On 9/8/07, Greg Lindstrom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> # run client pricing at 0215 (p) Monday-Friday
> 15 2 * * 1-5 cd /m01/edith/src && /usr/bin/python /m01/edith/src/driver.py
> --paid-date yesterday --jobname professional >>
> /m01/edith/stdout/ecomppo.stdout 2&>1
"2&>1", Is that a typo ? It
Am Sat, 08 Sep 2007 00:32:35 + schrieb Steven D'Aprano:
> On Fri, 07 Sep 2007 15:59:53 +0200, Wildemar Wildenburger wrote:
>
>> I just thought I'd go along with the analogy the OP created as that was
>> his mindset and it would make things easier to follow if I didn't try to
>> forcibly chang
Am Fri, 07 Sep 2007 13:10:16 + schrieb Grant Edwards:
> On 2007-09-07, Peter Otten <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Am Fri, 07 Sep 2007 10:40:47 + schrieb Steven D'Aprano:
>>
>>> Python doesn't have any pointers.
>>
>> Thinking of python variables or "names" as pointers should
>> get you a lo
Hi,
Is the sqlite distributed with Python 2.5 compiled with the
-DTHREADSAFE=1 flag? My gutt feeling is Windows (yes) MacOS/Linux (no)
but ...
If it is not on MacOS/Linux, how do I go about replacing the sqlite so
file with a threadsafe sqlite?
Thanks,
EuGeNe -- http://www.3kwa.com
--
http:
On Sat, 08 Sep 2007 10:37:51 +0200, EuGeNe Van den Bulke wrote:
> Is the sqlite distributed with Python 2.5 compiled with the
> -DTHREADSAFE=1 flag? My gutt feeling is Windows (yes) MacOS/Linux (no)
> but ...
Take a look at the `threadsafety` attribute of the module.
Ciao,
Marc 'BlackJ
On Sat, 08 Sep 2007 10:07:14 +0200, Peter Otten wrote:
> Am Fri, 07 Sep 2007 13:10:16 + schrieb Grant Edwards:
>
>> On 2007-09-07, Peter Otten <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>> Am Fri, 07 Sep 2007 10:40:47 + schrieb Steven D'Aprano:
>>>
Python doesn't have any pointers.
>>>
>>> Thinking
Steven D'Aprano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Should garbage-collecting 16 million strings really take 20+
> minutes?
It shouldn't. For testing purposes I've created a set of 16 milion
strings like this:
s = set()
for n in xrange(1600):
s.add('somerandomprefix' + str(n)) # prefix makes t
Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
> On Fri, 07 Sep 2007 12:19:12 -0700, Steve Holden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> declaimed the following in comp.lang.python:
>
>> Since it's only a matter of time before someone brings up the "post-It"
>> analogy, let me cavil in advance about it. The thing I don't like about
>
Hotmail: cheapestsell#hotmail.com
(www.cheapestsell.com )professionally wholesale sports shoes from
china,main product including:Footwear-sneakers series
(nike,puma,adidas,Jordan 1-24,nike max,nike shox,nike dunk,nike
kobe,nike rift,bapesta,timberland
boot,D&G,dsquqred,LV,prada,icecream,NBA,lacost
Hi,
Based on the already released SCF, the code is there:
http://snakecard.com/Source/Applications/SCF/Load_BC.zip.
hg
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Zentrader wrote:
> On Sep 7, 11:30 am, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> On Fri, 07 Sep 2007 18:49:12 +0200, Jorgen Bodde wrote:
>>> As for why caring if they are bools or not, I write True and False to
>>> the properties, the internal mechanism works like this so I need to
>>>
ah <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Art Deco wrote:
>> ah <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>>Art Deco wrote:
ah <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Art Deco wrote:
>> ah <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>>Art Deco wrote:
ah <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Art Deco wrote:
>> ah <[EMAI
On Sep 8, 3:33 am, "Gabriel Genellina" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> En Fri, 07 Sep 2007 16:16:46 -0300, Dr Mephesto <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> escribi?:
>
> > hey, that defaultdict thing looks pretty cool...
>
> > whats the overhead like for using a dictionary in python?
>
> Dictionaries are heavily opt
Dr Mephesto wrote:
> On Sep 8, 3:33 am, "Gabriel Genellina" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> En Fri, 07 Sep 2007 16:16:46 -0300, Dr Mephesto <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> escribi?:
>>
>>> hey, that defaultdict thing looks pretty cool...
>>> whats the overhead like for using a dictionary in python?
>> Diction
Hallöchen!
Is there a portable and simply way to direct file-like IO to simply
nothing? I try to implement some sort of NullLogging by saying
--8<---cut here---start->8---
import logging
if options.logging:
logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG, filename
Dr Mephesto <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> well, I want to (maybe) have a dictionary where the value is a list of
> 5 lists. And I want to add a LOT of data to these lists. 10´s of
> millions of pieces of data. Will this be a big problem? I can just try
> it out in practice on monday too :)
Yes, th
On Sat, 08 Sep 2007 12:08:16 -0300, Ricardo Aráoz wrote:
>> if type(x) == type(True):
>> ...print "bool"
>> ...
>> bool
>>
>>
> Or just :
>
a = True
type(a) == int
> False
[snip]
You know, one or two examples was probably plenty. The other six or seven
didn't add anything to
On Sat, 2007-09-08 at 18:52 +0200, Torsten Bronger wrote:
> Hallöchen!
>
> Is there a portable and simply way to direct file-like IO to simply
> nothing? I try to implement some sort of NullLogging by saying
>
> --8<---cut here---start->8---
> import logging
>
On Sat, 08 Sep 2007 18:52:57 +0200, Torsten Bronger wrote:
> Is there a portable and simply way to direct file-like IO to simply
> nothing? I try to implement some sort of NullLogging by saying
`os.devnull`?
Ciao,
Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch
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http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pyth
On Sep 7, 9:42 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Sep 7, 3:10 am, Jimmy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Hi, wxPython is cool and easy to use, But I ran into a problem
> > recently when I try to write a GUI.
> > The thing is I want to periodically update the content of StatixText
> > object, so
Duncan Booth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:
I went through your example to get timings for my machine, and I
ran into an issue I didn't expect.
My bat file did the following 10 times in a row:
(the command line wraps in this post)
call timeit -s "s='abracadabra1'*1000;t='
Hallöchen!
Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch writes:
> On Sat, 08 Sep 2007 18:52:57 +0200, Torsten Bronger wrote:
>
>> Is there a portable and simply way to direct file-like IO to
>> simply nothing? I try to implement some sort of NullLogging by
>> saying
>
> `os.devnull`?
Yes, but I wasn't really sure
Hi,
I am using a library (pcapy) that returns a timeval object T=
(seconds,microseconds) where microseconds is always < 1e6.
Is there a Python class that can handle timeval structs? Specifically,
I wish to subtract two T (defined above) objects, taking into account
the large values of T[0] and T[1]
Thanks for the replies, very instructive!
On 9/7/07, Steve Holden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Carl Banks wrote:
> > On Fri, 07 Sep 2007 01:30:00 -0500, Sergio Correia wrote:
> >> Hi, I'm kinda new to Python (that means, I'm a total noob here), but
> >> have one doubt which is more about consisten
Hallöchen!
Carsten Haese writes:
> On Sat, 2007-09-08 at 18:52 +0200, Torsten Bronger wrote:
>
>> Is there a portable and simply way to direct file-like IO to
>> simply nothing? [...]
>>
>> [...]
>
> This might work:
>
> class LogSink(object):
> def write(self, *args, **kwargs): pass
> d
Hi;
I'm trying to insert XYZ before a keyword in a string. The first and
the last occurence of hello in the string t1 (t1="hello world hello.
hello \nwhy world hello") are keywords. So after the insertion of XYZ
in this string, the result should be t1 = "XYZhello world hello. hello
\nwhy world XYZ
Hi, I want a progress bar to increase automatically, so I wrote code
like this:
current = 0
while True:
if current == 100:
current = 0
self._gauge.SetValue(current)
time.sleep(0.1
> The python doesn't supports t1[keyword_index]="XYZhello" (string
> object assignment is not supported). How do I get to this problem? Any
> sugguestions?
Build a new string var using slicing. eg:
t1 = t1[:keyword_index] + "XYZhello" + [keyword_index]
Or use string formatting:
t1 = "your text
On 9/8/07, David <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > The python doesn't supports t1[keyword_index]="XYZhello" (string
> > object assignment is not supported). How do I get to this problem? Any
> > sugguestions?
>
> Build a new string var using slicing. eg:
>
> t1 = t1[:keyword_index] + "XYZhello" + [key
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
...
..
.
> You know, one or two examples was probably plenty. The other six or seven
> didn't add anything to your post except length.
>
> Also, type testing by equality is generally not a good idea. For example:
>
> class HexInt(int):
> """Like built-in ints, but prin
On 9/8/07, Jimmy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi, I want a progress bar to increase automatically, so I wrote code
> like this:
> current = 0
> while True:
> if current == 100:
> current = 0
> self._gaug
On 9/8/07, sapsi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
> I am using a library (pcapy) that returns a timeval object T=
> (seconds,microseconds) where microseconds is always < 1e6.
> Is there a Python class that can handle timeval structs? Specifically,
> I wish to subtract two T (defined above) objects,
On Sep 7, 2:04 pm, Wildemar Wildenburger
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Paul Rudin wrote:
> > xkenneth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> >>> Ah, yes, a couple of things:
> >>> - avoid the 'one-class-per-file' syndrom. It's perfectly ok to have tens
> >> Yes but i find it hard to edit classes easily whe
On Sat, 08 Sep 2007 12:42:19 -0700, xkenneth wrote:
> How do import statements that are declared at the top of a python
> module work?
They import the module. ;-)
> for instance
>
> from MyModule.Objects import *
>
> class Class:
> def function:
>#here i cannot access th
>
> How do import statements that are declared at the top of a python
> module work?
>
> for instance
>
> from MyModule.Objects import *
>
> class Class:
> def function:
>#here i cannot access the things that should have been
> imported from the above statement
>#i
The timedelta module did the job just fine.
Thank you
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> How do import statements that are declared at the top of a python
> module work?
http://docs.python.org/tut/node8.html
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi,
I need to parse some source with nested parenthesis, like this :
>cut-
{
{item1}
{
{item2}
{item3}
}
}
>cut-
In fact I'd like to get all start indexes of items and their end (or
lenght).
I know regexps are rather limited for this type
To my horror, someone pointed out to me yesterday that a web app I
wrote has been prominently displaying a misspelled word. The word was
buried in my code.
Is there a utility out there that will help spell-check literal
strings entered into Python source code? I don't mean spell-check
strings en
On 9/8/07, tool69 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I need to parse some source with nested parenthesis, like this :
>
If this is exactly how your data looks, then how about a loop which
searches for "{item" and the following "}"? You can use the "find"
string method for that.
Otherwise, if th
John Zenger wrote:
> To my horror, someone pointed out to me yesterday that a web app I
> wrote has been prominently displaying a misspelled word. The word was
> buried in my code.
>
> Is there a utility out there that will help spell-check literal
> strings entered into Python source code? I do
> >
> > (I know that the better practice is to isolate user-displayed strings
> > from the code, but in this case that just didn't happen.)
> >
>
> Use the re module, identify the strings and write them to another file,
> then open the file with your spell checker. Program shouldn't be more
> than
Same solution as above, but if you just want "Hello" and to not
include words containing "Hello", i.e. "Helloing" or "Unhello", then
you want to include a leading and/or trailing space.
lit=" hello" ## note added space
t1="nothello world hello. hello \nwhy world hello"
start = t1.find(lit)
t2 = t
On 9/8/07, Zentrader <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Same solution as above, but if you just want "Hello" and to not
> include words containing "Hello", i.e. "Helloing" or "Unhello", then
> you want to include a leading and/or trailing space.
You can also use the re (regular expression) module to sea
David a écrit :
> On 9/8/07, tool69 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I need to parse some source with nested parenthesis, like this :
>>
>
> If this is exactly how your data looks, then how about a loop which
> searches for "{item" and the following "}"? You can use the "find"
> string meth
David wrote:
>>> (I know that the better practice is to isolate user-displayed strings
>>> from the code, but in this case that just didn't happen.)
>>>
>> Use the re module, identify the strings and write them to another file,
>> then open the file with your spell checker. Program shouldn't be mor
I am trying to extend list class to build a stack class -- see code below---
but I got an error when I try to call len method from list class here.. why?
Thanks in advance!
-
class Stackx(list):
def push(self,x):
indx= super.len(x)
self.insert(my_le
On Sep 8, 3:35 pm, David <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > How do import statements that are declared at the top of a python
> > module work?
>
> http://docs.python.org/tut/node8.html
On Sat, 08 Sep 2007 12:42:19 -0700, xkenneth wrote:
> How do import statements that are declared at the top of a pyth
On Sep 8, 3:42 pm, tool69 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I need to parse some source with nested parenthesis, like this :
>
> >cut-
>
> {
> {item1}
> {
> {item2}
> {item3}
> }
>
> }
>
> >cut-
>
> In fact I'd like to get all start indexes of
On Sep 8, 2007, at 8:04 PM, xkenneth wrote:
>
> Code doesn't compile in python. This is pseudo code anyways.
> Can't post actual code and tracebacks because the code is proprietary.
> "MyModule" is pseudo code, and i forgot the arguments, the actual code
> and errors are unimportant for this quest
On Sat, 08 Sep 2007 14:04:55 -0700, John Zenger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> In an ideal world, my IDE would do this with a red wavy line.
I can't help with your problem, but this is the first thing I turn off in
Word. It drives me _mad_.
Sorry - just had to share that.
DaveM
--
http://mail.p
You shouldn't even need the call to super in that method, a simple
'len(self)' ought to be sufficient. Note that using the list object's
append method is going to be much more efficient than handling it yourself
anyways.
There are a few problems in your call to super. First, it's a callable - it
Is there a way to import a module whose name is in a variable (read from
a configuration file for example)?
TIA
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http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Ricardo Aráoz wrote:
> Is there a way to import a module whose name is in a variable (read from
> a configuration file for example)?
pydoc __import__
Richard
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
John Zenger writes:
> In an ideal world, my IDE would do this with a red wavy line.
You didn't mention which IDE you use; however, if you use Emacs, there
is flyspell-prog-mode which does that for you (checks your spelling
"on the fly", but only within comments and strings).
Regards,
David Trudg
Gregor Horvath <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Alexander Eisenhuth schrieb:
> >
> > I'm wodering how the information hiding in python is ment. As I
> > understand there doesn't exist public / protected / private mechanism,
> > but a '_' and '__' naming convention.
> >
> > As I figured out there
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> Any cryptographer worth his salt (pun intended) would be looking to close
> that vulnerability BEFORE an attack is made public, and not just wait for
> the attack to trickle down from the NSA to the script kiddies.
Except that the NSA's rep
On-line registration is through the OOPSLA registrar
http://www.regmaster.com/conf/oopsla2007.html
APL 2007 home page
http://www.sigapl.org/apl2007.html
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http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Paul McGuire wrote:
> Well, it is an external module, but pyparsing makes this pretty
> straightforward:
>
> [snip delightful parsing]
>
Again pyparsing to the rescue :)
I have to do a parsing project in Java right now and I dearly miss
pyparsing. I explained it to the guy I'm working for, and
Lawrence D'Oliveiro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Except that the NSA's reputation has taken a dent since they failed to
> anticipate the attacks on MD5 and SHA-1.
NSA had nothing to do with MD5, and it's to NSA's credit that SHA-1
held up for as long as it did.
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http://mail.python.org/mailman/
Hi
Greets!
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Operaitons - Recruitment.
Currently we have openning in Unix/SQL/Oracle/JAVA for ISO 9001:2000/
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On Sep 8, 10:01 pm, Wildemar Wildenburger
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Again pyparsing to the rescue :)
>
> I have to do a parsing project in Java right now and I dearly miss
> pyparsing. I explained it to the guy I'm working for, and he was pretty
> impressed.
>
> Thought that might make you smi
The one thing I don't like about Python syntax is using backslashes to
continue lines. Yes, you can avoid them if you can include parentheses
somehow, but this isn't always possible.
Possible:
if (
quitting
and
len(client["to_write"]) == 0
and
>> In an ideal world, my IDE would do this with a red wavy line.
>
> You didn't mention which IDE you use; however, if you use Emacs, there
> is flyspell-prog-mode which does that for you (checks your spelling
> "on the fly", but only within comments and strings).
Same in Vim (:set spell)
HTH,
--
On Sun, 09 Sep 2007 17:16:05 +1200, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
> The one thing I don't like about Python syntax is using backslashes to
> continue lines. Yes, you can avoid them if you can include parentheses
> somehow, but this isn't always possible.
>
> Possible:
>
> […]
>
> Not possible:
>
>
Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch wrote:
> On Sun, 09 Sep 2007 17:16:05 +1200, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
>
>> The one thing I don't like about Python syntax is using backslashes to
>> continue lines. Yes, you can avoid them if you can include parentheses
>> somehow, but this isn't always possible.
>>
>> P
Hello Marco,
> hi all, I have a python program that calls a dll through ctypes
> (py2.5). In some (reproducible)
> conditions the program crashes with an error in ctypes module.
> How can I trace down the problem? I have created a debug build of
> python but I also use pyodbc
> and dateutil librar
> steps.sort(key = lambda s: s.time)
This is why attrgetter in the operator module was invented.
from operator import attrgetter
...
steps.sort(key=attrgettr("time"))
HTH,
--
Miki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://pythonwise.blogspot.com
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Paul Rubin wrote:
> Lawrence D'Oliveiro writes:
>> Except that the NSA's reputation has taken a dent since they failed to
>> anticipate the attacks on MD5 and SHA-1.
>
> NSA had nothing to do with MD5, and it's to NSA's credit that SHA-1
> held up for as long as it did.
I haven't kept up. Has any
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Stefan Behnel wrote:
> He means he has to use backslashes instead of parentheses here.
>
> Which is not true, you could easily rephrase this as:
>
> for link in GetEachRecord(
> "links",
> ):
> out.write(
> ..
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Paul Rubin wrote:
> Lawrence D'Oliveiro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> Except that the NSA's reputation has taken a dent since they failed to
>> anticipate the attacks on MD5 and SHA-1.
>
> NSA had nothing to do with MD5 ...
Nevertheless, it was their job to ant
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