On May 24, 8:50 pm, 7stud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thanks for the response.
>
> On May 24, 9:24 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> > I can't imagine why your hostname would be changing, unless you
> > installed some of their proprietary software thats messing around with
> > things.
>
> When I
Bruno Desthuilliers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> HMS Surprise a ?crit :
>> Trying not to be a whiner but I sure have trouble finding syntax in
>> the reference material. I want to know about list operations such as
>> append.
> The only thing you have to know is that it doesn't exists. Python
>
Hi,
> On May 24, 9:48 am, Tartifola <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi,
> > suppose a script of python is waiting for a file from the stdin and none
> > is given. How can I make the script to stop and, for example, print an
> > error message?
> >
> > Sorry for the n00b question and thanks
>
> I'
> Again, I'm confident, again I didn't test.
I did, ...
... and unfortunately it still gave errors.
So for the moment I'll just stick to my "lots of code solution",
and I'll try again, when I've some more understanding of these Python
"internals".
Anyway,
thank you all for your assistance.
che
Hi,
> > I could not find a version of Python that runs on a Blackberrry.
I'm in the process to buy one of this smart phone and very interested
in Python for Blackberry.
Any success in installing it?
>
>
> -
> This sig is dedicated to the advancement of Nu
rohit wrote:
> hi
> i want to detect all file change operations(rename,delete,create)
> on ALL THE DRIVES of the hard disk
But to go a little further than your question... are
you sure you want to do this? It's going to put quite
a load on your system and be not-very-scaleable. I
haven't yet h
On May 25, 12:31 am, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> This is how I implemented; I guess there must be elegant way to do
> this...
>
> def find_closest_relative(a,b,c):
> c1 = b.__class__
> c2 = b.__class__
>
> while True:
> if isinstance(a, c1):
> re
Paul Moore napisał(a):
>> Anyway, what you want is Mutagen. It handles both Flac and Mp3 tags, as well
>> as many others:http://www.sacredchao.net/quodlibet/wiki/Development/Mutagen
>
> Excellent! The web page you mentioned gave "access denied", but I got
> to it via Google's cache, and the downl
Stef Mientki wrote:
>> Again, I'm confident, again I didn't test.
>
> I did, ...
> ... and unfortunately it still gave errors.
Strange.
> So for the moment I'll just stick to my "lots of code solution",
> and I'll try again, when I've some more understanding of these Python
> "internals".
Anyw
On May 25, 12:40 pm, 7stud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On May 25, 12:31 am, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
>
>
>
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > This is how I implemented; I guess there must be elegant way to do
> > this...
>
> > def find_closest_relative(a,b,c):
> > c1 = b.__class__
> > c2 = b.__cl
On May 25, 12:40 pm, 7stud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On May 25, 12:31 am, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
>
>
>
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > This is how I implemented; I guess there must be elegant way to do
> > this...
>
> > def find_closest_relative(a,b,c):
> > c1 = b.__class__
> > c2 = b.__cl
Peter Otten wrote:
> Stef Mientki wrote:
>
>>> Again, I'm confident, again I didn't test.
>> I did, ...
>> ... and unfortunately it still gave errors.
>
> Strange.
indeed ..
>
>> So for the moment I'll just stick to my "lots of code solution",
>> and I'll try again, when I've some more understan
On May 23, 12:05 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> The logger objects findCaller() method is returning a "3" element
> tuple instead of "2" two as
> documented in the 2.4.4 Python Library Reference .DocString is showing
> it correctly.
I've updated the docs - the next 2.4.x release should have them.
On 22 май, 16:45, "sim.sim" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi all.
> i'm faced to trouble using minidom:
>
> #i have a string (xml) within CDATA section, and the section includes
> "\r\n":
> iInStr = '\n\n'
>
> #After i create DOM-object, i get the value of "Data" without "\r\n"
>
> from xml.dom impo
Hi All.
I'm using psycopg2 to retrieve results from a rather large query (it
returns 22m records); unsurprisingly this doesn't fit in memory all at
once. What I'd like to achieve is something similar to a .NET data
provider I have which allows you to set a 'FetchSize' property; it
then retrieves '
Hello,
I am trying to override a method of a class defined into an imported
module, but keeping intact the namespace of the imported module.
For example, let suppose
import module_X
and in module_X is defined something like
class A:
...
def method_1():
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Gre7g Luterman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I suppose I was lulled into complacency by how Python makes so many things
> look like classes, but I'm starting to realize that they're not, are they?
>
> I'm writing a C program which handles Python objects in diffe
"Neil Cerutti" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 2007-05-22, Duncan Booth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > "Hendrik van Rooyen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >> Aside from the hashing issue, there is nothing that a tuple can do
> >> that can't be done as well or better by a list.
> >
> > There a
From: "D.Hering" wrote:
> On May 23, 4:04 am, Tim Golden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Robert Rawlins - Think Blue wrote:
> >
I did not see the original post either :-( ...
> > > I've got an application that runs on an embedded system, the application
> > > uses a whole bunch or dicts and othe
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On May 22, 10:00 am, stef <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> hello,
>>
>> I'm trying to move from Delphi to Python
>> (move from MatLab to Python already succeeded, also thanks to this
>> discussion group).
>> From the discussions in this list about "the best" GUI for Python,
In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, sim.sim wrote:
> Below the code that tryes to parse an well-formed xml, but it fails
> with error message:
> "not well-formed (invalid token): line 3, column 85"
How did you verified that it is well formed? `xmllint` barf on it too.
> The "problem" within CDATA-section:
Just in case anyone else has seen this problem, after upgrading to 2.4.4 the
problem appears to have resolved itself.
>I know this has been seen before but it is not making too much sense (after
>reading many posts). It all appears to work fine but then dies after about
>40 invocations.
>
> My
I'm using optparse.OptionParser for parsing command line arguments.
parser = optparse.OptionParser()
parser.add_option("-x", "--xample", help="example",
default="nothing",
dest="ex")
options = parser.parse_args()[0]
python example.py -x value
I'm in search of a method to list out all
After switching my development environment to 64 bit I've got a problem with
a python extension for a 32 bit application. Compiling the app under Linux
results in the following error:
g++ -m32 -Wall -g -O2 -I. -Idb -DPYTHON=25 -o mappy.o -c mappy.cpp
In file included from /usr/include/python2.5/P
Jon Clements wrote:
> Hi All.
>
> I'm using psycopg2 to retrieve results from a rather large query (it
> returns 22m records); unsurprisingly this doesn't fit in memory all at
> once. What I'd like to achieve is something similar to a .NET data
> provider I have which allows you to set a 'FetchSiz
En Fri, 25 May 2007 00:04:04 -0300, 7stud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
escribió:
> I'm experimenting with a basic socket program(from a book), and both
> the client and server programs are on my computer. In both programs,
> I call socket.gethostname(), but I discovered that when I am connected
> to th
En Fri, 25 May 2007 05:09:00 -0300, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribió:
> Vehicle
> |
> |--- Two Wheeler
> | |
> | |--- BatteryPowered
> | |--- PetrolPowered
> | |--- DieselPowered
> |
> |--- Three Wheeler
> | |
>
On 25 May, 11:16, Jon Clements <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I'm using psycopg2 to retrieve results from a rather large query (it
> returns 22m records); unsurprisingly this doesn't fit in memory all at
> once. What I'd like to achieve is something similar to a .NET data
> provider I have which al
En Thu, 24 May 2007 21:53:24 -0300, Terry Reedy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
escribió:
> "Aahz" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> | First of all, if you're accessing python-list as comp.lang.python,
> you're
> | accessing a newsgroup, *not* a mailing list. Secondly, c.l.p
On 25 май, 12:45, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, sim.sim wrote:
> > Below the code that tryes to parse an well-formed xml, but it fails
> > with error message:
> > "not well-formed (invalid token): line 3, column 85"
>
> How did you verified that it is
On May 25, 3:07 am, Nirnimesh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm using optparse.OptionParser for parsing command line arguments.
>
> parser = optparse.OptionParser()
> parser.add_option("-x", "--xample", help="example",
> default="nothing",
> dest="ex")
> options = parser.parse_args()[0]
>
Vinay Sajip wrote:
> On May 23, 12:05 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> The logger objects findCaller() method is returning a "3" element
>> tuple instead of "2" two as
>> documented in the 2.4.4 Python Library Reference .DocString is showing
>> it correctly.
>
> I've updated the docs - the next 2.
En Fri, 25 May 2007 06:12:14 -0300, Fabrizio Pollastri
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribió:
> I am trying to override a method of a class defined into an imported
> module, but keeping intact the namespace of the imported module.
The last part I don't get completely...
> For example, let suppose
>
>
Hi all
I'm trying to parsing html with re module.
html = """
DATA1DATA2DATA3DATA4
DATA5DATA6DATA7DATA8
"""
I want to get DATA1-8 from that string.(DATA maybe not english words.)
Can anyone tell me how to do it with regular expression in python?
Thank you very much.
--
http://mail.py
ashish skrev:
> Hi All,
>
> I want to know weather is there any api available in python for parsing
> xml(XML parser)
I have had very good succes with lxml
--
hilsen/regards Max M, Denmark
http://www.mxm.dk/
IT's Mad Science
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi All,
I want to know weather is there any api available in python for parsing
xml(XML parser)
Regards
Ashish
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 5/24/07, ashish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> I want to know weather is there any api available in python for parsing
> xml(XML parser)
Checkout cElementTree .
Cheers,
--
Amit Khemka -- onyomo.com
Home Page: www.cse.iitd.ernet.in/~csd00377
Endless the world's turn, endless th
* Jia Lu (25 May 2007 04:51:35 -0700)
> I'm trying to parsing html with re module.
> [...]
> Can anyone tell me how to do it with regular expression in python?
Just don't. Use an HTML parser like BeautifulSoup
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Mathias Waack wrote:
> After switching my development environment to 64 bit I've got a problem with
> a python extension for a 32 bit application.
{...}
> Ok, thats fine. So why is python complaining? Or even more interesting, what
> do I have to do to compile the code?
Is the Python your toolch
On Fri, 2007-05-25 at 04:03 -0700, sim.sim wrote:
> my CDATA-section contains only symbols in the range specified for
> Char:
> Char ::= #x9 | #xA | #xD | [#x20-#xD7FF] | [#xE000-#xFFFD] |
> [#x1-#x10]
>
>
> filter(lambda x: ord(x) not in range(0x20, 0xD7FF), iMessage)
That test is me
Fabrizio Pollastri wrote:
> Hello,
> I am trying to override a method of a class defined into an imported
> module, but keeping intact the namespace of the imported module.
>
> For example, let suppose
>
> import module_X
>
> and in module_X is defined something like
>
> class A:
>
Gabriel Genellina wrote:
> En Thu, 24 May 2007 21:53:24 -0300, Terry Reedy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> escribió:
>
>> "Aahz" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
>> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> | First of all, if you're accessing python-list as comp.lang.python,
>> you're
>> | accessing a newsgroup, *n
On May 25, 12:03 pm, "sim.sim" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 25 ÍÁÊ, 12:45, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, sim.sim wrote:
> > > Below the code that tryes to parse an well-formed xml, but it fails
> > > with error message:
> > > "not well-formed (
"Neil Cerutti" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Web browsers are in the very business of reasonably rendering
> ill-formed mark-up. It's one of the things that makes
> implementing a browser take forever. ;)
For HTML, yes. it accepts all sorts of garbage, like most
On 2007-05-25, Richard Brodie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> "Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>> How did you verified that it is well formed?
>
> It appears to have a more fundamental problem, which is
> that it isn't correctly encoded (pre
"Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> How did you verified that it is well formed?
It appears to have a more fundamental problem, which is
that it isn't correctly encoded (presumably because the
CDATA is truncated in mid-character). I'm surpris
Hi,
Simple question. Is it possible in python to write code of the type:
-
while not eof <- really want the EOF and not just an empty line!
readline by line
end while;
-
What I am using now is the implicit for loop after a readlines().
In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Karim Ali
wrote:
> Simple question. Is it possible in python to write code of the type:
>
> -
> while not eof <- really want the EOF and not just an empty line!
> readline by line
> end while;
> -
while True:
Karim Ali wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Simple question. Is it possible in python to write code of the type:
>
> -
> while not eof <- really want the EOF and not just an empty line!
> readline by line
> end while;
> -
>
> What I am using now is the im
Carsten Haese:
> On Fri, 2007-05-25 at 04:03 -0700, sim.sim wrote:
> UnicodeDecodeError: 'utf8' codec can't decode bytes in position 176-177:
> invalid data
iMessage[176:178]
> '\xd1]'
>
> And that's your problem. In general you can't just truncate a utf-8
> encoded string anywhere and ex
"Karim Ali" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> -
> while not eof <- really want the EOF and not just an empty line!
> readline by line
> end while;
> -
for line in open_file:
...
It will stop on EOF, not on empty line.
> But also, in cas
[EMAIL PROTECTED] :
> You need to explicitly convert the string of UTF8 encoded bytes to a
> Unicode string before parsing e.g.
> unicodestring = unicode(encodedbytes, 'utf8')
it is only a part of a string - not hole string, i've wrote it before.
That meens that the content can not be converted t
Hi, I'm using ElementTree which is wonderful. I have a need now to write out
an XML file with these two headers:
My elements have the root named tocbody and I'm using:
newtree = ET.ElementTree(tocbody)
newtree.write(fname)
I assume if I add the encoding arg I'll get the xml header:
newtree = E
Richard Brodie ha scritto:
> For HTML, yes. it accepts all sorts of garbage, like most
> browsers; I've never, before now, seen it accept an invalid
> XML document though.
It *could* depend on Content-Type. I've seen that Firefox treats XHTML
as HTML (i.e. not trying to validate it) if you set Co
Thorsten Kampe ha scritto:
>> I'm trying to parsing html with re module.
> Just don't. Use an HTML parser like BeautifulSoup
Or HTMLParser/htmllib
--
|\/|55: Mattia Gentilini e 55 = log2(che_palle_sta_storia) (by mezzo)
|/_| ETICS project at CNAF, INFN, Bologna, Italy
|\/| www.getfirefox.com ww
Thorsten Kampe ha scritto:
>> I'm trying to parsing html with re module.
> Just don't. Use an HTML parser like BeautifulSoup
Or HTMLParser/htmllib. of course you can mix those and re, it'll be
easier than re only.
--
|\/|55: Mattia Gentilini e 55 = log2(che_palle_sta_storia) (by mezzo)
|/_| ETI
Richard Brodie пишет:
> "Neil Cerutti" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>> Web browsers are in the very business of reasonably rendering
>> ill-formed mark-up. It's one of the things that makes
>> implementing a browser take forever. ;)
>
> For HTML, yes. it accept
Hi all,
I'm trying to run the following query:
amember_db = MySQLdb.connect(host="localhost", user="**",
passwd="*", db="***")
# create a cursor
self.amember_cursor = amember_db.cursor()
# execute SQL statement
sql = """SELECT paymen
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
...
> > and I'm not connected to the internet and I run the program, I get:
> >
> > my-names-computer.local
> >
> > When I'm connected to the internet, I get:
> >
> > dialup-9.999.999.999.dial9.xxx.level9.net
>
> That would bug me to high hell. A router in the mi
> I'm trying to run the following query:
...
> member_id=%s AND expire_date > NOW() AND completed=1 AND (product_id
Shouldn't you be using the bind variable '?' instead of '%s' ?
(I'm asking because I'm not entirely sure how the execute command is
doing the substitution)
-Dave
--
http://mail.pyt
Maksim Kasimov napisał(a):
>> 'utf8' codec can't decode bytes in position 176-177: invalid data
> iMessage[176:178]
>> '\xd1]'
>>
>> And that's your problem. In general you can't just truncate a utf-8
>> encoded string anywhere and expect the result to be valid utf-8. The
>> \xd1 at the very e
Hrvoje Niksic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>If you open the file in binary mode, you can easily keep track of the
>position in file:
>
>bytepos = 0
>with file(filename) as f:
> for line in f:
> ... process line ...
> bytepos += len(line)
>
>If you need to restart the operation, simply seek
On May 25, 4:46 am, Stef Mientki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > On May 22, 10:00 am, stef <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >> hello,
>
> >> I'm trying to move from Delphi to Python
> >> (move from MatLab to Python already succeeded, also thanks to this
> >> discussion group).
On May 25, 10:51 am, "Dave Borne" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I'm trying to run the following query:
> ...
> > member_id=%s AND expire_date > NOW() AND completed=1 AND (product_id
>
> Shouldn't you be using the bind variable '?' instead of '%s' ?
> (I'm asking because I'm not entirely sure how t
On May 25, 7:04 am, "Amit Khemka" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 5/24/07, ashish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Hi All,
>
> > I want to know weather is there any api available in python for parsing
> > xml(XML parser)
>
> Checkout cElementTree .
>
> Cheers,
>
> --
>
> Amit Khemka -- onyomo.
On May 24, 5:03 pm, Ron Adam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Is anyone else having problems with the webbrowser module?
>
> Python 2.5.1c1 (release25-maint, Apr 12 2007, 21:00:25)
> [GCC 4.1.2 (Ubuntu 4.1.2-0ubuntu4)] on linux2
> Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>
Jarek Zgoda:
>
> No, it is not a part of string. It's a part of byte stream, split in a
> middle of multibyte-encoded character.
>
> You cann't get only dot from small letter "i" and ask the parser to
> treat it as a complete "i".
>
... i know it :))
can you propose something to solve it? ;)
On Fri, 2007-05-25 at 17:30 +0300, Maksim Kasimov wrote:
> I insist - my message is correct and not contradicts no any point of w3.org
> xml-specification.
The fact that you believe this so strongly and we disagree just as
strongly indicates a fundamental misunderstanding. Your fundamental
misund
Hi Paul, Peter, Uwe
Thank to the three of you for your
clear answers :)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Fri, 2007-05-25 at 09:51 -0500, Dave Borne wrote:
> > I'm trying to run the following query:
> ...
> > member_id=%s AND expire_date > NOW() AND completed=1 AND (product_id
>
> Shouldn't you be using the bind variable '?' instead of '%s' ?
The parameter placeholder for MySQLdb is, indeed and un
On May 25, 3:55 pm, "Tim Arnold" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi, I'm using ElementTree which is wonderful. I have a need now to write out
> an XML file with these two headers:
>
>
>
> My elements have the root named tocbody and I'm using:
> newtree = ET.ElementTree(tocbody)
> newtree.write(fname
Carsten Haese:
> If you want to convey an arbitrary sequence of bytes as if they were
> characters, you need to pick a character encoding that can handle an
> arbitrary sequence of bytes. utf-8 can not do that. ISO-8859-1 can, but
> you need to specify the encoding explicitly. Observe what happens
"Gerard Flanagan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> On May 25, 3:55 pm, "Tim Arnold" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Hi, I'm using ElementTree which is wonderful. I have a need now to write
>> out
>> an XML file with these two headers:
>>
>>
>>
>> My elements have the
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On May 24, 5:03 pm, Ron Adam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Is anyone else having problems with the webbrowser module?
>>
>> Python 2.5.1c1 (release25-maint, Apr 12 2007, 21:00:25)
>> [GCC 4.1.2 (Ubuntu 4.1.2-0ubuntu4)] on linux2
>> Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "
Hello
I've got a web application with the following structure:
1) module of 100 functions corresponding to user actions (e.g.
"update_profile()", "organisations_list()")
2) a wsgi callable which maps urls to functions eg
/organisations/list/?sort=date_created is mapped to
organisations_list("date
Kind and wise fellows,
I've got a web application with the following structure:
1) module of 100 functions corresponding to user actions (e.g.
"update_profile()", "organisations_list()")
2) a wsgi callable which maps urls to functions eg
/organisations/list/?sort=date_created is mapped to
orga
Ron Adam wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> On May 24, 5:03 pm, Ron Adam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>> Is anyone else having problems with the webbrowser module?
>>>
>>> Python 2.5.1c1 (release25-maint, Apr 12 2007, 21:00:25)
>>> [GCC 4.1.2 (Ubuntu 4.1.2-0ubuntu4)] on linux2
>>> Type "help", "co
Ron Adam said unto the world upon 05/25/2007 12:28 PM:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> On May 24, 5:03 pm, Ron Adam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>> Is anyone else having problems with the webbrowser module?
>>>
>>> Python 2.5.1c1 (release25-maint, Apr 12 2007, 21:00:25)
>>> [GCC 4.1.2 (Ubuntu 4.1.2-0u
7stud wrote:
[...]
>
> The strange thing is: the hostname and port in the output are not what
> I'm using in my server program:
> -
> import socket
>
> s = socket.socket()
>
> print "made changes 2"
>
> host = socket.gethostname() #I'm not connected to the internet when I
> use this li
Tim Arnold wrote:
> Hi, I'm using ElementTree which is wonderful. I have a need now to write out
> an XML file with these two headers:
>
>
>
> My elements have the root named tocbody and I'm using:
> newtree = ET.ElementTree(tocbody)
> newtree.write(fname)
>
> I assume if I add the encoding ar
>For local testing it is *much* easier to have your client
>and server use IP address 127.0.0.1
According to my book, an address is a tuple of the form (hostname,
port), so I didn't know what you meant by using 127.0.0.1 as the
address. I played around with it, and using the tuple ("127.0.0.1",
1
Hendrik van Rooyen wrote:
>>> Just to get the ball rolling, I'd suggest two things:
>>>
>>> Pyro -http://pyro.sf.net
>
> This is good advice, if you have the power to run it.
What do you mean exactly by "the power to run it"?
--Irmen
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http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Josh West wrote:
> Kind and wise fellows,
> [...]
Please see my separate reply with the same subject line but in a new
thread. That reply explains *why* it's in a new thread.
regards
Steve
--
Steve Holden+1 571 484 6266 +1 800 494 3119
Holden Web LLC/Ltd http://www.holdenwe
Brian van den Broek wrote:
> Ron Adam said unto the world upon 05/25/2007 12:28 PM:
>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>>> On May 24, 5:03 pm, Ron Adam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Is anyone else having problems with the webbrowser module?
Python 2.5.1c1 (release25-maint, Apr 12 2007, 21:00:2
I need to process large amount of data. The data structure fits well
in a dictionary but the amount is large - close to or more than the size
of physical memory. I wonder what will happen if I try to load the data
into a dictionary. Will Python use swap memory or will it fail?
Thanks.
--
http:
> Kind and wise fellows,
>
> I've got a web application with the following structure:
>
> 1) module of 100 functions corresponding to user actions (e.g.
> "update_profile()", "organisations_list()")
> 2) a wsgi callable which maps urls to functions eg
> /organisations/list/?sort=date_created is
Hi,
I am using a listbox in selectmode = MULTIPLE, I can get the current
selected item in the listbox from index = "ACTIVE" , but is there a
way to convert this "ACTIVE" to get the current selection index as a
number.
For multiple selectmode listboxes it returns a tuple of selected
indexes, so I w
In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Jack wrote:
> I need to process large amount of data. The data structure fits well
> in a dictionary but the amount is large - close to or more than the size
> of physical memory. I wonder what will happen if I try to load the data
> into a dictionary. Will Python use swap
Thanks for the replies!
Database will be too slow for what I want to do.
"Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Jack wrote:
>
>> I need to process large amount of data. The data structure fits well
>> in a dictionary but t
Nirnimesh wrote:
> On May 25, 3:07 am, Nirnimesh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> I'm using optparse.OptionParser for parsing command line arguments.
>>
>> parser = optparse.OptionParser()
>> parser.add_option("-x", "--xample", help="example",
>> default="nothing",
>> dest="ex")
>> options
ICMLA 2007: CALL FOR PAPERS
The Sixth International Conference on Machine Learning and
Applications
ICMLA 2007
December 13-15, 2007
Cincinnati, OH, USA
>
> First off, don't attempt to start a new thread by replying to a previous
> one. Many newsreaders will merge the two, confusing the hell out of
> everyone and generally not helping.
>
Ahh, yes. I see what you mean. Explains why it didn't appear the first
time I posted (until later..).
So
Steve Holden wrote:
> Ron Adam wrote:
>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>>> On May 24, 5:03 pm, Ron Adam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Is anyone else having problems with the webbrowser module?
Python 2.5.1c1 (release25-maint, Apr 12 2007, 21:00:25)
[GCC 4.1.2 (Ubuntu 4.1.2-0ubuntu4)] o
On May 25, 10:50 am, "Jack" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I need to process large amount of data. The data structure fits well
> in a dictionary but the amount is large - close to or more than the size
> of physical memory. I wonder what will happen if I try to load the data
> into a dictionary. Wil
Josh West wrote:
>> First off, don't attempt to start a new thread by replying to a previous
>> one. Many newsreaders will merge the two, confusing the hell out of
>> everyone and generally not helping.
>>
>
> Ahh, yes. I see what you mean. Explains why it didn't appear the first
> time I po
On 25 May, 00:03, Ron Adam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Is anyone else having problems with the webbrowser module?
>
> Python 2.5.1c1 (release25-maint, Apr 12 2007, 21:00:25)
> [GCC 4.1.2 (Ubuntu 4.1.2-0ubuntu4)] on linux2
> Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>
"Steve Holden" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
| I *did* try to explain all this a week or two ago. Did I not make myself
clear?
I could ask the same. Quoting from that post:
| All I am saying is that it's difficult to catch *everything* when so
| much of the cont
On May 25, 12:27 pm, Steve Holden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Is a further 2.4 release planned?
>
> I'd have thought that unless a security issue appears the answer is
> likely to be "no".
>
You never know - and it didn't take long to commit the change to
release24-maint, so why not?!
Regards,
P:
Stupid question:
reader = csv.reader(open('somefile.csv'))
for row in reader:
do something
Any way to determine the "length" of the reader (the number of rows)
before iterating through the rows?
-CJL
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Matej Cepl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Is there somewhere support for the extension of email module,
> which would support writing to (and creating new) mbox folders
> (with all bells and whistles, like locking)? It seems to me that
> current (Python 2.4.*, I even tried email package
> 4.0.2
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