend on the version of Python you're running, the
>> amount of memory you have, other processes running, and the details of
>> what's in the list you are trying to sort. But as my test shows, sort has
>> some overhead
On 9/01/2007 8:25 AM, Carroll, Barry wrote:
>> -Original Message-
>> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:python-
>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of John Machin
>> Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2007 11:09 PM
>> To: python-list@python.org
>> Subject: Re: File Closing Problem in 2.3 and 2.4, Not in 2
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:python-
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of John Machin
> Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2007 11:09 PM
> To: python-list@python.org
> Subject: Re: File Closing Problem in 2.3 and 2.4, Not in 2.5
>
> Martin v. Löwis wrote:
> > Carroll, Barry
Bjoern Schliessmann wrote:
> But you could technically achieve this with standard python too
> (just write python source and spawn a python process executing it).
The code I try to execute is Windows specific and it is binary, not
python. Furthermore, it is stored in a variable within the parent
Jussi Salmela wrote:
> To surlamolden: I don't know how you define private, but if one defines
> in C an external static variable i.e. a variable outside any functions,
> on the file level, the scope of the variable is that file only.
Sure, in C you can hide instances inside an object image by d
Good evening,
Mudcat a écrit :
> I am not that familiar with Crystal Reports, but having read some other
> posts I know that the way to integrate the API with Python is through
> the COM interface provide by win32all.
>
> However, I have been unable to find any other information on how to get
> s
Hi all,
I'm doing some convoluted stuff with running a python script from
inside a shared library that's running inside a Tcl/Tk interpreter.
It's all been going surprisingly well, up until the point where my
Python script attempts to import matplotlib, which includes a reference
to import md5:
I am playing around with this code but I am having trouble getting my x
to be bigger it only seems to redraw when it becomes smaller than the
original size up to full size (in ui_handle_repair). At other window
sizes it just seems to center it.. I tried playing around with resize
but never got th
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> The code I try to execute is Windows specific and it is binary,
> not python. Furthermore, it is stored in a variable within the
> parent python script, not stored on harddisk as a file.
Sure, I just wanted to show that your special application is not
specific for troja
John:
<<>
>
> Hi Barry,
>
> Please always reply on-list if the communication is non-private -- and
> meaningful :-)
Right. I noticed I hadn't "replied-to-all", so I resent the post to the
mailing list. Slip of the mouse, no disrespect intended to the list ;^)
>
> I don't know; here are som
At Monday 8/1/2007 18:01, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Chris Mellon wrote:
> Writing to a temp file will be at least 3 times as easy and twice as
> reliable as any other method you come up with.
I'm not disputing that, but I want to keep a piece of code (a parser
for Oracle binary dumps, that I did
At Monday 8/1/2007 19:20, Bjoern Schliessmann wrote:
Rory Campbell-Lange wrote:
> Is using the decimal module the best way around this? (I'm
> expecting the first sum to match the second). It seem
> anachronistic that decimal takes strings as input, though.
[...]
Also check the recent thread "b
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I have a script that uses urllib2 to repeatedly lookup web pages (in a
> spider sort of way). It appears to function normally, but if it runs
> too long I start to get 404 responses. If I try to use the internet
> through any other programs (Outlook, FireFox, etc.) it
On Jan 8, 3:30 pm, Rory Campbell-Lange <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >>> (1.0/10.0) + (2.0/10.0) + (3.0/10.0)
> 0.60009
> >>> 6.0/10.0
> 0.59998
>
> Is using the decimal module the best way around this? (I'm expecting the first
> sum to match the second).
Probably not. Dec
I am fetching different web pages (never the same one) from a web
server. Does that make a difference with them trying to block me?
Also, if it was only that site blocking me, then why does the internet
not work in other programs when this happens in the script. It is
almost like something is see
Gigs_ wrote:
> Can someone explain me bitwise expression?
> few examples for every expression will be nice
>
> x << y Left shift
> x >> y Right shift
> x & y Bitwise AND
> x | y Bitwise OR
> x ^ y Bitwise XOR (exclusive OR)
> ~x Bitwise negation
>
>
> thanks people
Here's some examples:
##W
At Monday 8/1/2007 21:30, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am fetching different web pages (never the same one) from a web
server. Does that make a difference with them trying to block me?
Also, if it was only that site blocking me, then why does the internet
not work in other programs when this happ
Consider: A)
>>> class C(object):
... pass
...
>>> def f(*args):
... print args
...
>>> C.f = f
>>> C.f
>>> c=C()
>>> c.f()
(<__main__.C object at 0x04A51170>,)
And B)
>>> del c
>>> C.f = types.MethodType(f, None, C)
>>> C.f
>>> c = C()
>>> c.f()
(<__main__.C object at 0
I'm using subprocess to launch, well, sub-processes, but now I'm
stumbling due to blocking I/O.
Is there a way for me to know that there's data on a pipe, and possibly
how much data is there so I can get it? Currently I'm doing this:
process = subprocess.Popen(
args,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I am fetching different web pages (never the same one) from a web
> server. Does that make a difference with them trying to block me?
> Also, if it was only that site blocking me, then why does the internet
> not work in other programs when this happens in the script.
At Monday 8/1/2007 22:09, Tom Plunket wrote:
I'm using subprocess to launch, well, sub-processes, but now I'm
stumbling due to blocking I/O.
Is there a way for me to know that there's data on a pipe, and possibly
how much data is there so I can get it? Currently I'm doing this:
Using a threa
At Monday 8/1/2007 21:47, Gerard Brunick wrote:
Consider: A)
>>> class C(object):
... pass
...
>>> def f(*args):
... print args
...
>>> C.f = f
>>> C.f
>>> c=C()
>>> c.f()
(<__main__.C object at 0x04A51170>,)
And B)
>>> del c
>>> C.f = types.MethodType(f, None, C)
>>> C.f
On 1/8/07, Gabriel Genellina <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> At Monday 8/1/2007 18:01, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> >Chris Mellon wrote:
> > > Writing to a temp file will be at least 3 times as easy and twice as
> > > reliable as any other method you come up with.
> >
> >I'm not disputing that, but I
On 1/8/07, Laszlo Nagy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I always thought that if you use multiple processes (e.g. os.fork) then
Python can take advantage of multiple processors. I think the GIL locks
one processor only. The problem is that one interpreted can be run on
one processor only. Am I not rig
Hi,
I've got a number of doctests which rely on a certain output format,
and since I wrote the tests I've changed the output format. Now,
almost all the tests fail.
What I'd like is if I could get doctest to take my tests, and
substitute the obtained output for the provided output. Then, I coul
Hi folks,
I have a data structure that looks like this:
d = {
'url1': {
'emails': ['a', 'b', 'c',...],
'matches': ['d', 'e', 'f',...]
},
'url2': {...
}
This dictionary will get _very_ big, so I want to write it somehow to a
file after it ha
I feel like a complete idiot but I can't figure out why re.sub won't
match multiline strings:
This works:
>>> re.search("^foo", "\nfoo", re.MULTILINE)
<_sre.SRE_Match object at 0x6c448>
This doesn't. No replacement:
>>> re.sub("^foo", "bar", "\nfoo", re.MULTILINE)
'\nfoo'
Why?
Thanks,
nyenyec
I feel like a complete idiot but I can't figure out why re.sub won't
match multiline strings:
This works:
>>> re.search("^foo", "\nfoo", re.MULTILINE)
<_sre.SRE_Match object at 0x6c448>
This doesn't. No replacement:
>>> re.sub("^foo", "bar", "\nfoo", re.MULTILINE)
'\nfoo'
Why?
Thanks,
nyenyec
Mudcat wrote:
> I am not that familiar with Crystal Reports, but having read some other
> posts I know that the way to integrate the API with Python is through
> the COM interface provide by win32all.
> Any pointers in the right direction would be helpful.
Like Armury, I worked on Crystal stu
>>Question, though: how can I unblock asyncore.loop(), or at least
be >>able to interrupt it?
>Why do you want to do that?
I was then thinking along the lines of a Netmeeting/visual chat
program, rather than a daemon-type server, where one might want to
terminate more quickly.
Searching furth
Hello,
In what version of python were private variables added?
Thanks,
--b
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
belinda thom schrieb:
> Hello,
>
> In what version of python were private variables added?
>
> Thanks,
>
> --b
>
With this question you stepped into a bee hive. :-)
Read the 'Why less emphasis on private data?' thread.
But I can't tell you, when this so called 'private variables' were added.
i was just perusing a Wikipedia entry on the "off side rule" at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Off-side_rule .
It says that the colon in Python is purely for readability, and cites
our FAQ entry
http://www.python.org/doc/faq/general.html#why-are-colons-required-for-the-if-while-def-class-statements
I was just perusing a Wikipedia entry on the "off side rule" at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Off-side_rule .
It says that the colon in Python is purely for readability, and cites
our FAQ entry
http://www.python.org/doc/faq/general.html#why-are-colons-required-fo...
.
However, near the top of the A
belinda thom wrote:
> Hello,
>
> In what version of python were private variables added?
>
> Thanks,
>
> --b
Short answer - 1.5 (or - so long ago that it doesn't matter anymore)
Long answer - There are no true private variables in Python. Just
private variables names by convention.
See Python do
vizcayno schrieb:
> Diez B. Roggisch ha escrito:
>
>> vizcayno schrieb:
>>> Hello:
>>> Need your help in the "correct" definition of the next function. If
>>> necessary, I would like to know about a web site or documentation that
>>> tells me about best practices in defining functions, especially
Hi, I got confused when I learned the function datetime.today().
So far I learned, unless an instance is created, it is not possible to
call the class method. For example:
class Foo:
def foo(self):
pass
Foo.foo() # error: unbound method foo().
What makes me confused is that datetime clas
Thomas Ploch wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> I have a data structure that looks like this:
>
> d = {
> 'url1': {
> 'emails': ['a', 'b', 'c',...],
> 'matches': ['d', 'e', 'f',...]
> },
> 'url2': {...
> }
>
> This dictionary will get _very_ big, so I want to writ
Paddy wrote:
> I was just perusing a Wikipedia entry on the "off side rule" at
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Off-side_rule .
> It says that the colon in Python is purely for readability, and cites
> our FAQ entry
> http://www.python.org/doc/faq/general.html#why-are-colons-required-fo...
> .
> Ho
"Paddy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>I was just perusing a Wikipedia entry on the "off side rule" at
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Off-side_rule .
> It says that the colon in Python is purely for readability, and cites
> our FAQ entry
> http://www.python.org/doc/fa
Ravi Teja schrieb:
> Thomas Ploch wrote:
>> Hi folks,
>>
>> I have a data structure that looks like this:
>>
>> d = {
>> 'url1': {
>> 'emails': ['a', 'b', 'c',...],
>> 'matches': ['d', 'e', 'f',...]
>> },
>> 'url2': {...
>> }
>>
>> This dictionary will get _
Better asyncore.loop use.
Also fixes a late bug in my first post of code: PILFile.seek(0)
needed since PIL.save does not reset the pointer.
class ImageServer(RequestHandler):
def __init__(self, conn, addr, server):
asynchat.async_chat.__init__(self,conn)
self.client_addres
Thomas Ploch wrote:
> Ravi Teja schrieb:
> > Thomas Ploch wrote:
> >> Hi folks,
> >>
> >> I have a data structure that looks like this:
> >>
> >> d = {
> >>'url1': {
> >>'emails': ['a', 'b', 'c',...],
> >>'matches': ['d', 'e', 'f',...]
> >>},
> >>'url2': {...
>
A nice guide to descriptors
http://users.rcn.com/python/download/Descriptor.htm
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
nyenyec wrote:
> I feel like a complete idiot but I can't figure out why re.sub won't
> match multiline strings:
>
> This works:
> >>> re.search("^foo", "\nfoo", re.MULTILINE)
> <_sre.SRE_Match object at 0x6c448>
>
> This doesn't. No replacement:
> >>> re.sub("^foo", "bar", "\nfoo", re.MULTILINE)
Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
>
> If you don't handle the exceptions, exactly what you seem to want will
> happen - you will see the interpreter stop, and why.
>
> All you did was to take the unpythonic (and un-javaic and un-C#ic) road
> to transform an exception to a returncode. But that has nothing to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Paddy wrote:
> > I was just perusing a Wikipedia entry on the "off side rule" at
> > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Off-side_rule .
> > It says that the colon in Python is purely for readability, and cites
> > our FAQ entry
> > http://www.python.org/doc/faq/general.html#w
[EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb:
> Hi, I got confused when I learned the function datetime.today().
>
> So far I learned, unless an instance is created, it is not possible to
> call the class method. For example:
>
> class Foo:
> def foo(self):
> pass
>
> Foo.foo() # error: unbound method foo()
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