Hello!
i stumbled on this situation, that is if I decode some string, below
just the empty string, using the mcbs encoding, it succeeds, but if I
try to encode it back with the same encoding it surprisingly fails
with a LookupError. This seems like something to be corrected?
$ python
Python 2.5.1
> i stumbled on this situation, that is if I decode some string, below
> just the empty string, using the mcbs encoding, it succeeds, but if I
> try to encode it back with the same encoding it surprisingly fails
> with a LookupError. This seems like something to be corrected?
Indeed - in your code
On Jan 1, 4:18 pm, John Machin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Jan 2, 10:32 am, hubritic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > The data I have has a fixed number of characters per field, so I could
> > split it up that way, but wouldn't that defeat the purpose of using a
> > parser?
>
> The purpose of a
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Can anyone elaborate on how 'os.tmpfile()' works? I was thinking it would
> create some sort of temporary file I could quickly add text too and then when
> I was finished would automatically get rid of it. Here's my questions:
Please don't use os.tmpfile(). It's not
On Jan 2, 9:30 am, "Martin v. Löwis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Use "mbcs" in the second call, not "mcbs".
Ooops, sorry about that, when i switched to test it in the interpreter
I mistyped "mbcs" with "mcbs". But remark I did it consistently ;-)
I.e. it was still teh same encoding, even if mayb
On Jan 1, 5:32 pm, hubritic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I am trying to parse data that looks like this:
>
> IDENTIFIER TIMESTAMP T C RESOURCE_NAME DESCRIPTION
> 2BFA76F6 1208230607 T S SYSPROC SYSTEM
> SHUTDOWN BY USER
> A6D1BD62 1215230807 I
> H
On Wed, 02 Jan 2008 15:17:54 +1100, Ben Finney wrote:
> Torsten Bronger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> [...] the width of a tab is nowhere defined. It really is a matter of
>> the editor's settings.
>
> RFC 678 "Standard File Formats"
> http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc678.txt>:
Dated 19 December
Thanks for the response.
The section of the email is an actual message fragment. The first blank line
that
appears in the message is immediately after the 1st
' boundary="m.182DA3C.BE6A21A3"'
There are no blank line prior to this in the message.
In the example that was snipped from
On Jan 2, 7:45 pm, mario <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Jan 2, 9:30 am, "Martin v. Löwis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Use "mbcs" in the second call, not "mcbs".
>
> Ooops, sorry about that, when i switched to test it in the interpreter
> I mistyped "mbcs" with "mcbs". But remark I did it cons
Hi
have a look at these demos (includes trajectory etc) with VPython
http://showmedo.com/videos/series?name=pythonThompsonVPythonSeries
best wishes,
KM
--
On Jan 2, 2008 5:3
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
-=. harassment at work -=
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Once I stopped watching television and listening to the radio. at the end of
1990, "they" had to find other ways of committing abuses. So. they took what
must be for them a tried and tested route; they get at. you by subve
On Jan 2, 8:44 pm, John Machin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> (1) Try these at the Python interactive prompt:
>
> unicode('', 'latin1')
Also use those 6 cases to check out the difference in behaviour
between unicode(x, y) and x.decode(y)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Jan 1, 8:12 pm, Scott David Daniels <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> We accept this seems natural to you. You don't seem to understand why
> others might not think so. I fear this is the kind of thing that
> separates programmers into two classes: the smart ones that can set up
> the chains, and
On Dec 30 2007, 12:27 am, Steven D'Aprano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
cybersource.com.au> wrote:
> In the absence of a better solution, I'm very comfortable with keeping
> the behaviour as is. Unfortunately, there's no good solution in Python to
> providing functions with local storage that persists across
On Jan 2, 10:44 am, John Machin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Two things for you to do:
>
> (1) Try these at the Python interactive prompt:
>
> unicode('', 'latin1')
> unicode('', 'mbcs')
> unicode('', 'raboof')
> unicode('abc', 'latin1')
> unicode('abc', 'mbcs')
> unicode('abc', 'raboof')
$ pyth
On Jan 1, 5:38 pm, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Tue, 01 Jan 2008 04:21:29 -0800,Shriphaniwrote:
> > On Jan 1, 4:28 pm, Piet van Oostrum <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >> >Shriphani<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> (S) wrote:
> >> >S> I tried pyPdf for this and decided to get the pag
Hello,
Here is sample of my simple script with wxpython and modules:
subprocess,threading, directpython...
Code sample:
import wx
import wx.aui
app=wx.App()
frame=wx.Frame(None,title="New project")
#There is also part with wx.aui
frame.Show()
app.MainLoop()
After a few minutes wx applica
On Jan 2, 9:57 pm, mario <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Jan 2, 10:44 am, John Machin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Two things for you to do:
>
> > (1) Try these at the Python interactive prompt:
>
> > unicode('', 'latin1')
> > unicode('', 'mbcs')
> > unicode('', 'raboof')
> > unicode('abc',
On Wed, 02 Jan 2008 03:24:56 -0800, vedrandekovic wrote:
> Here is sample of my simple script with wxpython and modules:
> subprocess,threading, directpython...
Are you accessing the GUI from threads?
Ciao,
Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-l
On 2 sij, 12:29, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wed, 02 Jan 2008 03:24:56 -0800, vedrandekovic wrote:
> > Here is sample of my simple script with wxpython and modules:
> > subprocess,threading, directpython...
>
> Are you accessing the GUI from threads?
>
> Ciao,
>
Hi all,
My kids have a bunch of games that have to be run from CD (on Windows
XP). Now they're not very careful with them, and so I have a plan.
I've downloaded a utility (Daemon Tools) which allows me to mount and
unmount virtual CD drives onto an ISO image. This works well, but I
want to wrap th
On Jan 2, 12:28 pm, John Machin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Jan 2, 9:57 pm, mario <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Do not know what the implications of encoding according to "ANSI
> > codepage (CP_ACP)" are.
>
> Neither do I. YAGNI (especially on darwin) so don't lose any sleep
> over it.
>
> >
Hi all
I am trying to port Scribes to Windows, but I could not find a package
named dbus-python for windows. There is a windbus but it not for Python, so how could
I install dbus module for Windows Python 2.5 ?
ps Is there anyone trying to port Scribes to Windows?
--
http://mail.python.org/mail
Two little things I may like added.
1) A fast and memory efficient way to create an array.array at a
certain size.
At the moment I can see some ways to do it:
from array import array
from itertools import repeat
a = array("l", xrange(n)) #1
a = array("l", [0]*n)) #2
a = array("l", repeat(0, n)) #
hi.. i want get playtime of movie files ( avi , mpeg , wav , mov
etc... )
how to get ??
please help me ..
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
-On [20080102 13:11], Ant ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
>2) Is there a module out there for extracting icons from a Windows
>exe?
This might be a good start:
http://groups.google.com/group/comp.lang.python/browse_thread/thread/be829b454c945a89
--
Jeroen Ruigrok van der Werven / asmodai
-On [20080102 13:41], est ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
>I am trying to port Scribes to Windows, but I could not find a package
>named dbus-python for windows. There is a windbus sourceforge.net/projects/windbus/> but it not for Python, so how could
>I install dbus module for Window
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On 2 sij, 12:29, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> On Wed, 02 Jan 2008 03:24:56 -0800, vedrandekovic wrote:
>> > Here is sample of my simple script with wxpython and modules:
>> > subprocess,threading, directpython...
>>
>> Are you accessing the
I am not going to compile anything like that :) and I only need
Windows library for dbus-python
ps Windows source code is here
https://windbus.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/windbus/trunk/
On Jan 2, 8:44 pm, Jeroen Ruigrok van der Werven <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
nomine.org> wrote:
> -On [20080
How to?
I couldn't find anything except EVT_ENTER_WINDOW that didn't work.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
SMALLp wrote:
> Hy!
>
> I have many small panels with text and I want do bind wx.EVT_LEFT_DOWN
> when clicked on panel, but i need to bind that in parent class. So I
> have instance of that small panel and when i bind it efects only part of
> small panel where is no text.
>
>
>
> import wx
>
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> yes, so what's the problem?
http://wxwidgets.org/manuals/stable/wx_wxthreadoverview.html
| If you do decide to use threads in your application, it is
| strongly recommended that no more than one thread calls GUI
| functions. The thread sample shows that it is possible f
> mario <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> (M) wrote:
>M> $ python
>M> Python 2.5.1 (r251:54869, Apr 18 2007, 22:08:04)
>M> [GCC 4.0.1 (Apple Computer, Inc. build 5367)] on darwin
>M> Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
> unicode('', 'mbcs')
>M> u''
> unicode('abc',
Steven D'Aprano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Wed, 02 Jan 2008 15:17:54 +1100, Ben Finney wrote:
>
> > Torsten Bronger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >
> >> [...] the width of a tab is nowhere defined. It really is a matter of
> >> the editor's settings.
> >
> > RFC 678 "Standard File Formats
I read a few things about this on the web, and i still don't get the
difference between cloud computing and grid computing...
It looks like the same.
Nikolas
On Jan 2, 2008 3:46 AM, PatrickMinnesota <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Jan 1, 7:12 pm, Neil Hodgson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > C
> It's a file. You read strings from it and write strings to it. It
> isn't a string itself. Given that what you're trying to do doesn't make
> any sense, it's hard to know where to begin to identify what's confusing
> you.
> --
> Erik Max Francis
Erik, I am going to be displaying sections
On Jan 2, 5:24 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Here is sample of my simple script with wxpython and modules:
> subprocess,threading, directpython...
>
> Code sample:
>
> import wx
> import wx.aui
> app=wx.App()
> frame=wx.Frame(None,title="New project")
>
> #There is also part with wx
Sorry for the delay in my response. New Year's Eve and moving
apartment
> - Where the data come from (I mean: are your data in Excel already
> when you get them)?
> - If your primary source of data is the Excel file, how do you read
> data from the Excel file to Python (I mean did you solve this
On Jan 2, 6:55 am, SMALLp <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> How to?
>
> I couldn't find anything except EVT_ENTER_WINDOW that didn't work.
I use wx.EVT_MOTION, which you would have found had you googled for
"wxpython mouse events". The first result is:
http://www.wxpython.org/docs/api/wx.MouseEvent-cl
Jair Trejo wrote:
> I'm doing some image processing in PIL, and I want to
> display the results in a GTK window using PyCairo, so
> I create a Cairo image surface from the PIL Image like
> this:
> data
> mfile = StringIO.StringIO()
> final.save(mfile, format="PNG")
> ima =
Hello Guys,
I'm having a little trouble modifying my logging so that the log files are
rotated. I'm using the standard python logging module and can find some
decent documentation on how to create and add a rotatingFileHandler to my
logger but I've been unable to find out how to disable the sta
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> Fredrik, if you're reading this, I'm curious what your reason is. I don't
> have an opinion on whether you should or shouldn't treat files and
> strings the same way. Over to you...
as Diez shows, it's all about use cases.
and as anyone who's used my libraries or read
Hello guys,
I know this is not the right place for asking about this but i am sure some
of you must have an idea about this.
I have a bit knowledge about networking and protocols. I would like to know
what do we actually mean by "Bandwidth". As in if a person is allowed to
download stuff of about 4
Aaron Watters wrote: (from a gmail account)
> So cloud computing is java diskless workstations warmed over but less
> flexible?
>
> I'm having trouble understanding why people would want
> to buy in to this.
Why do you like gmail - since you appear to use it? (I can think of several
possibilities
-On [20080102 16:00], Sunil Ghai ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
>I know this is not the right place for asking about this but i am sure some of
>you must have an idea about this.
The networking community would be more appropriate, methinks.
>I would like to know what do we actuall
> I must admit I feel a hint of amusement though at your comment above, when
> it's sent from precisely the sort of setup you appear bemused by - since
> you appear to have already bought into it without realising ! :-D
Ok, so if we include yahoo mail and gmail in "cloud computing" then I
guess
u
On 2008-01-02, Ant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I've downloaded a utility (Daemon Tools) which allows me to mount and
> unmount virtual CD drives onto an ISO image.
[...]
> 1) Is there a module out there for extracting files from an ISO?
Why not just mount them and then use the normal OS file
o
On Jan 2, 6:39 am, "Geon." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> hi.. i want get playtime of movie files ( avi , mpeg , wav , mov
> etc... )
>
> how to get ??
>
> please help me ..
Take a look at PyMedia: http://pymedia.org/
Mike
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I spent some time working on a skill resume, the kind of resume
college students put together and realized, I am not in college and
everything I learned was self-taught. Of course I would like some real
world achievements but don't consider throw-away code an achievement
and am failing to really se
On Jan 2, 9:59 am, vbgunz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I spent some time working on a skill resume, the kind of resume
> college students put together and realized, I am not in college and
> everything I learned was self-taught. Of course I would like some real
> world achievements but don't consid
[bearophileH]
>
> 1) A fast and memory efficient way to create an array.array at a
> certain size.
> At the moment I can see some ways to do it:
>
> from array import array
> from itertools import repeat
> a = array("l", repeat(0, n)) #3
. . .
> - #3 interacts badly with Psyco (Psyco doesn't diges
Hi All,
So i'm working with the WITSML standard, which is a pretty
massive standard defined in XML for the transfer of oilfield data.
There are a ton of XSD files for defining and checking all data in the
WITSML format. I'd like to be able to easily create XML based on the
types defined by t
-On [20080102 18:21], xkenneth ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> So i'm working with the WITSML standard, which is a pretty
>massive standard defined in XML for the transfer of oilfield data.
I cannot answer (yet) the question of generating XML data from an XSD. But for
writing out
On Jan 2, 2008 8:56 AM, Fredrik Lundh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Steven D'Aprano wrote:
>
> > Fredrik, if you're reading this, I'm curious what your reason is. I don't
> > have an opinion on whether you should or shouldn't treat files and
> > strings the same way. Over to you...
>
> as Diez shows
Thanks a lot Martin and Marc for the really great explanations! I was
wondering if it would be reasonable to imagine a utility that will
determine whether, for a given encoding, two byte strings would be
equivalent. But I think such a utility will require *extensive*
knowledge about many bizarritie
Hi,
I used code similar to the one at
http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/python/2006/02/09/ai_decision_trees.html in
order to build an ID3 decision tree using python. I obviously do not want to
rebuild this tree every time i need to use it! so i tried to save it using
pickle, after building it:
>from cP
Ant wrote in news:34a84caa-5387-40a2-a808-
[EMAIL PROTECTED] in comp.lang.python:
[snip]
>
> So I have two questions really:
>
> 1) Is there a module out there for extracting files from an ISO?
There are command line programs that can do this:
http://cdrecord.berlios.de/old/private/cdrecord
On Jan 2, 9:33 am, Aaron Watters <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I must admit I feel a hint of amusement though at your comment above, when
> > it's sent from precisely the sort of setup you appear bemused by - since
> > you appear to have already bought into it without realising ! :-D
>
> Ok, so if
> > De: Fredrik Lundh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> A: python-list@python.org
> Fecha: Wed, 02 Jan 2008 15:39:11 +0100
> Asunto: Re: PyCairo, PIL and StringIO
>
> Jair Trejo wrote:
>
> > I'm doing some image processing in PIL, and I want
> to
> > display the results in a GTK window using PyCairo,
> so
>
> > De: Fredrik Lundh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> A: python-list@python.org
> Fecha: Wed, 02 Jan 2008 15:39:11 +0100
> Asunto: Re: PyCairo, PIL and StringIO
>
> Jair Trejo wrote:
>
> > I'm doing some image processing in PIL, and I want
> to
> > display the results in a GTK window using PyCairo,
> so
>
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Erik, I am going to be displaying sections of text in the Terminal Window on
> OS X.
> I wanted to format the text in a specific way and thought it might be quicker
> to
> output all the text to a temporary file that I could quickly read sections
> from instead
>
Thanks for anyone who takes the time to read this. If I posted to the
wrong list, I apologize and you can disregard.
I need help with a script to pull data from a postgres database. I'm ok
with the database connection just not sure how to parse the data to get
the results I need.
I'm running Py
"PatrickMinnesota" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
| I would say that the biggest difference between what people have been
| doing
| for decades and what is now being referred to as 'cloud computing' is
| the applications.
Having welcomed the shift from timeshare to d
> Thanks a lot Martin and Marc for the really great explanations! I was
> wondering if it would be reasonable to imagine a utility that will
> determine whether, for a given encoding, two byte strings would be
> equivalent.
But that is much easier to answer:
s1.decode(enc) == s2.decode(enc)
A
> Do not know what the implications of encoding according to "ANSI
> codepage (CP_ACP)" are. Windows only seems clear, but why does it only
> complain when decoding a non-empty string (or when encoding the empty
> unicode string) ?
It has no implications for this issue here. CP_ACP is a Microsoft
xkenneth schrieb:
> Hi All,
>
> So i'm working with the WITSML standard, which is a pretty
> massive standard defined in XML for the transfer of oilfield data.
> There are a ton of XSD files for defining and checking all data in the
> WITSML format. I'd like to be able to easily create XML b
Hello,
Does anyone have experience using cx_Oracle to call a stored procedure
that inserts to a clob field? We have done this successfully via
straight SQL, but we are at a loss on how to do the same insert using
a stored procedure call. Any assistance would be much appreciated.
Thanks.
Jason
-
Hello list,
I've been looking for a way to explicitly disable the use of proxies with
urllib2, no matter what the environment dictates. Unfortunately I can't find
a way in the documentation, and reading the source leads me to believe that
something like the following does the job:
req.set_pr
First of all, thank you Raymond for your answer, and a happy new year
to you and to all the Python group :-)
Raymond:
>#3 is a fine choice. It is memory efficient -- the repeat() itertool takes-up
>only a few bytes. It doesn't need psyco, you already have to fast C routines
>talking to each ot
Dimitrios Apostolou <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hello list,
>
> I've been looking for a way to explicitly disable the use of proxies with
> urllib2, no matter what the environment dictates. Unfortunately I can't find
> a way in the documentation, and reading the source leads me to believe tha
Israel Carr wrote:
> Thanks for anyone who takes the time to read this. If I posted to the
> wrong list, I apologize and you can disregard.
>
> I need help with a script to pull data from a postgres database. I'm ok
> with the database connection just not sure how to parse the data to get
> the
Hi all,
I'm working on a cgi script that zips up files and presents the zip
file to the user for download. It works fine except for the fact that
I have to overwrite the file using the same filename because I'm
unable to delete it after it's downloaded. The reason for this is
because after sending
[Raymond]
> >#3 is a fine choice. It is memory efficient -- the repeat() itertool
> >takes-up only a few bytes. It doesn't need psyco, you already have to fast
> >C routines talking to each other without having to go through the
> >interpreter loop.<
[bearophile]
> In my code I have found oth
Is there any way to print the docstring of the including module? I'd
like to be able to do something like the following
file one.py:
"some docstring"
include two
file two.py:
from magicmodule import getincluder
print getincluder().__doc__
Running one.py would print the docstring.
Thanks!
Bu
> "Raymond" == Raymond Hettinger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Raymond> * in most apps (except for sparse arrays), the initialization time
Raymond> for an array is dominated by the time spent actually doing
Raymond> something useful with the array (iow, this is an odd place to be
Raymond> optimiz
Raymond:
>though you have to be very careful about what you measure, how you measure it,
>that the system state hasn't changed between measurements, and how your
>interpret the results).<
Right. This is part of the list of things they teach you to care of
when you want to make experiments in bi
Hello everyone,
I am writing a program with twisted and dbus and got a such problem.
If i run the code as
$python local_proxy.py
There is an error like this:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "local_proxy.py", line 608, in
reactor.listenTCP(143, factory)
File "/usr/lib/python2.5/si
> So the data comes in as a long list. I'm dealing with some
> information on various countries with 6 pieces of information to
> pivot. Just to make it simple it's like a video store database. The
> data is like [Country, Category, Sub Category, Film Title, Director,
> Number of Copies]. data
I have a beta ide that I stold for shed skin and bcx basic available.
currently it is set up to compile just from one directory.. It is
available http://dexrow.blogspot.com/2008/01/bcx-with-cr-editor.html
It could use a much better script and I would be glad to hear
suggestions.
--
http://mail.py
On Jan 2, 4:52 pm, bukzor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Is there any way to print the docstring of the including module? I'd
> like to be able to do something like the following
>
> file one.py:
>
> "some docstring"
> include two
>
> file two.py:
> from magicmodule import getincluder
> print getincl
On Jan 3, 7:50 am, jwwest <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I'm working on a cgi script that zips up files and presents the zip
> file to the user for download. It works fine except for the fact that
> I have to overwrite the file using the same filename because I'm
> unable to delete it aft
Hi,
I have several machines running Linux (mostly fedora6) and Windows
(mostly XP). I'm thinking of using easy_install to create as uniform
an environment as possible for all of them. Cloning the environment,
to put it another way.
Is there a good example somewhere showing how to do this? I'm ne
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>2) When I use MatchObjects I have to look at the docs to remember the
>difference between group() and groups() etc. So I suggest to add a
>__getitem__ method to MatchObject, so this:
>
>mo[3]
>
>Equals to:
>
>mo.group(3)
Patches are wo
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Terry Reedy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>2. yes, cost. University mainframes cost $s/minute. I remember
>blowing about $200 due to a misplaced comma or something in a
>statistical analysis setup. So it was cost-effective (and rather
>liberating) to spend $1 o
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Aaron Watters <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>Ok, so if we include yahoo mail and gmail in "cloud computing" then I
>guess usenet is also cloud computing.
Usenet actually is a good example of cloud computing, but only at the
article distribution level. Netnews clien
On Jan 2, 8:56 pm, Justin Ezequiel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> On Jan 3, 7:50 am, jwwest <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Hi all,
>
> > I'm working on a cgi script that zips up files and presents the zip
> > file to the user for download. It works fine except for the fact that
> > I have to ov
On Jan 3, 1:35 pm, jwwest <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thanks! That worked like an absolute charm.
>
> Just a question though. I'm curious as to why you have to use the
> msvcrt bit on Windows. If I were to port my app to *NIX, would I need
> to do anything similar?
>
> - James
not needed for *NIX
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Hi,
Im trying to implement the logic from
http://www.hypothetic.org/docs/msn/general/http_connections.php to a
simple python code using urllib2 and some parts of urllib. Im behind a
http proxy that requires authentication that is why Im using urllib2. Im
asking for help on how to send commands
Hello All,
Does somebody install PIL manually??, I mean, copy directories manually
without executing setup.py. I saw an identical message from Guirai, but I
didn't see any response. Thanks in advance!
Best Regards,
Naxo
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http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
kevin cline <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>As if there were such a thing as an 'Ada programmer'. Any decent
>programmer should be productive in Ada long before their security
>clearance is approved.
That's only true because the security clearance process has become so
complicated. Ada is not a
Joachim Durchholz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Xah Lee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>> [...] PHP and Perl are practically identical in their
>>> high-levelness or expressiveness or field of application (and
>>> syntax),
>
>That must have been a very, very distant point of view with narrowly
>squi
I gave PyInstaller a shot and was pleased by the results so far. The
usual problems occurred with missing data and icon files (the latter for
splash screens only). However, it's a bit hard for me to overcome them.
I tried COLLECT but the files don't seem to be added to the install. The
reason i
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