Re: instancemethod

2007-01-22 Thread Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch
In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Gert Cuykens wrote: >> > >gert.excecute('select * from person') >> > >for x in range(0,gert.rowcount): >> > >print gert.fetchone() >> > >gert.close() >> > > > […] > > python always seems to amaze me how other languages make a mess of > things that suppo

Re: class explorer for automating IE

2007-01-22 Thread John
The problem is that this does not run javascript code it seems. I got started with pamie, which seems to work till now. Thanks, --j On Jan 22, 2:42 am, Peter Otten <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > John wrote: > > Is there an analogue of IE Mechanize in > > python?http://www.google.com/search?q=pyth

Re: Win GUI application: avoiding DOS console

2007-01-22 Thread siggi
"Jarek Zgoda" wrote: > Siggi napisa³(a): > >> how do I avoid the DOS console show-up when starting a WinXP GUI >> application >> with mouseclick on the respective Python file? >> >> I had this with my previous Python installation; it is very simple, >> something with a "-i" somewhere in the ope

Re: Code reformater?

2007-01-22 Thread Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch
In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Vincent Delporte wrote: > On Sun, 21 Jan 2007 14:15:46 +1100, Steven D'Aprano > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >>Still, it is better not to lose the indentation in the first place. > > Thanks for the tips. But it does happen when copy/pasting code from > either a web page or a

newbie question

2007-01-22 Thread kavitha thankaian
Hi, i wrote a simple script (which follows) to insert a table in the database.i could execute this query and get the result in python shell.but when i open "my sql enterprise manager" i couldnt find the table"animals".it would be so kind of you if someone could help me,,, import

Re: Python Windows Editors

2007-01-22 Thread stef
gonzlobo wrote: > I prefer PyScripter too, but would like to know if I can have > 'indentation guides' enabled like PythonWin allows. If you mean, typing a for-statement, then when placing the final ":"+Enter, the indentation auto increases, then the answer is yes, otherwise I don't kno what you me

Re: html + javascript automations = [mechanize + ?? ] or somethingelse?

2007-01-22 Thread Duncan Booth
"John" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I tried it, didnt work with the python25 distribution msi file that is > on python.org > But activestate python worked. Now I can open IE using COM. What I am > trying > to figure out is how to click an x,y coordinate on a page in IE > automatically > using COM.

Re: PyMeld for html templates?

2007-01-22 Thread Richie Hindle
[Sean] > The pymeld docs show examples only for the Python command line > interpreter and show using the print statement to output stuff. But > using mod_python.apache, I think you need to use req.write(something) > format. And of course, this fails when you feed it output from Meld. req.write(str

Re: mmap caching

2007-01-22 Thread Nick Craig-Wood
Martin v. Löwis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > In fact, memory that is read in because of mmap should *never* cause > a MemoryError. Python calls MapViewOfFile when mmap.mmap is invoked, > at which point the operating commits to providing that much address > space to the application, along with b

Re: mmap caching

2007-01-22 Thread Nick Craig-Wood
George Sakkis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > The file is written once and then opened as read-only, there's no > flushing. So if caching is completely up to the OS, I take it that my > options are either (1) modify my algorithms so that they work in > fixed-size batches instead of arbitrarily lon

Re: PQueue and Python 2.5

2007-01-22 Thread Berteun Damman
Gabriel Genellina wrote: > Python got in 2.3 a heapq module in its standard library; I think it is what > Ah! then I bet: > - There is some C code involved. > - It carelessly mixes PyMem_Malloc with PyObject_Free or similar as > described in > http://docs.python.org/whatsnew/ports.html > > So do y

Re: newbie question

2007-01-22 Thread Eugene Antimirov
kavitha thankaian wrote: > Hi, > > i wrote a simple script (which follows) to insert a table in the > database.i could execute this query and get the result in python > shell.but when i open "my sql enterprise manager" i couldnt find the > table"animals".it would be so kind of you if someone c

Linking in a Linux environment

2007-01-22 Thread Roux Claude
Bonjour, We have implemented Python as an "embedded script language" in our NLP application, XIP which a grammar rule engine written in C++ and available as a library. We have also developped a GUI in Java, which is linked to this XIP library, to simplify the development of NL grammars. JAVA

Re: Py 2.5 on Language Shootout

2007-01-22 Thread Carl Friedrich Bolz
Ramon Diaz-Uriarte wrote: >> In England the corresponding expression is "Counting Angels on a >> Pinhead" >> http://dannyayers.com/2001/misc/angels.htm >> > > Thanks, that is neat. I find the discussion on the sex of the angels, > well, sexier. But we are probably a few hundred years late to

Re: newbie question

2007-01-22 Thread Eugene Antimirov
Eugene Antimirov wrote: > You've probably missed cursor.commit() ;) Sorry, my bad: conn.commit() is correct one AFAIR. -- Sincerely, Eugene Antimirov PortaOne, Inc., SIP Support Engineer [EMAIL PROTECTED] * For further Billing and Technical information: => Please visit our website http://www.p

python grammar

2007-01-22 Thread tpochep
Hello. In 'augop' non-terminal : http://docs.python.org/ref/augassign.html the delimiter '//=' was skipped. Why? In 'Boolean operations': http://docs.python.org/ref/Booleans.html In 'expression' rule - what does 'if', 'else' mean? I guess 'if' and 'else' must be keywords, not non-terminals.

Getting to an SSH account over a HTTP proxy

2007-01-22 Thread BJörn Lindqvist
I want to use Python to connect to a SSH account over a HTTP proxy to automate some operations. I thought paramiko would be able to do that, but it can not (it seems). Is there some other Python module that can do what I want? -- mvh Björn -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: pylab, matplotlib ... roots function question

2007-01-22 Thread Schüle Daniel
Hi, [...] > No, that's actually wrong. What version of numpy are you using? With a recent > SVN checkout of numpy, I get the correct answer: > > In [3]: roots([1,0,0]) > Out[3]: array([ 0., 0.]) In [17]: import sys, numpy In [18]: sys.version Out[18]: '2.5 (r25:51908, Sep 23 2006, 01:23:14) \

Re: Frequency spectrum with fft of a real valued array...?

2007-01-22 Thread Holger
Hello Robert! Thank you for your tips. They were very useful. Bye Holger Am 11.01.2007, 19:08 Uhr, schrieb Robert Kern <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > Holger wrote: > >> What does it mean to me? How do I get to the wanted frequenca >> spectrum??? > > It's packed in the conventional FFT format. Here i

Re: Getting to an SSH account over a HTTP proxy

2007-01-22 Thread Diez B. Roggisch
BJörn Lindqvist wrote: > I want to use Python to connect to a SSH account over a HTTP proxy to > automate some operations. I thought paramiko would be able to do that, > but it can not (it seems). > > Is there some other Python module that can do what I want? Is there anything that can do what y

Program eating memory, but only on one machine?

2007-01-22 Thread Per B. Sederberg
Hi Everybody: I'm having a difficult time figuring out a a memory use problem. I have a python program that makes use of numpy and also calls a small C module I wrote because part of the simulation needed to loop and I got a massive speedup by putting that loop in C. I'm basically manipulating a

Re: Getting to an SSH account over a HTTP proxy

2007-01-22 Thread Yu-Xi Lim
Diez B. Roggisch wrote: > BJörn Lindqvist wrote: > >> I want to use Python to connect to a SSH account over a HTTP proxy to >> automate some operations. I thought paramiko would be able to do that, >> but it can not (it seems). >> >> Is there some other Python module that can do what I want? > >

GetBoundingMetrics

2007-01-22 Thread BartlebyScrivener
Hi, I have been moving from Windows XP to Debian Etch. Most of my Python scripts work fine with minor modifications. However, I have a script that launches a browser and goes to various sites using the Python module webbrowser.open ("url-goes-here") On Debian Etch, Firefox (or IceWeasel, I guess)

module check

2007-01-22 Thread Victor Polukcht
Can anybody suggest a correct way of checking in python module exists and correctly installed from python program. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Is it possible to fasten the import of cgi?

2007-01-22 Thread Jorgen Grahn
On Thu, 18 Jan 2007 14:15:44 -0300, Gabriel Genellina <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: ... > I'll try to explain better: the cgi *protocol* (I'm not talking about the > cgi *module*) requires a *new* python process to be created on *each* > request. Try to measure the time it takes to launch Python, th

Re: module check

2007-01-22 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I'm at work so I can't test this, but I do beleive the inspect module can help you out. If it can't you can always try import the module in a try-catch statement, catching ImportError, however ImportError may be raised if the module you imported has trouble loading another module, but it shouln't b

Re: module check

2007-01-22 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I'm at work so I can't test this, but I do beleive the inspect module can help you out. If it can't you can always try import the module in a try-catch statement, catching ImportError, however ImportError may be raised if the module you imported has trouble loading another module, but it shouln't b

Re: OpenOffice 2.0 UNO update Links; need help

2007-01-22 Thread m.banaouas
Sells, Fred a écrit : > I've got a ~100 page document I assemble from ~30 OOo .odt files with some > search and replace functions. I then produce a PDF. So far so good. > > Now I need to get a barcode from our internal website and insert that. The > barcode will vary based on some parameters.

Re: Program eating memory, but only on one machine?

2007-01-22 Thread Wolfgang Draxinger
Per B. Sederberg wrote: > Python 2.4.4c1 (#2, Oct 11 2006, 20:00:03) > [GCC 4.1.2 20060928 (prerelease) (Ubuntu 4.1.1-13ubuntu5)] on > [linux2 Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for > more information. Doesn't eat up. > Python 2.4.3 (#1, Apr 7 2006, 10:54:33) > [GCC 4.0.1 (Apple C

Re: GetBoundingMetrics

2007-01-22 Thread BartlebyScrivener
BartlebyScrivener wrote: > I don't get it if I just launch > firefox from the commandline. Only when I use the Python module. I spoke too soon. I do get it from the command line if firefox is not already running. Same is true with the Python script. Must be a Gnome or Debian thing. Sorry for th

Is there a better way to implement this:

2007-01-22 Thread Michael Yanowitz
Hello: I wrote the code below (much irrelevant code removed). This doesn't quite work. What I wanted it to do was a) Execute function ftimed, which takes a function and a timeout in seconds. b) This will also execute function abort() as a thread. This function just runs for the specif

Re: OpenOffice 2.0 UNO update Links; need help

2007-01-22 Thread Thomas Guettler
Sells, Fred wrote: > I've got a ~100 page document I assemble from ~30 OOo .odt files with some > search and replace functions. I then produce a PDF. So far so good. > > Now I need to get a barcode from our internal website and insert that. The > barcode will vary based on some parameters. Our

Re: Program eating memory, but only on one machine?

2007-01-22 Thread Per B.Sederberg
Wolfgang Draxinger darkstargames.de> writes: > > > So, does anyone have any suggestions for how I can debug this > > problem? > > Have a look at the version numbers of the GCC used. Probably > something in your C code fails if it interacts with GCC 3.x.x. > It's hardly Python eating memory, thi

Re: closing a "forever" Server Socket

2007-01-22 Thread alessandro
thanks infact the server_forever() method is only a serve() method inside an infinite loop. many thanks again, Alessandro Matimus ha scritto: > > I want to ask if someone knows a better way for closing a "forever > > server" or if there is a lack in my design. > > Generally you don't create a

Re: Is there a better way to implement this:

2007-01-22 Thread Benjamin Niemann
Michael Yanowitz wrote: > Hello: > >I wrote the code below (much irrelevant code removed). > This doesn't quite work. What I wanted it to do was > a) Execute function ftimed, which takes a function and a timeout > in seconds. > b) This will also execute function abort() as a thread. >

RE: Is there a better way to implement this:

2007-01-22 Thread Michael Yanowitz
Thanks. I suppose I could have used time.sleep(seconds) here. I did it in 0.01 because in an earlier verion, I did something else between the sleeps. I guess I am looking for something portable (both Windows and Linux) where I can abort a function after a certain time limit expires. -Or

Re: closing a "forever" Server Socket

2007-01-22 Thread Laszlo Nagy
alessandro írta: > thanks > > infact the server_forever() method is only a serve() method inside an > infinite loop. > > many thanks again, > Here is a snipped that show a "software terminateable threading TCP socker server". The "server" object is a SocketServer instance, server_stopped is a

Re: closing a "forever" Server Socket

2007-01-22 Thread alessandro
Oh my God! it's really so complicated? 3 modules (threading, SocketServer, select) only for design a way to shutdown a TCP server ...but they told me that python was easy... :) I'm working on a simulator and I have a monitor server that collects information. I can shutdown it using Ctrl-C fro

Re: Program eating memory, but only on one machine?

2007-01-22 Thread Wolfgang Grafen
I had a similar problem with an extension module on Solaris years ago. My problem at that time: I requested memory and released it and requested more memory in the next step and so on. The reason that the memory was eaten up: An answer out of this group was that the operating system doesn't releas

SQLObject 0.7.3b1

2007-01-22 Thread Oleg Broytmann
Hello! I'm pleased to announce the 0.7.3b1 release of SQLObject. What is SQLObject = SQLObject is an object-relational mapper. Your database tables are described as classes, and rows are instances of those classes. SQLObject is meant to be easy to use and quick to get started w

SQLObject 0.8.0b2

2007-01-22 Thread Oleg Broytmann
Hello! I'm pleased to announce the 0.8.0b2 release of SQLObject. What is SQLObject = SQLObject is an object-relational mapper. Your database tables are described as classes, and rows are instances of those classes. SQLObject is meant to be easy to use and quick to get started

Re: Is there a better way to implement this:

2007-01-22 Thread Paul Boddie
Michael Yanowitz wrote: > >I guess I am looking for something portable (both > Windows and Linux) where I can abort a function after > a certain time limit expires. Doing a search for "timeout function Python" on Google reveals a number of approaches. Using signals: * http://nick.vargish.o

Re: Is any python like linux shell?

2007-01-22 Thread Donn Cave
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, James Stroud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: ... > Paddy wrote:' > > Frank, > > IPython is great, but it is not a replacement for a shell like bash. If > > you have a Linux system then you still need to know the rudiments of > > bash > > Or better yet, csh. ;) Careful

Re: closing a "forever" Server Socket

2007-01-22 Thread Laszlo Nagy
alessandro írta: > Oh my God! it's really so complicated? > > 3 modules (threading, SocketServer, select) only for design a way to > shutdown a TCP server > ...but they told me that python was easy... :) > I believe that SockerServer was created for testing purposes, although there are some

(newbie) new version install (winXP) ?

2007-01-22 Thread Stef Mientki
I've been started with Python on winXP, by installing the "Enthought" edition (about half a year old). This works like a charm. As a regular windows user, I'm not used to install partial packages. Now I find interesting application, that require higher versions of certain packages. Can I install o

Best way to document Python code...

2007-01-22 Thread Scott Huey
I am working on a Python module and I would like to prepare some API documentaiton. I managed to find epydoc after some searching online. Is there a standard way to document the API for Python modules? Is epydoc the best way to go if there is no standard? Are there other ways to document a Python

Re: (newbie) new version install (winXP) ?

2007-01-22 Thread Gabriel Genellina
At Monday 22/1/2007 15:58, you wrote: Can I install only the higher version of a certain package ? Is that done by simply copying them ? You should read the install instructions given in the package, but usually it's as easy as: - extract the .zip into a temporary directory - open a command

Re: closing a "forever" Server Socket

2007-01-22 Thread Gabriel Genellina
At Monday 22/1/2007 14:49, alessandro wrote: Oh my God! it's really so complicated? 3 modules (threading, SocketServer, select) only for design a way to shutdown a TCP server ...but they told me that python was easy... :) You already have the answer: replace serve_forever with your own lo

Re: instancemethod

2007-01-22 Thread Bruno Desthuilliers
Gert Cuykens a écrit : > import MySQLdb > > class Db: (snip) >def excecute(self,cmd): >self._cursor.execute(cmd) >self._db.commit() > What about autocommit and automagic delegation ? import MySQLdb class Db(object): def __init__(self,server, user, password, database):

Re: Python Windows Editors

2007-01-22 Thread Jarek Zgoda
W. Watson napisał(a): > I downloaded python-2.5.msi and installed it. I believe its editor is > IDE. I understand there's a Win editor called pythonwin. I believe it's > in the download pywin32-210.win32-py2.5.exe, but I'm not sure if this > exe file has just the editor or all of Python. Comments?

Re: Program eating memory, but only on one machine? (Solved, sort of)

2007-01-22 Thread Per B.Sederberg
Per B.Sederberg princeton.edu> writes: > I'll see if I can make a really small example program that eats up memory on > our cluster. That way we'll have something easy to work with. Now this is weird. I figured out the bug and it turned out that every time you call numpy.setmember1d in the lat

Re: Python Windows Editors

2007-01-22 Thread Stef Mientki
Any text editor is only as good as the > programmer who uses it. ;) > Yes but an IDE is different ;-) cheers, Stef Mientki -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: SQLObject 0.8.0b2

2007-01-22 Thread Robert Hicks
Where is Oracle support? -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Are there sprintf in Python???

2007-01-22 Thread questions?
Are there any sprintf in Python? I know you can print to files(or redefine sys.stout) and later open the file content. Are there similar function to sprintf in C? Thanks -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Are there sprintf in Python???

2007-01-22 Thread rzed
"questions?" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: > Are there any sprintf in Python? > I know you can print to files(or redefine sys.stout) and later > open the file content. > > Are there similar function to sprintf in C? Something like this? x = 9 vbl = "One digit: %d, four d

Re: mmap caching

2007-01-22 Thread George Sakkis
Dennis Lee Bieber wrote: > On 21 Jan 2007 13:32:19 -0800, "George Sakkis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > declaimed the following in comp.lang.python: > > > > > The file is written once and then opened as read-only, there's no > > flushing. So if caching is completely up to the OS, I take it that my > >

Re: Does eval has the same features as Perl's?

2007-01-22 Thread J. Clifford Dyer
The python editor won't "get exit." It will raise an exception. With or without an eval, you can catch the exception. try: x = 1/0 except ZeroDivisionError: x = "infinity" Jm lists wrote: > Hello members, > > I want to know does the "eval" in python have the same features as in > Perl

Re: Program eating memory, but only on one machine? (Solved, sort of)

2007-01-22 Thread Robert Kern
Per B.Sederberg wrote: > Per B.Sederberg princeton.edu> writes: > >> I'll see if I can make a really small example program that eats up memory on >> our cluster. That way we'll have something easy to work with. > > Now this is weird. I figured out the bug and it turned out that every time > y

Re: mmap caching

2007-01-22 Thread Laszlo Nagy
> In fact, memory that is read in because of mmap should *never* cause > a MemoryError. This is certainly not true. You can run out of virtual address space by reading data from a memory mapped file. > Python calls MapViewOfFile when mmap.mmap is invoked, > at which point the operating commits t

Re: mmap caching

2007-01-22 Thread Laszlo Nagy
> It's around 400MB. As I said, I cannot reproduce the MemoryError > locally since I have 1GB physical space but IIRC the user who reported > it had less. Actually I am less concerned about whether a MemoryError > is raised or not in this case and more about the fact that even if > there's no exce

Re: SQLObject 0.8.0b2

2007-01-22 Thread Dejan Rodiger
Robert Hicks said the following on 22.1.2007 21:02: > Where is Oracle support? > What about DB2 UDB and DB2/400 >:o -- Dejan Rodiger - PGP ID 0xAC8722DC Delete wirus from e-mail address -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Best way to document Python code...

2007-01-22 Thread Adonis Vargas
Scott Huey wrote: > I am working on a Python module and I would like to prepare some API > documentaiton. I managed to find epydoc after some searching online. > > Is there a standard way to document the API for Python modules? Is > epydoc the best way to go if there is no standard? Are there othe

AES and Credit card number encryption

2007-01-22 Thread Tobiah
I browsed this subject and thought I might use the 'AES' cypher scheme to do this. Would this be a good choice? I came across a "Python Cryptography Toolkit" http://www.amk.ca/python/code/crypto which has a nice AES implementation, but in the example, a simple string is passed as the key: obj=

Re: Best way to document Python code...

2007-01-22 Thread Boris Ozegovic
Adonis Vargas wrote: > Then Python will generate a quick help interface for your module. I Hi Does Python has API just like in Java, for example http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/docs/api/allclasses-noframe.html ctrl-f and than click on class you are searching for, and finally you get clean list o

Re: Is any python like linux shell?

2007-01-22 Thread Jorgen Grahn
On Sun, 21 Jan 2007 22:10:17 -0800, James Stroud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Frank Potter wrote: >> I learned some python in windows. >> And now I've turned to linux. >> I read a book and it teaches how to write shell script with bash, >> but I don't feel like the grammar of bash. ... > My strong

Re: instancemethod

2007-01-22 Thread Gert Cuykens
Reading all of the above this is the most simple i can come too. import MySQLdb class Db: def __init__(self,server,user,password,database): self._db=MySQLdb.connect(server , user , password , database) self._db.autocommit(True) self.cursor=self._db.cursor() def e

Re: Getting to an SSH account over a HTTP proxy

2007-01-22 Thread Jorgen Grahn
On Mon, 22 Jan 2007 14:40:49 +0100, Diez B. Roggisch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > BJörn Lindqvist wrote: > >> I want to use Python to connect to a SSH account over a HTTP proxy to >> automate some operations. I thought paramiko would be able to do that, >> but it can not (it seems). >> >> Is there

Re: Best way to document Python code...

2007-01-22 Thread bearophileHUGS
Boris Ozegovic: > Does Python has API just like in Java, for example > http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/docs/api/allclasses-noframe.html ctrl-f and > than click on class you are searching for, and finally you get clean list > of all fields and methods. Where can I find similar in Python, for > examp

Re: Best way to document Python code...

2007-01-22 Thread Gabriel Genellina
At Monday 22/1/2007 17:48, Boris Ozegovic wrote: Does Python has API just like in Java, for example http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/docs/api/allclasses-noframe.html ctrl-f and than click on class you are searching for, and finally you get clean list of all fields and methods. Where can I find si

Building extensions with vc8

2007-01-22 Thread Howard Lightstone
Has there been any progress on being able to build extensions with MSVC8 (aka Visual Studio 2005)? Since the "free" compiler from Microsoft is now VC8, I *assume* this will be the new method. 2.5 itself rebuilds using PCbuild8, as do tkinter (but using Tcl 8.4.14 and Tk 8.4.14) however no

Re: mmap caching

2007-01-22 Thread Martin v. Löwis
Laszlo Nagy schrieb: > >> In fact, memory that is read in because of mmap should *never* cause >> a MemoryError. > This is certainly not true. You can run out of virtual address space by > reading data from a memory mapped file. That is true, but not what I said. I said you cannot run out of mem

Re: AES and Credit card number encryption

2007-01-22 Thread Paul Rubin
Tobiah <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > I browsed this subject and thought I might use the 'AES' cypher > scheme to do this. Would this be a good choice? There's more to it than that, but yes, AES is a good underlying algorithm. > So my real question is, how do I go about generating the best key. >

Re: mmap caching

2007-01-22 Thread Martin v. Löwis
Nick Craig-Wood schrieb: > So presumably it is python generating a MemoryError. It is asking for > a new bit of memory and it is failing so it throws a MemoryError. > > Could memory allocation under windows be affected by a large chunk of > mmap()ed file which is physically swapped in at the time

How to convert a string into an integer

2007-01-22 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Can you please tell me why the following code does not work in python? My guess is I need to convert 'count' from a string to an integer. How can I do that? And my understanding is python is a dynamic type language, should python convert it for me automatically? count = sys.argv[2] for i in range(

Re: How to convert a string into an integer

2007-01-22 Thread Tobiah
> count = sys.argv[2] > for i in range(count): > #do some stuff for i in range(int(count)): -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Building extensions with vc8

2007-01-22 Thread Martin v. Löwis
Howard Lightstone schrieb: > Has there been any progress on being able to build extensions with MSVC8 > (aka Visual Studio 2005)? No. No progress will happen throughout the release of Python 2.5. To get the facts straight: it *might* be possible to build an extension with msvc8 (thus linking with

Re: Python Windows Editors

2007-01-22 Thread Jarek Zgoda
Stef Mientki napisał(a): > Any text editor is only as good as the >> programmer who uses it. ;) >> > Yes but an IDE is different ;-) Would it make me better Fortran programmer? ;) -- Jarek Zgoda http://jpa.berlios.de/ -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: mmap caching

2007-01-22 Thread Ross Ridge
George Sakkis wrote: > It's around 400MB. On Windows you may not be able to map a file of this size into memory because of virtual address space fragmentation. A Win32 process has only 2G of virtual address space, and DLLs tend to get scattered through out that address space. > As I said, I cann

Re: How to convert a string into an integer

2007-01-22 Thread Ravi Teja
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Can you please tell me why the following code does not work in python? > My guess is I need to convert 'count' from a string to an integer. How > can I do that? > And my understanding is python is a dynamic type language, should > python convert it for me automatically?

How to use time.clock() function in python

2007-01-22 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hi, I am following this python example trying to time how long does an operation takes, like this: My question is why the content of the file (dataFile) is just '0.0'? I have tried "print >>dataFile, timeTaken" or "print >>dataFile,str( timeTaken)", but gives me 0.0. Please tell me what am I miss

beep or sound playing under linux

2007-01-22 Thread hg
Hi, Is there a way to do that ? Regards, hg -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: How to use time.clock() function in python

2007-01-22 Thread Gabriel Genellina
At Monday 22/1/2007 19:05, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I am following this python example trying to time how long does an operation takes, like this: My question is why the content of the file (dataFile) is just '0.0'? I have tried "print >>dataFile, timeTaken" or "print >>dataFile,str( timeTaken)

Re: How to use time.clock() function in python

2007-01-22 Thread Steven D'Aprano
On Mon, 22 Jan 2007 14:05:16 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Hi, > > I am following this python example trying to time how long does an > operation takes, like this: > > My question is why the content of the file (dataFile) is just '0.0'? > I have tried "print >>dataFile, timeTaken" or "print

Re: Best way to document Python code...

2007-01-22 Thread Stuart D. Gathman
On Mon, 22 Jan 2007 20:40:57 +, Adonis Vargas wrote: > But a quick look at pydoc (not to be confused with epydoc) > which is part of the standard library allows you to generate > documentation in HTML format, and/or serve it over web with its built-in > HTTP server. > > pydoc: http://docs.

Re: Python Windows Editors

2007-01-22 Thread Stef Mientki
Jarek Zgoda wrote: > Stef Mientki napisał(a): > >> Any text editor is only as good as the >>> programmer who uses it. ;) >>> >> Yes but an IDE is different ;-) > > Would it make me better Fortran programmer? ;) > I can't judge for you, ... ... maybe you are already at the top ;-) I can only spe

Re: beep or sound playing under linux

2007-01-22 Thread hg
hg wrote: > Hi, > > Is there a way to do that ? > > Regards, > > hg PS: I'm actually under wpPython -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: module check

2007-01-22 Thread Larry Bates
Victor Polukcht wrote: > Can anybody suggest a correct way of checking in python module exists > and correctly installed from python program. > Not sure I understand the question, but I'll try: try: import yourmodule except: print "Can't import yourmodule" -Larry -- http://mail.python.org

arrow keys don't work

2007-01-22 Thread tac-tics
I've noticed that in Python 2.5, the interactive prompt does not support intelligent use of arrow keys like 2.4 did (up/down for previous/next statement, left/right for moving the cursor). What exactly is the reason for this and is there an easier fix than downgradinig to 2.4? Thanks. -- http://m

Re: beep or sound playing under linux

2007-01-22 Thread Chuck Rhode
hg wrote this on Mon, Jan 22, 2007 at 04:12:50PM +0100. My reply is below. > Is there a way to do that? (Make noise.) In Gnome there is: gtk.gdk.beep() -- .. Chuck Rhode, Sheboygan, WI, USA .. Weather: http://LacusVeris.com/WX .. 28° — Wind WSW 10 mph — Sky overcast. -- http://mail.python

Re: arrow keys don't work

2007-01-22 Thread Robert Kern
tac-tics wrote: > I've noticed that in Python 2.5, the interactive prompt does not > support intelligent use of arrow keys like 2.4 did (up/down for > previous/next statement, left/right for moving the cursor). What > exactly is the reason for this and is there an easier fix than > downgradinig to

Re: beep or sound playing under linux

2007-01-22 Thread Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch
In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, hg wrote: > Is there a way to do that ? Maybe this helps: http://paste.pocoo.org/show/316/ Ciao, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

How to get self reference from within a module?

2007-01-22 Thread Lavoie Érick
Hi, i would like to now how to get a self reference from within a module. The goal is to be able to generate a list of all declared function within the module. Thanks, Erick -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: How to use time.clock() function in python

2007-01-22 Thread samuel . y . l . cheung
Thanks. I have a fuction called 'func1'. def func1: # logic of the function When my script just call 'func1()' it works. func1() But when put it under timerit.Timer, like this: t = timeit.Timer("func1()","") t.repeat(1, 10) # want to time how long it takes to run 'func1' 10 times, I get a

Re: SQLObject 0.8.0b2

2007-01-22 Thread James Stroud
Oleg Broytmann wrote: > Hello! > > I'm pleased to announce the 0.8.0b2 release of SQLObject. > > > What is SQLObject > = > > SQLObject is an object-relational mapper. Your database tables are described > as classes, and rows are instances of those classes. SQLObject is meant t

Re: How to get self reference from within a module?

2007-01-22 Thread Gary Herron
Lavoie Érick wrote: > Hi, > > i would like to now how to get a self reference from within a > module. The goal is to be able to generate a list of all declared > function within the module. > > Thanks, > > Erick I think this is what you're asking for: If you import a module, say import sys

Re: arrow keys don't work

2007-01-22 Thread tac-tics
Robert Kern wrote: > tac-tics wrote: > > I've noticed that in Python 2.5, the interactive prompt does not > > support intelligent use of arrow keys like 2.4 did (up/down for > > previous/next statement, left/right for moving the cursor). What > > exactly is the reason for this and is there an easi

Re: arrow keys don't work

2007-01-22 Thread Steven D'Aprano
On Mon, 22 Jan 2007 14:53:01 -0800, tac-tics wrote: > I've noticed that in Python 2.5, the interactive prompt does not > support intelligent use of arrow keys like 2.4 did (up/down for > previous/next statement, left/right for moving the cursor). It works perfectly for me. > What > exactly is t

Re: How to use time.clock() function in python

2007-01-22 Thread Steven D'Aprano
On Mon, 22 Jan 2007 15:32:58 -0800, samuel.y.l.cheung wrote: > File "/usr/lib/python2.4/timeit.py", line 188, in repeat > t = self.timeit(number) > File "/usr/lib/python2.4/timeit.py", line 161, in timeit > timing = self.inner(it, self.timer) > File "", line 6, in inner > NameError:

Re: arrow keys don't work

2007-01-22 Thread tac-tics
> Have you changed your terminal (either the program itself or its config) > so that it is no longer sending the correct codes? I doubt this is the case. Everything works for the bash shell and common lisp. It's just python acting up. > When you hit the arrow key, what happens? Do you just get no

Re: arrow keys don't work

2007-01-22 Thread tac-tics
It looks like I got readline working. Thanks for the help! -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

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