Re: gmpy floating point exception

2007-03-29 Thread Alex Martelli
Martin Manns <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi, > > I am experiencing some trouble with gmpy v1.01. > Multiplying an mpq with inf results in a floating point exception that > exits python. Has this already been fixed in newer gmpy versions? No, I can reproduce the problem (on a Mac with an Intel

Re: BeautifulSoup vs. Microsoft

2007-03-29 Thread Duncan Booth
John Nagle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Strictly speaking, it's Microsoft's fault. > > title="". So all that following stuff is from what > follows the next "-->" which terminates a comment. It is an attribute value, and unescaped angle brackets are valid in attributes. It looks to me lik

Re: Hpw make lists that are easy to sort.

2007-03-29 Thread Anton Vredegoor
Terry Reedy wrote: > If I understand correctly, you want to multiiply each of m numbers by each > of n numbers, giving m*n products. That is O(m*n) work. Inserting (and > extracting) each of these is a constant size m priority cue takes, I > believe, O(log(m)) work, for a total of m*n*log(m).

Re: with timeout(...):

2007-03-29 Thread Hendrik van Rooyen
"Nick Craig-Wood" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Well, yes there are different levels of potential reliability with > different implementation strategies for each! Gadzooks! Foiled again by the horses for courses argument. ; - ) - Hendrik -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: with timeout(...):

2007-03-29 Thread Diez B. Roggisch
> > I beleive the convention is when calling an OS function which might > block the global interpreter lock is dropped, thus allowing other > python bytecode to run. So what? That doesn't help you, as you are single-threaded here. The released lock won't prevent the called C-code from taking as

Re: BeautifulSoup vs. Microsoft

2007-03-29 Thread Justin Ezequiel
On Mar 29, 4:08 pm, Duncan Booth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > John Nagle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > title="

Re: which methods to use?

2007-03-29 Thread Florian Leitner
* Alex Martelli wrote, On 3/29/07 9:46 AM: > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> another query, in the docs, list(a) and a[:] does the same thing (a = >> [1,2,3] for example), but besides the speed of slicing is faster than >> list(), what advantage is there for using list(a) in this case ? > > Readabil

Re: PyPy 1.0: JIT compilers for free and more

2007-03-29 Thread Robin Becker
Christian Tismer wrote: ... >> something >> special, I am unable to dream of? Or is it purely academic project to >> create Python VM in Python? > > It will eventually give you a GIL-free VM, and it already gives you > a lot more than you have dreamt of. > > There is one feature missing that

Re: BeautifulSoup vs. Microsoft

2007-03-29 Thread Justin Ezequiel
On Mar 29, 6:11 pm, "Justin Ezequiel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > FWIW, seehttp://tinyurl.com/yjtzjz > hmm. not quite right. http://tinyurl.com/ynv4ct or http://www.crummy.com/software/BeautifulSoup/documentation.html#Customizing%20the%20Parser -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/py

YouTube showing repr() of a tuple

2007-03-29 Thread Leif K-Brooks
Thought this might amuse some of you: I'd heard that YouTube uses Python, but it's fun to see proof of that, even if it comes in the form of a minor bug. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Question about extending tuple

2007-03-29 Thread abcd
> > I hope you see now why it is consistent. > > Georg yea that clears it up. thanks. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: with timeout(...):

2007-03-29 Thread Nick Craig-Wood
Hendrik van Rooyen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > "Nick Craig-Wood" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > Well, yes there are different levels of potential reliability with > > different implementation strategies for each! > > Gadzooks! Foiled again by the horses for courses argument. > > ; - ) ;

Re: newbi question on python rpc server, how it works?

2007-03-29 Thread Jean-Paul Calderone
On Thu, 29 Mar 2007 11:25:38 +0530, krishnakant Mane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >hello all, >I have downloaded the entire twisted library. >I am also trying to read the documentation but I have a couple of >problems right now. >firstly, I did not find any thing in twisted documentation that >spec

Re: socket read timeout

2007-03-29 Thread Jean-Paul Calderone
On Thu, 29 Mar 2007 07:29:35 +0200, Hendrik van Rooyen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > >> >> hg> My issue with that is the effect on write: I only want a timeout on >> hg> read ... but anyway ... >> >> So set a long timeout when you want to write and short time

Weird behavior in search in a list

2007-03-29 Thread Su Y
hi all, I can't understand how this code work, its behavior is really weird for me... I want find the first number in extend[] which is larger than num, so I wrote: def find(num): count=0 for elem in extend: if elem-- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: BeautifulSoup vs. Microsoft

2007-03-29 Thread Duncan Booth
"Justin Ezequiel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Mar 29, 4:08 pm, Duncan Booth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> John Nagle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> > title="

Re: Weird behavior in search in a list

2007-03-29 Thread Su Y
On 3月29日, 下午7时51分, "Su Y" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > hi all, > I can't understand how this code work, its behavior is really weird > for me... > > I want find the first number in extend[] which is larger than num, soI wrote: > > def find(num): > count=0 > for elem in extend: > if

Re: PyPy 1.0: JIT compilers for free and more

2007-03-29 Thread Duncan Booth
Robin Becker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I am hugely encouraged by this > > C:\Python\devel\pypy-1.0.0>\python24\python \python\lib\test \pystone.py > Pystone(1.1) time for 5 passes = 1.49586 > This machine benchmarks at 33425.6 pystones/second > > C:\Python\devel\pypy-1.0.0>.\pypy-c.exe \p

Re: Weird behavior in search in a list

2007-03-29 Thread Amit Khemka
On 29 Mar 2007 04:51:00 -0700, Su Y <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > hi all, > I can't understand how this code work, its behavior is really weird > for me... > > I want find the first number in extend[] which is larger than num, so > I wrote: > def find(num): > count=0 > for elem in extend: >

Re: Weird behavior in search in a list

2007-03-29 Thread Amit Khemka
> On 29 Mar 2007 04:51:00 -0700, Su Y <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > I want find the first number in extend[] which is larger than num, so > On 3/29/07, Amit Khemka <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Btw a concise way could be: > def getfirstbigger(num): > for i,x in enumerate(extend): > i

Re: Python automatic testing: mocking an imported module?

2007-03-29 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Mar 27, 9:13 pm, "Chris Lasher" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Mar 27, 6:18 pm, "Silfheed" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > Heyas > > > So we have the following situation: we have a testee.py that we want > > to automatically test out and verifiy that it is worthy of being > > deployed. We wan

Re: Weird behavior in search in a list

2007-03-29 Thread Josh
"Su Y" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On 3ÔÂ29ÈÕ, ÏÂÎç7ʱ51·Ö, "Su Y" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > hi all, > I can't understand how this code work, its behavior is really weird > for me... > > I want find the first number in extend[] which is larger than num, soI > w

Re: Weird behavior in search in a list

2007-03-29 Thread Michael Bentley
On Mar 29, 2007, at 6:51 AM, Su Y wrote: > > I want find the first number in extend[] which is larger than num, so > I wrote: > def find(num): > count=0 > for elem in extend: > if elem count+=1 > return count > > I found that if extend[] is monotonous, like [1.1, 2.

Re: Weird behavior in search in a list

2007-03-29 Thread Amit Khemka
On 3/29/07, Michael Bentley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On Mar 29, 2007, at 6:51 AM, Su Y wrote: > > > > I want find the first number in extend[] which is larger than num, so > def find(num): > # check to make sure there *is* a value greater than num > if max(extend) > num: >

Re: Weird behavior in search in a list

2007-03-29 Thread Su Y
On 3月29日, 下午8时22分, Michael Bentley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Mar 29, 2007, at 6:51 AM, Su Y wrote: > > > > > > > I want find the first number in extend[] which is larger than num, so > > I wrote: > > def find(num): > > count=0 > > for elem in extend: > > if elem >

Re: PDB does not allow jumping to first statement?

2007-03-29 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Mar 28, 6:05 pm, "Chris Lasher" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I have submitted this as a bug via SourceForge: > func=detail&atid=105470&aid=1689458&group_id=5470> > or if munged > > > ThePythonfolks would like a test case and/or a p

Re: Long way around UnicodeDecodeError, or 'ascii' codec can't decode byte

2007-03-29 Thread Paul Boddie
On 29 Mar, 06:26, "Oleg Parashchenko" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hello, > > I'm working on an unicode-aware application. I like to use "print" to > debug programs, but in this case it was nightmare. The most popular > result of "print" was: > > UnicodeDecodeError: 'ascii' codec can't decode byte

Re: Finding User Profile path

2007-03-29 Thread kyosohma
On Mar 29, 2:50 am, Tim Golden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > Hi, > > > I am trying to query our domain to get a list of our users profile > > locations. I thought I might be able to use WMI, but I can't get it to > > work. > > Can you be a bit more specific: did WMI itse

Re: Modal value of an array

2007-03-29 Thread bearophileHUGS
Alex Martelli: > >>> foo = ["spam", "eggs", "spam", "spam", "spam", "beans", "eggs"] > >>> max(foo, key=foo.count) It's a very nice solution, the shortest too. But I think it's better to develop your own well tested and efficient stats module (and there is one already done that can be found around

Weird gcc behaviour with function pointer types

2007-03-29 Thread greg
In my quest to eliminate C compiler warnings from Pyrex output, I've discovered some utterly bizarre behaviour from gcc 3.3. The following code: void g(struct foo *x) { } void f(void) { void (*h)(struct foo *); h = g; } produces the following warning: blarg.c: In funct

Re: YouTube showing repr() of a tuple

2007-03-29 Thread Daniel Nogradi
> Thought this might amuse some of you: > > > > I'd heard that YouTube uses Python, but it's fun to see proof of that, > even if it comes in the form of a minor bug. But their web frontend is (probably) in php: http://youtube.com/result

Re: how can I clear a dictionary in python

2007-03-29 Thread Larry Bates
Aahz wrote: > In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, > Larry Bates <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: >>> I create a dictionary like this >>> myDict = {} >>> >>> and I add entry like this: >>> myDict['a'] = 1 >>> but how can I empty the whole dictionary? >> just point myDict to an emp

Re: Finding User Profile path

2007-03-29 Thread Tim Golden
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > One of my co-workers thought I could do > something like this: > > c = wmi.WMI() > for i in c.Win32_UserAccount(Name=user): > # Get user paths somehow. > > I messed around with that, but I think he was mistaken. It has lots of > good info, but not what I need. > >

Problem with class variables

2007-03-29 Thread Dag
I have a problem which is probaly very simple to solve, but I can't find a nice solution. I have the following code class Test: def __init__(self): self.a=[1,2,3,4] self.b=self.a def swap(self): self.a[0],self.a[3]=self.a[3],self.a[0] def prnt(self): pr

gettext files manager

2007-03-29 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Does anyone know if Python gettext module or something else in Python can "manage" po/mo files - list all strings from po/mo, show untranslated, fuzzy strings ? I need something like that for a "translations manager" :) -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: urllib timeout issues

2007-03-29 Thread supercooper
On Mar 27, 4:50 pm, "Gabriel Genellina" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > En Tue, 27 Mar 2007 17:41:44 -0300, supercooper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > escribió: > > > > > On Mar 27, 3:13 pm, "Gabriel Genellina" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > wrote: > >> En Tue, 27 Mar 2007 16:21:55 -0300, supercooper <[EMAIL PROTECTE

Re: Problem with class variables

2007-03-29 Thread Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch
In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Dag wrote: > I have a problem which is probaly very simple to solve, but I can't > find a nice solution. > I have the following code > > class Test: > def __init__(self): > self.a=[1,2,3,4] > self.b=self.a self.b = list(self.a) BTW this is a

Re: Finding User Profile path

2007-03-29 Thread kyosohma
On Mar 29, 8:23 am, Tim Golden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > One of my co-workers thought I could do > > something like this: > > > c = wmi.WMI() > > for i in c.Win32_UserAccount(Name=user): > > # Get user paths somehow. > > > I messed around with that, but I think h

Re: Problem with class variables

2007-03-29 Thread kyosohma
On Mar 29, 8:43 am, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Dag wrote: > > I have a problem which is probaly very simple to solve, but I can't > > find a nice solution. > > I have the following code > > > class Test: > > def __init__(self): > > self

Re: Finding User Profile path

2007-03-29 Thread Tim Golden
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > On Mar 29, 8:23 am, Tim Golden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: >>> One of my co-workers thought I could do >>> something like this: >>> c = wmi.WMI() >>> for i in c.Win32_UserAccount(Name=user): >>> # Get user paths somehow. >>> I messed around

Re: upgrading python (and other modules)

2007-03-29 Thread kyosohma
On Mar 29, 1:14 am, Astan Chee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Forget I asked this question. > I've solved it using wxPython 2.6.3.3 > Cheers > > Astan Chee wrote: > > Hi, > > I was once using python 2.4 in win2k with wxPython 2.4.2.4 (if im not > > mistaken) with it. > > Now i've upgraded to winXP an

Re: BeautifulSoup vs. Microsoft

2007-03-29 Thread Paul McGuire
On Mar 29, 1:50 am, John Nagle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Here's a construct with which BeautifulSoup has problems. It's > from "http://support.microsoft.com/contactussupport/?ws=support";. > > This is the original: > > http://www.microsoft.com/usability/enroll.mspx"; > id="L_75998" >

Re: Problem with class variables

2007-03-29 Thread Thomas Krüger
Dag schrieb: > I have a problem which is probaly very simple to solve, but I can't > find a nice solution. > I have the following code > > class Test: > def __init__(self): > self.a=[1,2,3,4] > self.b=self.a > def swap(self): > self.a[0],self.a[3]=self.a[3],self.a[

Re: YouTube showing repr() of a tuple

2007-03-29 Thread Leif K-Brooks
Leif K-Brooks wrote: > Thought this might amuse some of you: > > Better example: -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Finding User Profile path

2007-03-29 Thread kyosohma
On Mar 29, 9:05 am, Tim Golden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > On Mar 29, 8:23 am, Tim Golden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > >>> One of my co-workers thought I could do > >>> something like this: > >>> c = wmi.WMI() > >>> for i in c.Win32_UserAc

Re: Creating a new data structure while filtering its data origin.

2007-03-29 Thread FlipFish2007
On Mar 28, 4:44 pm, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi everyone. > > I'm trying to work with very simple data structures but I'm stuck in the very > first steps. If someone has the luxury of a few minutes and can give an > advice how to resolve this, I'll really appreciate it. > > 1- I have a list o

make RE more cleaver to avoid inappropriate : sre_constants.error: redefinition of group name

2007-03-29 Thread aspineux
I want to parse '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' or '<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>' and get the email address [EMAIL PROTECTED] the regex is r'<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>|[EMAIL PROTECTED]' now, I want to give it a name r'<(?P[EMAIL PROTECTED])>|(?P[EMAIL PROTECTED])' sre_constants.error: redefinition of group name 'emai

A nice way to use regex for complicate parsing

2007-03-29 Thread aspineux
My goal is to write a parser for these imaginary string from the SMTP protocol, regarding RFC 821 and 1869. I'm a little flexible with the BNF from these RFC :-) Any comment ? tests=[ 'MAIL FROM:<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>', 'MAIL FROM:[EMAIL PROTECTED]', 'MAIL FROM:<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> SI

Islam, the Religion of Ease

2007-03-29 Thread moslim
Excuse me!! Would you stop for a moment?! O...man...Haven't you thought-one day- about yourself ? Who has made it? Have you seen a design which hasn't a designer ?! Have you seen a wonderful,delicate work without a worker ?! It's you and the whole universe!.. Who has made them all ?!! You know who

Re: how can I clear a dictionary in python

2007-03-29 Thread Bruno Desthuilliers
Larry Bates a écrit : > Aahz wrote: >> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, >> Larry Bates <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I create a dictionary like this myDict = {} and I add entry like this: myDict['a'] = 1 but how can I empty the whole dictionar

Re: A nice way to use regex for complicate parsing

2007-03-29 Thread Shane Geiger
It would be worth learning pyparsing to do this. aspineux wrote: My goal is to write a parser for these imaginary string from the SMTP protocol, regarding RFC 821 and 1869. I'm a little flexible with the BNF from these RFC :-) Any comment ? tests=[ 'MAIL FROM:<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>', 'MA

Re: Why doesnt __getattr__ with decorator dont call __get_method in decorator

2007-03-29 Thread glomde
> To get python to run the __get__ method I think you have to call > __getattr__ explicitly: > a.__getattr__('test') > > If you do: > a.test > python follows a different routine: it checks for the existence of the > attribute, then check if there is a __getattr__ attribute. Now the > speculative b

Re: XML/encoding/prolog/python hell...

2007-03-29 Thread fscked
Here is what I currently have. Still missing prolog information and namespace info. Encoding is irritating me also. :) import os,sys import csv from elementtree.ElementTree import Element, SubElement, ElementTree, tostring def indent(elem, level=0): i = "\n" + level*" " if len(elem):

What are OOP's Jargons and Complexities

2007-03-29 Thread Xah Lee
What are OOP's Jargons and Complexities Xah Lee, 20050128 Classes, Methods, Objects In computer languages, often a function definition looks like this: subroutine f (x1, x2, ...) { variables ... do this or that } In advanced languages such as LISP family, it is not uncommon to define funct

inf class (was: gmpy floating point exception)

2007-03-29 Thread Martin Manns
On Thu, 29 Mar 2007 00:57:03 -0700 [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Alex Martelli) wrote: > Martin Manns <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > 2) Is there any inf type around with > > a + inf == inf > > inf > a (as long as a != inf) > > etc. > > that works with any other type? > > You mean something like: > > class

Re: make RE more cleaver to avoid inappropriate : sre_constants.error: redefinition of group name

2007-03-29 Thread attn . steven . kuo
On Mar 29, 7:22 am, "aspineux" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I want to parse > > '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' or '<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>' and get the email address [EMAIL > PROTECTED] > > the regex is > > r'<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>|[EMAIL PROTECTED]' > > now, I want to give it a name > > r'<(?P[EMAIL PROTECTED])>|(

What is the timeout value of HTTP

2007-03-29 Thread ken
Can you please tell me what is the timeout value of httplib.HTTP? i.e. how long python will wait for a response in the below code? h = httplib.HTTP(self.url, 8080) h.putrequest('GET', '/sample/?url=' + self.url) h.endheaders() Thank you. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/lis

Re: Creating a new data structure while filtering its data origin.

2007-03-29 Thread attn . steven . kuo
On Mar 28, 1:44 pm, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi everyone. > > I'm trying to work with very simple data structures but I'm stuck in the very > first steps. If someone has the luxury of a few minutes and can give an > advice how to resolve this, I'll really appreciate it. > > 1- I have a list o

Re: Finding User Profile path

2007-03-29 Thread Tim Golden
[resending as the original seems to have got lost; apologies if it appears as a duplicate] At the risk of insulting your intelligence, here's a rough-and-ready non-AD solution (culled from some code I had somewhere): import win32net import win32netcon dc = win32net.NetGetAnyDCName (None, None)

Re: What is the timeout value of HTTP

2007-03-29 Thread Alex Martelli
ken <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Can you please tell me what is the timeout value of httplib.HTTP? > > i.e. how long python will wait for a response in the below code? > >h = httplib.HTTP(self.url, 8080) > h.putrequest('GET', '/sample/?url=' + self.url) > h.endheaders() HTTP

Re: Finding a module's sub modules at runtime

2007-03-29 Thread Alex Martelli
Joshua J. Kugler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > still be nicely portable. It just seems that since Python is gathering > that information anyway, it should make it available without me having to > walk the directory tree. Sorry, where is Python "gathering that information anyway"? Unless I'm mist

Re: A nice way to use regex for complicate parsing

2007-03-29 Thread Paul McGuire
On Mar 29, 9:42 am, Shane Geiger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > It would be worth learning pyparsing to do this. > Thanks to Shane and Steven for the ref to pyparsing. I also was struck by this post, thinking "this is pyparsing written in re's and dicts". The approach you are taking is *very* much

Re: manually implementing staticmethod()?

2007-03-29 Thread Alex Martelli
7stud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi, > > Can someone show me how to manually implement staticmethod()? Here is Simplest way: class smethod(object): def __init__(self, f): self.f=f def __call__(self, *a, **k): return self.f(*a, **k) Alex -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pytho

File deletion after 72 hours of creation

2007-03-29 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I'm looking for a simple method to delete a folder after 72 "Business hours" (saturday/sunday doesnt count) since its creation. Note that This is on a linux system and I realize that it will be the last modified time. These files wont be modified since their creation. Im very confused on how to wo

Re: Weird gcc behaviour with function pointer types

2007-03-29 Thread attn . steven . kuo
On Mar 29, 6:05 am, greg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > In my quest to eliminate C compiler warnings from > Pyrex output, I've discovered some utterly bizarre > behaviour from gcc 3.3. > > The following code: > >void g(struct foo *x) { >} > >void f(void) { > void (*h)(struct foo *);

Re: make RE more cleaver to avoid inappropriate : sre_constants.error: redefinition of group name

2007-03-29 Thread aspineux
On 29 mar, 16:22, "aspineux" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I want to parse > > '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' or '<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>' and get the email address [EMAIL > PROTECTED] > > the regex is > > r'<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>|[EMAIL PROTECTED]' > > now, if I want to give it a name > > r'<(?P[EMAIL PROTECTED])>|

Re: pattern search

2007-03-29 Thread Fabian Braennstroem
Hi Paul, Paul McGuire schrieb am 03/27/2007 07:19 PM: > On Mar 27, 3:13 pm, Fabian Braennstroem <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> Hi to all, >> >> Wojciech Mu?a schrieb am 03/27/2007 03:34 PM: >> >>> Fabian Braennstroem wrote: Now, I would like to improve it by searching for different 'real'

Re: File deletion after 72 hours of creation

2007-03-29 Thread skip
Alex> I'm looking for a simple method to delete a folder after 72 Alex> "Business hours" (saturday/sunday doesnt count) since its Alex> creation. Note that This is on a linux system and I realize that Alex> it will be the last modified time. These files wont be modified Alex> s

Re: Finding User Profile path

2007-03-29 Thread kyosohma
On Mar 29, 10:30 am, Tim Golden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > [resending as the original seems to have got lost; > apologies if it appears as a duplicate] > > At the risk of insulting your intelligence, here's a > rough-and-ready non-AD solution (culled from some code I > had somewhere): > > > impo

Re: PyPy 1.0: JIT compilers for free and more

2007-03-29 Thread Bart Ogryczak
On 28 mar, 23:36, Jarek Zgoda <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Carl Friedrich Bolz napisa³(a): > > > Welcome to the PyPy 1.0 release - a milestone integrating the results > > of four years of research, engineering, management and sprinting > > efforts, concluding the 28 months phase of EU co-funding! >

Re: with timeout(...):

2007-03-29 Thread Nick Craig-Wood
Diez B. Roggisch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > I beleive the convention is when calling an OS function which might > > block the global interpreter lock is dropped, thus allowing other > > python bytecode to run. > > > So what? That doesn't help you, as you are single-threaded here. The >

Re: how can I clear a dictionary in python

2007-03-29 Thread Larry Bates
Bruno Desthuilliers wrote: > Larry Bates a écrit : >> Aahz wrote: >>> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, >>> Larry Bates <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > I create a dictionary like this > myDict = {} > > and I add entry like this: > myDict['a'] = 1 >

Re: dynamic module does not define init function (initpsycopgmodule)

2007-03-29 Thread Gabriel Genellina
En Wed, 28 Mar 2007 17:16:43 -0300, kickslop <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribió: > Clearly I am doing something braindead here with psycopg 1.1.21 > (psycopg2 is not an option). > > Any ideas? I get the same results when I build it with Red Hat's GCC > 3.4.6 setup as well as our in-house GCC 3.3.5 setu

Re: BeautifulSoup vs. Microsoft

2007-03-29 Thread John Nagle
Duncan Booth wrote: > John Nagle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > >>Strictly speaking, it's Microsoft's fault. >> >> title="". So all that following stuff is from what >>follows the next "-->" which terminates a comment. > > > It is an attribute value, and unescaped angle brackets are valid

Re: What is the timeout value of HTTP

2007-03-29 Thread Facundo Batista
ken wrote: > i.e. how long python will wait for a response in the below code? > >h = httplib.HTTP(self.url, 8080) > h.putrequest('GET', '/sample/?url=' + self.url) > h.endheaders() For ever. In Py<=2.5, httplib.HTTP doesn't have a timeout, so you have to do something like:

Re: PyPy 1.0: JIT compilers for free and more

2007-03-29 Thread Carl Friedrich Bolz
Duncan Booth wrote: > Robin Becker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> I am hugely encouraged by this >> >> C:\Python\devel\pypy-1.0.0>\python24\python \python\lib\test > \pystone.py >> Pystone(1.1) time for 5 passes = 1.49586 >> This machine benchmarks at 33425.6 pystones/second >> >> C:\Python\d

Re: with timeout(...):

2007-03-29 Thread Jean-Paul Calderone
On Thu, 29 Mar 2007 11:30:04 -0500, Nick Craig-Wood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >Diez B. Roggisch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> > >> > I beleive the convention is when calling an OS function which might >> > block the global interpreter lock is dropped, thus allowing other >> > python bytecode to ru

encoding confusions

2007-03-29 Thread Tim Arnold
I have the contents of a file that contains French documentation. I've iterated over it and now I want to write it out to a file. I'm running into problems and I don't understand why--I don't get how the encoding works. My first attempt was just this: < snipped code for classes, etc; fname is str

Best way to wait for string input

2007-03-29 Thread kevinliu23
Hi guys, Python newbie here for some expert help. So basically I want to design a menu system that waits for a string input. I'm not sure what the best way of going about this is. The current system waits for a single character input using msvcrt.kbhit( ) and msvcrt.getch( ). Is there something eq

Question about details of __import__

2007-03-29 Thread Mitko Haralanov
Hi all, I am going to do my best to describe the issue that I am having and hopefully someone can shed some light on it: I have three modules that a comprising the problem: ./core.py ./log.py ./resources/simple/__init__.py core.py looks something like this (simplified version): import log class

Re: which methods to use?

2007-03-29 Thread Gabriel Genellina
En Thu, 29 Mar 2007 01:56:15 -0300, Steven D'Aprano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribió: > By the way, "id(obj) == id(another_object)" is just a long way of writing > "obj is another_object". Just as a side note: that's not true, testing by id() only works if both objects are alive at the same time.

Re: Best way to wait for string input

2007-03-29 Thread Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch
In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, kevinliu23 wrote: > Python newbie here for some expert help. So basically I want to design > a menu system that waits for a string input. I'm not sure what the > best way of going about this is. The current system waits for a single > character input using msvcrt.kbhit( ) a

Re: encoding confusions

2007-03-29 Thread Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch
In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Tim Arnold wrote: > I have the contents of a file that contains French documentation. > I've iterated over it and now I want to write it out to a file. > > I'm running into problems and I don't understand why--I don't get how the > encoding works. > My first attempt was j

Any "consumer review generators" available?

2007-03-29 Thread aralsky
I am looking for a fake consumer review generator that could generate realistic looking reviews for any products, kind of like on amazon.com but generated by Artificial Intelligence. Is there a package available in your favorite programing language... thx alan -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/

Re: Any "consumer review generators" available?

2007-03-29 Thread Paul McGuire
On Mar 29, 1:19 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > I am looking for a fake consumer review generator that could generate > realistic looking reviews for any products, kind of like on amazon.com but > generated by Artificial Intelligence. Is there a package available in your > favorite programing lan

Re: with timeout(...):

2007-03-29 Thread John Nagle
Diez B. Roggisch wrote: > Nick Craig-Wood wrote: > > >>Did anyone write a contextmanager implementing a timeout for >>python2.5? >> >>And have it work reliably and in a cross platform way! > > Cross platform isn't the issue here - reliability though is. To put it > simple: can't be done that way

Re: Question about details of __import__

2007-03-29 Thread Gabriel Genellina
En Thu, 29 Mar 2007 14:42:33 -0300, Mitko Haralanov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribió: > I have three modules that a comprising the problem: > ./core.py > ./log.py > ./resources/simple/__init__.py Surely there is a ./resources/__init__.py too? > The problem that I am seeing is that 'global_info' in

Re: Question about details of __import__

2007-03-29 Thread Mitko Haralanov
On Thu, 29 Mar 2007 15:43:46 -0300 "Gabriel Genellina" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Surely there is a ./resources/__init__.py too? There sure is: ./resources/__init__.py is: __all__ = ['simple', 'other'] > You may check if this is the case, looking at sys.modules I did look at sys.modules but I

Re: Any "consumer review generators" available?

2007-03-29 Thread Peter Otten
Paul McGuire wrote: > On Mar 29, 1:19 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: >> I am looking for a fake consumer review generator that could generate >> realistic looking reviews for any products, kind of like on amazon.com >> but generated by Artificial Intelligence. Is there a package available in >> your

Re: Any "consumer review generators" available?

2007-03-29 Thread Uri Guttman
> "a" == aralsky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: a> I am looking for a fake consumer review generator that could a> generate realistic looking reviews for any products, kind of like a> on amazon.com but generated by Artificial Intelligence. Is there a a> package available in your favorite

Re: Finding a module's sub modules at runtime

2007-03-29 Thread Joshua J. Kugler
On Thursday 29 March 2007 07:33, Alex Martelli wrote: > Joshua J. Kugler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> still be nicely portable. It just seems that since Python is gathering >> that information anyway, it should make it available without me having to >> walk the directory tree. > > Sorry, whe

Re: PyPy 1.0: JIT compilers for free and more

2007-03-29 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Mar 28, 5:36 pm, Jarek Zgoda <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Carl Friedrich Bolz napisa³(a): > > > Welcome to the PyPy 1.0 release - a milestone integrating the results > > of four years of research, engineering, management and sprinting > > efforts, concluding the 28 months phase of EU co-funding!

How can I get the content of a web site using http library

2007-03-29 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I am trying to get the content of a web site like this: But my question is how can I do a 'GET' request without putting the '/ index.html'' h = httplib.HTTP('www.yahoo.com') # it takes 2 arguments here, but I don't know if the site has '/index.html' , how can I leave this out?

Hellow World:)

2007-03-29 Thread void pointer
Hi All ..I am looking for PDF version of " Practical Python" and a language to stick to .Should I find that book ,I wil lconsder this Python :) Thanks - Now that's room service! Choose from over 150,000 hotels in 45,000 destinations on Yahoo! Tr

Re: How can I get the content of a web site using http library

2007-03-29 Thread kyosohma
On Mar 29, 2:18 pm, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I am trying to get the content of a web site like this: > But my question is how can I do a 'GET' request without putting the '/ > index.html'' > >h = httplib.HTTP('www.yahoo.com') > > # it takes 2 arguments here, but

Re: Question about details of __import__

2007-03-29 Thread Gabriel Genellina
En Thu, 29 Mar 2007 15:56:54 -0300, Mitko Haralanov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribió: >> You may check if this is the case, looking at sys.modules > > I did look at sys.modules but I wasn't sure what to look for. There was > a log module in the list but what else should I look for? If you think tha

Re: How can I get the content of a web site using http library

2007-03-29 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Mar 29, 2:34 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > On Mar 29, 2:18 pm, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" > > > > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > I am trying to get the content of a web site like this: > > But my question is how can I do a 'GET' request without putting the '/ > > index.html'' > > >h = httplib.HTTP

Re: How can I get the content of a web site using http library

2007-03-29 Thread Thorsten Kampe
* [EMAIL PROTECTED] (29 Mar 2007 12:18:19 -0700) > I am trying to get the content of a web site like this: > But my question is how can I do a 'GET' request without putting the '/ > index.html'' import urllib print urllib.urlopen('http://www.yahoo.com/').read() -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/l

Web21C Python SDK - announce

2007-03-29 Thread Otu Ekanem
The BT Web21C python SDK is a package which abstract the SOAP/WsSecurity stack from end users allowing them to write python code to access BT plethora of webservices directly. You can use it to make phone calls, conference calls, send text messages (SMS) and locate people based on cell of origin

Re: How can I get the content of a web site using http library

2007-03-29 Thread kyosohma
On Mar 29, 3:07 pm, Thorsten Kampe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > * [EMAIL PROTECTED] (29 Mar 2007 12:18:19 -0700) > > > I am trying to get the content of a web site like this: > > But my question is how can I do a 'GET' request without putting the '/ > > index.html'' > > import urllib > print urllib

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