En Sat, 08 Dec 2007 14:37:13 -0300, Pierre Quentel
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribió:
> I understand that there is no possible conversion from a number of
> days to a (X,Y,Z) tuple of (years,months,days), and the reverse. But
> the difference between 2 dates can be unambiguously expressed as
> (X,Y,Z
On Dec 11, 1:58 am, gsal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> If all you need to do is display a bunch of arrows, as you mention,
> the easiest thing to do might be to use Visual Python. It is
> extremely easy to use.
Another option, if your app is data-driven, is to check out the
Visualization Toolkit (
Duncan Booth wrote:
> Peter Otten <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> However, you will get into trouble if you try to run two simultaneous
>> iterations over the same LinkedList, so there is room for another
>> exercise ;)
That was a bit vague; I saw the shared _cursor attribute but didn't dig
deepe
On Mon, 10 Dec 2007 23:51:00 -0800, kettle wrote:
> On Dec 10, 6:58 pm, Peter Otten <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Well, there's also dict.setdefault()
>>
>> >>> pairs = ["ab", "ab", "ac", "bc"]
>> >>> outer = {}
>> >>> for a, b in pairs:
>>
>> ... inner = outer.setdefault(a, {})
>> ... inn
[EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit :
(Martin, please, don't top post - fixed)
>
> Peter Otten wrote:
>> MartinRinehart wrote:
>>
>>> However, here's the little tester I wrote:
>>>
>>> # t.py - testing
>>>
>>> global g
>>> g = 'global var, here'
>>>
>>> def f():
>>> print g
>>>
>>> f()
>>>
>>> It prints
sturlamolden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 9 Des, 23:34, Christian Heimes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> >http://antoniocangiano.com/2007/11/28/holy-shmoly-ruby-19-smokes-pyth
>> >...
>>
>> The Ruby developers are allowed to be proud. They were able to
>> optimize some aspects of the implemen
On Dec 9, 9:35 am, kettle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
> I'm wondering what the best practice is for creating an extensible
> dictionary-of-dictionaries in python?
>
> In perl I would just do something like:
>
> my %hash_of_hashes;
> for(my $i=0;$i<10;$i++){
> for(my $j=0;$j<10;$j++){
>
Hi people
Is there a dpap implementation for python? All I can seem to find is
perl based? (dpap is used to share photos in iphoto)
Andy
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Peter Otten <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Only if you try to modify the list from both of them.
>
> One deletion is enough to trigger the assertion:
Yes, but the assertion isn't intended to be the complete code.
>
> Or you just rule that delete(x) must occur "immediately" after x =
> next().
On 11 Dec 2007 04:14:09 GMT, Stargaming <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mon, 10 Dec 2007 16:54:08 -0800, mosi wrote:
>
> > Python matrices are usually defined with numpy scipy array or similar.
> > e.g.
> matrix1 = [[1, 2], [3, 4], [5, 6]]
> > I would like to have easier way of defining matric
xkenneth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I'll shortly be distributing a number of python applications that
> use proprietary.
That's unfortunate. Hopefully it's not too late to avoid restricting
yourself and your users in this way.
> The software is part of a much larger system and it will need to
"[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Just a few months ago, we found a few amazingly talented ninjas and
> even a few swarthy pirates. The team is doing wonderfully, and we're
> hoping to add a few more adventure-loving souls to our ranks.
For job postings, please don't use the maili
En Mon, 10 Dec 2007 16:43:15 -0300, km <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
escribió:
> Is there a way to access the classes defined in the __init__.py into the
> modules files in the directory?
> for example say i have a module (dir) M with contents __init__.py and
> a.pyand
> b.py
> a.py and b.py would lik
Hi everybody.
I hope not to be OT but this is a python problem, not a turbogears
one.
I have a problem when starting a turbogears project.
In my model.py i import an api to work with a db which imports a pyd
library.
It gives me this output:
C:\Turbogears>python start-traffic.py dev.cfg
2007-12-11
I'm getting this error whilst building simplejson-1.7.3 with "setup.py install"
on a win32 platform.
...
creating build\bdist.win32\egg\EGG-INFO
removing simplejson.egg-info\native_libs.txt
copying simplejson.egg-info\PKG-INFO -> build\bdist.win32\egg\EGG-INFO
copying simplejson.egg-info\SOUR
I am trying to get the pyTTS module working. I have Python 2.4, the
Microsodt SAPI and pyTTS-3.0.win32-py2.4.exe installed.
When I run this script:
import pyTTS
tts = pyTTS.Create()
#set the speech rate
tts.Rate = 4
#set the speech volume percentage (0-100%)
tts.Volume = 40
#get a list of all
On Dec 11, 2:03 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> PyXML seems to be long gone. Is lxml the way to go if i want to have
> xpath supported?
The libxml2dom package (which I maintain) also supports XPath and is
also based on libxml2. If you want to migrate code from using PyXML
without too much effort, i
Hey there, new Python user here.
Currently, I'm working on a project in Python for my college work, I chose
to use Python since I heard of its great advantages, now for designing GUI's
I'm using the wxPython package.
What I'm trying to do at the moment is the following;
A file directory browser
Is there a package that supports XSLT 2?
On 11/12/2007, Paul Boddie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Dec 11, 2:03 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > PyXML seems to be long gone. Is lxml the way to go if i want to have
> > xpath supported?
>
> The libxml2dom package (which I maintain) also supports
Connolly a écrit :
> Hey there, new Python user here.
>
> Currently, I'm working on a project in Python for my college work, I chose
> to use Python since I heard of its great advantages, now for designing GUI's
> I'm using the wxPython package.
> What I'm trying to do at the moment is the follo
Hi,
I'm trying to access a web service written in java from python, but it is
returning a NullPointerException. The parameter that I'm passing is somehow
not reaching the server.
Here is the code I'm using for invoking the service
import SOAPpy
from SOAPpy import SOAPProxy
import fpconst
import
kromakey a écrit :
> On 10 Dec, 19:11, Stargaming <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> On Mon, 10 Dec 2007 16:10:16 +0200, Nikos Vergas wrote:
>>
>> [snip]
>>
Problem: In the dynamic language of your choice, write a short program
that will:
1. define a list of the following user ids 42346,
On Dec 10, 8:34 pm, evenrik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Dec 7, 12:46 pm, Vinay Sajip <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > On Dec 6, 6:35 pm, evenrik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > An a redhat box I have root, apache and other normal users run code
> > > that uses theloggingmodule to write t
On 2007-12-11, Duncan Booth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> There are lots of ways to handle this. You could save a
> separate pointer for each iterator. In fact I would expect that
> to handle all the possible variations of inserting and deleting
> correctly you do need to keep all the pointers somew
On Dec 10, 5:39 am, gangesmaster <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> i've had this strange idea of using the exception's traceback (which
> holds the stack frame) to enable functional continuations, meaning,
> raise some special exception which will be caught by a reactor/
> scheduler/framework, which cou
Dear Experts,
Does anyone know how you can either make pylint "see" setattr or give it
explicit information when you do a "compile time" call to setattr?
For example, imagine that I have the following block of code
class foo:
def __init__(self):
for i in [1,2,5]:
setattr(s
I'm less confused. If someone can explain the wisdom of this design,
I'd be grateful.
If someone can explain why the following compiles successfully, I'd be
even more grateful:
def get_toks( text ):
global line_ptr, last_line
while line_ptr < last_line:
while char_ptr < len(text[l
I've been working with the source code for Trac (http://
trac.edgewall.org/) lately and have run across a bizarre problem. It
seems that all POST requests to Trac's standalone server (tracd) have
a random chance of causing the server to issue a TCP RST packet that
resets the connection.
Running T
First off let me state that I really enjoy using Python. I am a 3rd
year student and have been using python for 3 months, (thanks to
trac!). I do not consider myself an experienced or clever programmer,
but I am able to get by.
Something I love about Python is that almost everything you do can be
On Dec 11, 4:03 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> PyXML seems to be long gone. Is lxml the way to go if i want to have
> xpath supported?
Of course. Lxml proved itself as a very convenient xml & xslt
processing tool.
Dmitri
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Dec 11, 5:59 am, dfg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Breakthrough - How To Turn Your Dull Website into Money Making Website
I was surprised at how effectively the spam posting the other day,
"Jesus in the Quran" was masked and defused by a reply titled "J in
the Q". It seems this might be a simp
The code you just posted doesn't compile successfully.
However, in your code, you probably have char_ptr defined at the module level,
and you're confused because you didn't declare it as global. Am I right? My
crystal ball has a smudge on it, but I think I can still see okay.
You can still re
On Dec 11, 2007 8:23 AM, J. Clifford Dyer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The code you just posted doesn't compile successfully.
>
It *compiles* fine, but it'll raise an error when run.
> However, in your code, you probably have char_ptr defined at the module
> level, and you're confused because yo
J. Clifford Dyer a écrit :
> The code you just posted doesn't compile successfully.
>
> However, in your code, you probably have char_ptr defined at the
> module level, and you're confused because you didn't declare it as
> global. Am I right? My crystal ball has a smudge on it, but I think
> I
On Tue, Dec 11, 2007 at 08:36:54AM -0600, Chris Mellon wrote regarding Re: Dumb
newbie back in shell:
> Delivered-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Date: Tue, 11 Dec 2007 08:36:54 -0600
> From: "Chris Mellon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "python-list@python.org"
> Subject: Re: Dumb newbie back in shell
> In-R
Chris Mellon a écrit :
(snip)
> What's probably happening is that line_ptr < last_line is not true
Indeed.
> and the body of the function isn't executed at all. The unbound local
> exception is a runtime error that occurs when the local is accessed,
> not when the function is compiled.
Now sin
[EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit :
Martin, would you _please_ learn to quote properly ? top-posting and
keeping the whole text of the previous posts are two really annoying
practices. TIA
> I'm less confused. If someone can explain the wisdom of this design,
> I'd be grateful.
Since there's no disti
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> First off let me state that I really enjoy using Python. I am a 3rd
> year student and have been using python for 3 months, (thanks to
> trac!). I do not consider myself an experienced or clever programmer,
> but I am able to get by.
>
> Something I love about Python is
On 2007-12-11, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> First off let me state that I really enjoy using Python. I am a
> 3rd year student and have been using python for 3 months,
> (thanks to trac!). I do not consider myself an experienced or
> clever programmer, but I am able to get by.
>
>
QOTW: "I wrote 20 short programs in Python yesterday. It was wonderful.
Perl, I'm leaving you." Randall Munroe
title attribute embedded in source of http://xkcd.com/353/
"[M]ost undergraduate degrees in computer science these days are basically
Java vocational training." - Alan Kay
eliss wrote:
> I'm using dl.call() to call a C function in an external library. It's
> working great so far except for one function, which returns an
> unsigned int in the C version. However, in python it returns a signed
> value to me. How can I get the unsigned value from this? I haven't
> brushe
Bret wrote:
> Does anyone know of a package that can be used to "fix" bad formatting
> in Python code? I don't mean actual errors, just instances where
> someone did things that violate the style guide and render the code
> harder to read.
>
> If nothing exists, I'll start working on some sed scri
On Dec 11, 3:10 am, Duncan Booth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> sturlamolden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On 9 Des, 23:34, Christian Heimes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> >> >http://antoniocangiano.com/2007/11/28/holy-shmoly-ruby-19-smokes-pyth
> >> >...
>
> >> The Ruby developers are allowed to be
On Dec 11, 2007 8:51 AM, Bruno Desthuilliers
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Chris Mellon a écrit :
> (snip)
> > What's probably happening is that line_ptr < last_line is not true
>
> Indeed.
>
> > and the body of the function isn't executed at all. The unbound local
> > exception is a runtime error
Neil Cerutti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> If you put an instrumented iterator through, say, reversed or
> sorted, you'd lose the ability to use it to modify the list
I think that is kind of irrelevant. reversed doesn't take an iterator, it
requires a sequence and returns an iterator. sorted will
Larry Bates wrote:
> eliss wrote:
>> I'm using dl.call() to call a C function in an external library. It's
>> working great so far except for one function, which returns an
>> unsigned int in the C version. However, in python it returns a signed
>> value to me. How can I get the unsigned value fro
On 2007-12-11, Duncan Booth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Neil Cerutti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> If you put an instrumented iterator through, say, reversed or
>> sorted, you'd lose the ability to use it to modify the list
>
> I think that is kind of irrelevant. reversed doesn't take an
> iterato
Chris Mellon a écrit :
> On Dec 11, 2007 8:51 AM, Bruno Desthuilliers
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Chris Mellon a écrit :
>> (snip)
>>> What's probably happening is that line_ptr < last_line is not true
>> Indeed.
>>
>>> and the body of the function isn't executed at all. The unbound local
>>>
Hi.
Is it safe to use PyErr_NoMemory in a multi sub-interpreters environment?
I have some doubts since PyErr_NoMemory uses a global variable:
PyExc_MemoryErrorInst
Thanks Manlio Perillo
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Leo 4.4.5 final is available at:
http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=3458&package_id=29106
Leo 4.4.5 fixes several long-delayed bug fixes and adds several new
features.
Leo is a text editor, data organizer, project manager and much more. See:
http://webpages.charter.net/edreamle
On 11 Des, 10:10, Duncan Booth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> @memoize(3)
> def fib(n):
>if n == 0 or n == 1:
> return n
>else:
> return fib(n-1) + fib(n-2)
The thing I would do is:
def fibo(n):
while 1:
try:
return fibo.seq[n]
except AttributeE
Is there any way that I can find the path of the main .py file of my
application?
For example, I have an application with some resources which are in a
subdirectory:
myPythonApp.py
/resources
image1
image2
etc.
If i just do a call to os.getcwd() I get back
I'm trying to find the contents of an XML tag. Nothing fancy. I don't
care about parsing child tags or anything. I just want to get the raw
text. Here's my script:
import re
data = """
here's some text!
here's some text!
here's some text!
"""
tagName = 'div'
pattern = re.compile('<%(tag
import sys
if sys.platform == "win32":
import os, msvcrt
msvcrt.setmode(sys.stdout.fileno(), os.O_BINARY)
"Jack" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Just want to make sure, how exactly are you doing that?
>
>> Thanks for the reply, Jack. I tried setting mode to
> I also started to ponder about the "'do
> something' if 'true' else 'do this'", and pondered if perhaps
> this statement could do with the including of the keyword do.
Python has support for this in versions >= 2.5:
>>> a = range(0, 5)
>>> b = range(5, 8)
>>> min(a) if sum(a) < sum(b) else min(
> Is what I'm trying to do possible with Python's Regex library? Is
> there an error in my Regex?
Search for '*?' on http://docs.python.org/lib/re-syntax.html.
To get around the greedy single match, you can add a question mark
after the asterisk in the 'content' portion the the markup. This
caus
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Paul McGuire <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>On Dec 11, 5:59 am, dfg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>> Breakthrough - How To Turn Your Dull Website into Money Making Website
>
>I was surprised at how effectively the spam posting the other day,
>"Jesus in the Quran" was m
On Dec 10, 11:07 pm, Stargaming <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mon, 10 Dec 2007 19:27:43 -0800, George Sakkis wrote:
> > On Dec 10, 2:11 pm, Stargaming <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >> On Mon, 10 Dec 2007 16:10:16 +0200, Nikos Vergas wrote:
>
> >> [snip]
>
> >> >> Problem: In the dynamic language o
On Dec 11, 10:08 am, "ron.longo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Is there any way that I can find the path of the main .py file of my
> application?
>
> For example, I have an application with some resources which are in a
> subdirectory:
>
> myPythonApp.py
> /resources
> image1
>
I'm having difficulty getting the following code to work. All I want
to do is remove the '0:00:00' from the end of each line. Here is part
of the original file:
3,3,"Dyspepsia NOS",9/12/2003 0:00:00
4,3,"OA of lower leg",9/12/2003 0:00:00
5,4,"Cholera NOS",9/12/2003 0:00:00
6,4,"Open wound of ea
On Dec 11, 4:05 pm, Chris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm trying to find the contents of an XML tag. Nothing fancy. I don't
> care about parsing child tags or anything. I just want to get the raw
> text. Here's my script:
>
> import re
>
> data = """
>
>
>
> here's some text!
>
>
> here's som
barronmo wrote:
> I'm having difficulty getting the following code to work. All I want
> to do is remove the '0:00:00' from the end of each line. Here is part
> of the original file:
>
> 3,3,"Dyspepsia NOS",9/12/2003 0:00:00
> 4,3,"OA of lower leg",9/12/2003 0:00:00
> 5,4,"Cholera NOS",9/12/200
Some usage of __file__ will always get what you want in various situations:
print __file__
print modulename.__file__
print os.getcwd() + "/" + __file__
Rick Dooling wrote:
> On Dec 11, 10:08 am, "ron.longo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> Is there any way that I can find the path of t
Hi John:
Thanks for responding.
>Look at your file using
> print repr(open('c:/test/spanish.txt','rb').read())
>If you see 'a\xf1o' then use charset="windows-1252"
I did this ... no change ... still see 'a\xf1o'
>else if you see 'a\xc3\xb1o' then use charset="utf-8" else
>Based on your
Nope, maybe I'm not explaining myself well.
When I do os.getenv('HOME') I get back None.
According to the docs, 'HOME' is the user's home directory on some
platforms. Which is not what I want.
What I want is the directory in which an application's main .py file
resides. That is, when I type:
http://cheap-computers-new.blogspot.com
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Dec 11, 11:41 am, garage <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Is what I'm trying to do possible with Python's Regex library? Is
> > there an error in my Regex?
>
> Search for '*?' onhttp://docs.python.org/lib/re-syntax.html.
>
> To get around the greedy single match, you can add a question mark
> afte
I have 2 python scripts: examples of a producer and a filter,
respectively:
#! /usr/bin/env python
import sys, time
if __name__ == "__main__":
while True:
sys.stdout.write("hello.\r\n")
time.sleep(0.01)
#! /usr/bin/env python
import sys
Tomorrow is block comment day. I want them to nest. I think the reason
that they don't routinely nest is that it's a lot of trouble to code.
Two questions:
1) Given a start and end location (line position and char index) in an
array of lines of text, how do you Pythonly extract the whole block
com
On Dec 11, 7:25 pm, barronmo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm having difficulty getting the following code to work. All I want
> to do is remove the '0:00:00' from the end of each line. Here is part
> of the original file:
>
> 3,3,"Dyspepsia NOS",9/12/2003 0:00:00
> 4,3,"OA of lower leg",9/12/200
re top posting
Thanks for explaining. google groups hides the quoted text, so I
didn't see it.
Bruno Desthuilliers wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] a �crit :
>
> Martin, would you _please_ learn to quote properly ? top-posting and
> keeping the whole text of the previous posts are two really annoying
> This result is a copy of "ProblemList" without any changes made. What
> am I doing wrong? Thanks for any help.
rstrip doesn't work the way you think it does
>>> help(str.rstrip)
Help on method_descriptor:
rstrip(...)
S.rstrip([chars]) -> string or unicode
Return a copy of the strin
"bulgaro" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
| I hope not to be OT but this is a python problem, not a turbogears one.
What you have shown is not a crash but a planned shutdown in response to an
error. There is a difference ;-). It is almost certainly not a problem
Chris wrote:
> On Dec 11, 11:41 am, garage <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> > Is what I'm trying to do possible with Python's Regex library? Is
>> > there an error in my Regex?
>>
>> Search for '*?' onhttp://docs.python.org/lib/re-syntax.html.
>>
>> To get around the greedy single match, you can add
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Bruno Desthuilliers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Lou Pecora a écrit :
> > In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> > Bruno Desthuilliers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >
> >>>Thus: close;
> >>>could replace close();
>
> *Please* give proper attribution. I'd
Jeremy C B Nicoll a écrit :
> Bruno Desthuilliers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>>Jeremy C B Nicoll a écrit :
>>
>>>Figuring out how IDLE works is a bit beyond me at this stage.
>>
>>Did you try out, or is it just an a priori ?
>
>
> Sort of, no and yes...
>
> A few weeks ago I started tryi
On Dec 11, 1:05 pm, dwhall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> filters. Is there any way to write the filter to make this work?
>
> thanks,
>
> !!Dean
turn off python buffering & it should work.
export PYTHONUNBUFFERED=t
n'joy
-N
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
[EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit :
> Tomorrow is block comment day. I want them to nest. I think the reason
> that they don't routinely nest is that it's a lot of trouble to code.
Indeed.
> Two questions:
>
> 1) Given a start and end location (line position and char index) in an
> array of lines of tex
How do i build python 2.5.1 from source using MSVC 2005?
Are there instructions on doing this.
thanks
black_13
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I'm not entirely sure what's going on here, but I suspect it's related
to my general lack of knowledge of the python import internals.
Here's the setup:
module: tester.py:
-
import imp
def loader(mname, mpath):
fp, pathname, description = imp.find_module(mname,[mpath])
tr
I need to do a non-standard DNS server in Python. This
is for a spam blacklist type DNS server, not for IP lookup.
"dnspython" seems to be client side only. Oak DNS is
deprecated. Suggestions?
John Nagle
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi,
I'm struggling to use the python in-built csv module, and I must say
I'm less than satisfied. Apart from being rather poorly documented, I
find it especially cumbersome to use, and also rather limited. What I
dislike more is that it seems working by *rows* instead than by
*columns*.
So I have
2007/12/11, massimo s. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Hi,
>
> I'm struggling to use the python in-built csv module, and I must say
> I'm less than satisfied. Apart from being rather poorly documented, I
> find it especially cumbersome to use, and also rather limited. What I
> dislike more is that it seems
sturlamolden wrote:
> On 10 Des, 23:49, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Aahz) wrote:
>
>> "Premature optimization is the root of all evil in programming."
>> --C.A.R. Hoare (often misattributed to Knuth, who was himself quoting
>> Hoare)
We're ten years into Python, and it's still a naive interpreter.
It'
sturlamolden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On 10 Des, 23:49, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Aahz) wrote:
>
>> "Premature optimization is the root of all evil in programming."
>> --C.A.R. Hoare (often misattributed to Knuth, who was himself quoting
>> Hoare)
>
> Oh, I was Hoare? Thanks. Anyway, it doesn't chan
Hi,
Is the tuple comparison brooked in python ?!?!?
Thanks.
Try this and you will see funny things:
# -*- coding: cp1252 -*-
import random
import csv
import struct
import array
def gera_string(res):
# acampo3
acampo3=((0,5,'muito reduzidos'),(6,20,'reduzidos'),
(21,32,'satisfa
On Tue, 11 Dec 2007 11:10:52 -0800, John Nagle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I need to do a non-standard DNS server in Python. This
>is for a spam blacklist type DNS server, not for IP lookup.
>"dnspython" seems to be client side only. Oak DNS is
>deprecated. Suggestions?
>
There's Twisted Nam
On Mon, 10 Dec 2007 19:25:53 -0800, farsheed wrote:
> On Dec 11, 5:03 am, "Whizzer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Is OReilly's Learning Python a good place to start learning to program?
>> I've been told Python is a good first language.
>>
>> Thanks for the advice.
>
> I learn it from python own
On Dec 11, 2007 1:25 PM, John Nagle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> sturlamolden wrote:
> > On 10 Des, 23:49, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Aahz) wrote:
> >
> >> "Premature optimization is the root of all evil in programming."
> >> --C.A.R. Hoare (often misattributed to Knuth, who was himself quoting
> >> Hoare)
ron.longo wrote:
> Nope, maybe I'm not explaining myself well.
>
> When I do os.getenv('HOME') I get back None.
>
> According to the docs, 'HOME' is the user's home directory on some
> platforms. Which is not what I want.
>
> What I want is the directory in which an application's main .py file
On Dec 12, 4:46 am, "weheh" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi John:
> Thanks for responding.
>
> >Look at your file using
>
> > print repr(open('c:/test/spanish.txt','rb').read())
>
> >If you see 'a\xf1o' then use charset="windows-1252"
>
> I did this ... no change ... still see 'a\xf1o'
So it's
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On 2007-12-11, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Is the tuple comparison brooked in python ?!?!?
No.
> Thanks.
You're welcome.
> Try this and you will see funny things:
No thanks.
Maybe you could to post a smaller, easier to read example of
what you think is broken?
--
I'm dealing with several large items that have been zipped up to
get quite impressive compression. However, uncompressed, they're
large enough to thrash my memory to swap and in general do bad
performance-related things. I'm trying to figure out how to
produce a file-like iterator out of the
"Joe Goldthwaite" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> To do a range(100)
>
> 1. Allocate a big chunk of memory
> 2. Fill the memory with the range of integers
> 3. Setup an index into the memory array
> 4. Every time the program asks for the next item, bump
> the mem
Neil Cerutti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Anyhow, implementing linked lists in Python is not challenging, but
> they don't work well with Python iterators, which aren't suitable
> for a linked list's purposes--so you have to give up the happy-joy
> for loop syntax in favor of Python's frowny-sad
On 2007-12-10, sturlamolden wrote:
> We have seen several examples that 'dynamic' and 'interpreted'
> languages can be quite efficient: There is an implementation of Common
> Lisp - CMUCL - that can compete with Fortran in efficiency for
> numerical computing. There are also versions of Lisp than
sturlamolden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On 10 Des, 23:54, Bruno Desthuilliers
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> Or a lack of time and money. Lisp is one of the older programming
>> languages around, and at a time had BigBucks(tm) invested on it to try
>> and make it practically usable.
>
> Yes.
Duncan Booth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> I do have one last question about a doubly-linked list. Would you
>> have to perform any tricks (del statements) to get the garbage
>> collector to collect every node, or will it just work?
>
> It should just work.
Fortunately that's trivial to verify:
Is there a module available in the standard library, for Python 2.4
running on Windows, like "crypt" for Python 2.4 running on *nix
machines?
I need to store database passwords in a Python 2.4 script, but
obviously don't want them in clear text.
I'm looking for a reasonable level of security. Wha
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