Hi,
I am also facing the same problem, smtplib used to send mail a while
back but it stopped sending mails.
when i run this in interpreter
>>> import smtplib
>>> s = smtplib.SMTP("localhost")
>>> s.sendmail(from, to, "message")
{}
>>>
though it is not giving any error, it is not sending mail.
Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>> I'm still using Python 2.4. In my code, I want to encrypt a password
>> and at another point decrypt it. What is the standard way of doing
>> encryption in python? Is it the Pycrypto module?
>
> Usually, one doesn't store clear-text passw
On Jan 28, 10:11 pm, Arnaud Delobelle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> My strategy was to walk through each solution "only once" (for a
> certain definition of "only once :), thus I was hoping not to need a
> hashtable.
Yes, that seems like it should be preferable (and indeed necessary for
a more gene
As has occurred since the inception of PyCon, there will be a sprint
on the Python core at this year's conference!
If you will be attending PyCon (or will be in Chicago during the dates
of the sprints), attending the sprint is a great way to give back to
Python. Working on Python itself tends to d
Hi Python list,
I have been struggleling with this before, but have never been able to
find a good solution.
The thing I dont understand is, I follow the guide here:
http://docs.python.org/tut/node8.html#SECTION00842
And have the same setup as the packages howto here:http://
docs.p
have you checked your mail server logs ?
tir, 29.01.2008 kl. 00.24 -0800, skrev ashok.raavi:
> Hi,
>
> I am also facing the same problem, smtplib used to send mail a while
> back but it stopped sending mails.
>
> when i run this in interpreter
> >>> import smtplib
> >>> s = smtplib.SMTP("localho
In the spirit of "Simple is better than complex." and totally
bypassing the intention of quines (though not necessarily the
definition):
--- probably_not_a_real_quine.py
import sys
for line in open(sys.argv[0]):
print line,
--
;-)
--
Ant.
--
http:/
"Roy Smith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
| But, surely Python has plenty of "implementation defined" aspects.
| Especially in the libraries.
I personally do not consider the libraries as part of the language (as
opposed to the distribution) and was not referring t
Michael Ströder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> But if the password checking is done with a challenge-response
> mechanism (e.g. HTTP-Digest Auth or SASL with DIGEST-MD5) it's
> required that the instance checking the password has the clear-text
> password available. So reversible encryption for stor
"Russ P." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I would just like to thank you for reminding me about what losers
> hang out perpetually on sites like this one, thinking they are in
> some kind of real "community." Being reminded of that will help
> prevent me from becoming such a loser myself. No, I didn
Hi,
Is is possible to access the refcount for an object?
Ideally, I am looking to see if I have a refcount of 1 before calling del
Thanks
Simon
--
Linux Counter: User# 424693
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
It was a very loosely thought out problem, and my Maths isn't good enough
to define 'sane' rules for collapsing the signs/operators to make a
sensible expression; so take my constraints with a pinch of salt.
I guess a better way of putting it may be - now it has been pointed out
that 8+++9 i
abhishek wrote:
> I am having problem parsing following data set from XML. Please
> provide hints on how to rectify this problem.
>
> I am using python2.4 version
>
> this is te test data that i am using --
>
> """
> 1!!!11
> 2@@@22
> 3###33
> 4$$$
Hello group,
I am having problem parsing following data set from XML. Please
provide hints on how to rectify this problem.
I am using python2.4 version
this is te test data that i am using --
"""
1!!!11
2@@@22
3###33
4$$$44
5%%%5
Hi,
I appreciate everyone's feedback on the topic.
Having reflected on what has been said here, I now realize that
creating more complexity is not the way to go. I would rather favor
something that relies on existing language features, something like
the default keyword argument assignment in fun
Simon Pickles <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Is is possible to access the refcount for an object?
>>> import sys
>>> sys.getrefcount(42)
6
> Ideally, I am looking to see if I have a refcount of 1 before calling del
That's a pointless exercise: you probably don't understand what del does.
All that
Ricardo Aráoz wrote:
> What about :
>
> doc = """
>
>99
>
>
>42
>
> """
That's not an XML document, so what about it?
Stefan
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi All,
Pydev and Pydev Extensions 1.3.12 have been released
Details on Pydev Extensions: http://www.fabioz.com/pydev
Details on Pydev: http://pydev.sf.net
Details on its development: http://pydev.blogspot.com
Release Highlights in Pydev Extensions:
--
Tim Rau wrote:
> I'm working on a game, and I'd like players to be able to define thier
> ships with scripts. Naturally, I don't want to give them the entire
> program as thier romping ground. I would like to invoke a seperate
> interpreter for these files, and give it a limited subset of the
> fu
Thanks. Point is that all such approaches would require lots(!) of calls to
the Python API - a way by which I won't gain the desired speed.
I've tried pyrex and the corresponding C-file is so convoluted with dummy
variables, incrementing & decrementing references, and other stuff, that I
want to
I have made a sudoku solver, and discovered I simply
can turn it into a hexadoku solver, like so:
___
# sudoku solver using sets
import sudoku
sudoku.symbols="0123456789ABCDEF"
sudoku.size=16
sudoku.sqs=4 # square root of size .
___
Exampl
On Jan 29, 5:46 am, Christian Heimes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Simon Pickles wrote:
> > Hi,
>
> > Is is possible to access the refcount for an object?
>
> > Ideally, I am looking to see if I have a refcount of 1 before calling del
>
> Help on built-in function getrefcount in module sys:
>
> getr
hello,
i have problem manipulating mySQL data. When i add values in a Table,
i can recieve them instantly but when i check the table from another
script, the new values dont exist.
i'm not experienced in sql dbses so the problem might be something
outside python.
example (i do this to add values,
Hello,
I've never gotten this traceback error before using mx.ODBC. Any ideas about
resolving this issue? The statement and the error it generates are listed
below.
curse.execute("Insert into FHWA_StandSamp_2008(LRS_ID_NEW)
values('040210') where LRS_ID = '0403700010'")
Traceback (most recen
> You didn't mention speed in your original post.
Sorry, perhaps I considered this self-evident - which it is, of course, not.
> What about using
> array.array? Unless I am mistaken, these are just a thin wrapper
> around normal C arrays.
The algorithm I want to implement requires several millio
On Jan 28, 2008 10:31 AM, John Nagle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Arnaud Delobelle wrote:
> > On Jan 27, 11:00 pm, "Russ P." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >> On Jan 27, 2:49 pm, "André" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >>> Perhaps this:http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-3107/mightbe
> >>> relevant?
> >>
Hi!
I am going through some code and found
import runscript
BUT I cant find and information about this module. I searched Google
did a grep in
the /usr/lib/python directory.
What is the purpose of this module and where can I find information
about it. Or the source.
Best regards,
Toni
--
htt
Hello,
I'm a student at UCL Belgium and I have to write a paper about reflection
and introspection in Python.
It is somewhat difficult to find advanced information about reflection in
Python, not only introspection but also the other sides of reflection.
I'm using the book: "Programming Python, T
On Jan 29, 8:34 am, William McBrine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Look at this -- from Python 2.5.1:
>
> >>> a = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
> >>> for x in a:
>
> ... if x == 3:
> ... a.remove(x)
> ... print x
> ...
> 1
> 2
> 3
> 5
>
> >>> a
> [1, 2, 4, 5]
>
> Sure, the resulting list is correct
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:python-
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of kj
> Sent: Tuesday, January 29, 2008 11:39 AM
> To: python-list@python.org
> Subject: Python noob SOS (any [former?] Perlheads out there?)
>
>
>
> For many months now I've been trying to learn
On Tue, 29 Jan 2008 16:34:17 GMT, William McBrine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Look at this -- from Python 2.5.1:
>
a = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
for x in a:
> ... if x == 3:
> ... a.remove(x)
> ... print x
> ...
> 1
> 2
> 3
> 5
a
> [1, 2, 4, 5]
You have to iterate over a cop
On Jan 29, 7:48 am, Peter Schuller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> > You can also put, in animal/__init__.py:
> > from monkey import Monkey
> > and now you can refer to it as org.lib.animal.Monkey, but keep the
> > implementation of Monkey class and all related stuff into
> > .../animal/monkey.py
>
>
Paddy wrote:
> I would value the opinion of fellow Pythoneers who have also
> contributed to Wikipedia, on the issue of "Is Python Standardized".
> Specifically in the context of this table:
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_programming_languages#General_comparison
> (Comparison o
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> hello,
> i have problem manipulating mySQL data. When i add values in a Table,
> i can recieve them instantly but when i check the table from another
> script, the new values dont exist.
>
> i'm not experienced in sql dbses so the problem might be something
> outside py
Benjamin wrote:
> On Jan 29, 5:46 am, Christian Heimes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Simon Pickles wrote:
>>> Hi,
>>> Is is possible to access the refcount for an object?
>>> Ideally, I am looking to see if I have a refcount of 1 before calling del
>> Help on built-in function getrefcount in module
Jens a écrit :
> On Jan 25, 3:19 pm, "Diez B. Roggisch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Jens schrieb:
>>
>>
>>
>>> Hello Everyone
>>> I'm newbie to Zope and i have a few questions regarding external
>>> methods.
(snip)
>>> This doesn't work because because the method doesn't have access to
>>> the e
I'm trying to load a dll via ctypes by doing this:
cdll.LoadLibrary('/path/to/mylib.so')
But i'm getting this:
/path/to/mylib.so: cannot open shared object file: No such file or
directory What am i doing wrong?
The dll in question is in a directory mounted via NSF, but no part of
th
On Tuesday 29 January 2008 01:20, Devraj
wrote:
> Also be careful and setup all the paths
> that is required for compiling various
> Python modules etc.
>
> On Jan 29, 8:28 am, Yansky
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I asked my hosting company if they would
> > upgrade Python on my server to the
>
Over-simplified yes, but it will work!
Python is beautiful :-)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Terry Reedy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> "Roy Smith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> | But, surely Python has plenty of "implementation defined" aspects.
> | Especially in the libraries.
>
> I personally do not consider the libra
On Jan 25, 3:19 pm, "Diez B. Roggisch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Jens schrieb:
>
>
>
> > Hello Everyone
>
> > I'm newbie to Zope and i have a few questions regarding external
> > methods. What i wan't to do
> > is provide a terse syntax for converting urls to special tracking
> > urls:
>
> > ht
i checked it after your mail..
it is giving the following warning: no entropy for TLS key generation:
disabling TLS support
which was addressed here "
http://www.howtoforge.com/forums/showthread.php?t=781";
after adding the line "tlsmgr unix - - n 1000? 1 tlsmgr" to
/etc/postfix/master.cf it s
I need to extend the import mechanism to support another file type.
I've already written the necessary C library to read the file and
return a python code object.
I found one example which just sub-classed imputil.ImportManager like
this:
from myLib import pye_code as pye_code
class MyImporter(im
On Jan 29, 12:48 pm, Christian Meesters <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Think, that I'm still at the wrong track. Point is that I cannot find any
> examples and don't know where to start here.
> Perhaps my problem boils down to two questions:
> I'd like to pass lists (in some cases nested ones) from P
>>> 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 iter
> You can reassign the class's module:
>
> from org.lib.animal.monkey import Monkey
> Monkey.__module__ = 'org.lib.animal'
>
>
> (Which, I must admit, is not a bad idea in some cases.)
Is there a sense whether this is truly a supported way of doing this,
in terms of not running into various uninte
Think, that I'm still at the wrong track. Point is that I cannot find any
examples and don't know where to start here.
Perhaps my problem boils down to two questions:
I'd like to pass lists (in some cases nested ones) from Python to C and
convert those Python-lists to C-arrays (e. g. of doubles). M
Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
> Simon Pickles schrieb:
>> Hi
>>
>> Can anyone suggest a really simple XML reader for python? I just want to
>> be able to do something like this:
>>
>> xmlDoc = xml.open("file.xml")
>> element = xmlDoc.GetElement("foo/bar")
>>
>> ... to read the value of:
>>
>>
>> 42
>
On Jan 29, 9:02 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Oops I sent too quickly...
> If you've found an efficient way to walk through the possible
> solutions only once, then
> - I expect that yours will be faster
> - and well done!
>
> I guess I should try to understand your code...
My code is quite nai
On Jan 29, 2008 12:11 PM, walterbyrd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I am not really sure about what wsgi is supposed to accomplish.
This will explain WSGI: http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0333/
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
> Look at this -- from Python 2.5.1:
>
> >>> a = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
> >>> for x in a:
> ... if x == 3:
> ... a.remove(x)
> ... print x
Well ... you could use:
>>> for i in range(len(a)-1, -1, -1):
...print a[i]
...if a[i] == 3: del a[i]
...
5
4
3
2
1
>>> print a
[1, 2, 4, 5]
walterbyrd a écrit :
> I don't know much php either, but running a php app seems straight
> forward enough.
Mmm... As long as the whole system is already installed and connfigured,
*and* matches your app's expectations, kind of, yes.
> Python seems to always use some sort of development environm
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Dr.Ruud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
: I negated the test, to make the regex simpler: [...]
Yes, your approach is simpler. I assumed from the "need it all
in one pattern" constraint that the OP is feeding the regular
expression to some other program that is looki
kj a écrit :
> For many months now I've been trying to learn Python, but I guess
> I'm too old a dog trying to learn new tricks... For better or
> worse, I'm so used to Perl when it comes to scripting, that I'm
> just having a very hard time getting a hang of "The Python Way."
>
(snip)
>
> I'd w
> i have problem manipulating mySQL data. When i add values in a Table,
> i can recieve them instantly but when i check the table from another
> script, the new values dont exist.
Depending on your transaction settings (both on your mysql
connection object in code, and the engine used for the tabl
Nope:
'repeatdelay': ('repeatdelay', 'repeatDelay', 'RepeatDelay', '300', '300'),
And even after I set it, it looks funny:
'repeatdelay': ('repeatdelay', 'repeatDelay', 'RepeatDelay', '300', '1000'),
And when I try it with the new repeatdelay (1000), the only thing that
has changed is that it w
Hi,
Ricardo Aráoz wrote:
> I don't know zit about xml, but I might need to, and I am saving the
> thread for when I need it. So I looked around and found some 'real'
> XML document (see below). The question is, how to access s from
> s (any category) but not s.
>
> doc = """
>
>
> expenses: jan
On Jan 29, 1:22 pm, Christian Meesters <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thanks. Point is that all such approaches would require lots(!) of calls to
> the Python API - a way by which I won't gain the desired speed.
You didn't mention speed in your original post. What about using
array.array? Unless I
No Joy.
Waits the 1 second, then clicks the button once per second until the
limit's reached.
Sigh.
Metta,
Ivan
On Jan 29, 2008 10:20 AM, Russell E Owen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >Nope:
> >
> >'repeatdelay': ('repeatdelay', 'repeatDelay', 'RepeatDelay', '300', '300'),
> >
> >And even after I
On Tue, 29 Jan 2008 09:23:16 -0800 (PST), [EMAIL PROTECTED]
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> If you're going to delete elements from
> a list while iterating over it, then do
> it in reverse order:
Why so hard? Reversing it that way creates a copy, so you might as
well do:
>>> a = [ 98, 99, 100 ]
>>>
Simon Pickles wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Is is possible to access the refcount for an object?
>
> Ideally, I am looking to see if I have a refcount of 1 before calling del
Help on built-in function getrefcount in module sys:
getrefcount(...)
getrefcount(object) -> integer
Return the reference count
On Jan 29, 4:39 pm, kj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> It's not the Python syntax that I'm having problems with, but rather
> with larger scale issues such as the structuring of packages,
> techniques for code reuse, test suites, the structure of
> distributions,... Python and Perl seem to come from
On Jan 29, 10:39 am, kj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'd written a Perl module to facilitate the writing of scripts.
> It contained all my boilerplate code for parsing and validating
> command-line options, generating of accessor functions for these
> options, printing of the help message and of t
On Jan 29, 9:02 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> If you've found an efficient way to walk through the possible
> solutions only once
As discussed earlier in this thread, the definition of 'only once' is
not as clear cut as one would first think (see Terry's thoughts on
this).
--
Arnaud
--
http://
Hello!
It's more a design question than anything python specific. If anyone could
help me, I would be grateful. If it's not the right place for this subject,
please advise.
I've got a IBuyable interface. The app can sell both Products and Services
(Both "Buyables"). I'm not sure if Product and Se
On Jan 29, 4:46 am, Stefan Behnel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> How is this related to XML?
>
> Stefan
I guess that's what makes so **nasty**!
-- Paul
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
> You can also put, in animal/__init__.py:
> from monkey import Monkey
> and now you can refer to it as org.lib.animal.Monkey, but keep the
> implementation of Monkey class and all related stuff into
> .../animal/monkey.py
The problem is that we are now back to the identity problem. The class
On Jan 29, 12:18 am, Tim Rau <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm working on a game, and I'd like players to be able to define thier
> ships with scripts. Naturally, I don't want to give them the entire
> program as thier romping ground. I would like to invoke a seperate
> interpreter for these files,
> What about :
>
> doc = """
>
>99
>
>
>42
>
> """
That's not an XML document, so what about it?
Stefan
--
Ok Stefan, I will pretend it was meant in good will.
I don't know zit about xml, but I might need to, and I am saving the
thread fo
Hi,
Tim Rau wrote:
> I'm working on a game, and I'd like players to be able to define thier
> ships with scripts. Naturally, I don't want to give them the entire
> program as thier romping ground. I would like to invoke a seperate
> interpreter for these files, and give it a limited subset of the
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi Python list,
>
> I have been struggleling with this before, but have never been able to
> find a good solution.
> The thing I dont understand is, I follow the guide here:
> http://docs.python.org/tut/node8.html#SECTION00842
> And have the same setup
Christian Meesters wrote:
>> You didn't mention speed in your original post.
> Sorry, perhaps I considered this self-evident - which it is, of course, not.
>
>> What about using
>> array.array? Unless I am mistaken, these are just a thin wrapper
>> around normal C arrays.
> The algorithm I want
Look at this -- from Python 2.5.1:
>>> a = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
>>> for x in a:
... if x == 3:
... a.remove(x)
... print x
...
1
2
3
5
>>> a
[1, 2, 4, 5]
>>>
Sure, the resulting list is correct. But 4 is never printed during the
loop!
What I was really trying to do was this:
apps =
For many months now I've been trying to learn Python, but I guess
I'm too old a dog trying to learn new tricks... For better or
worse, I'm so used to Perl when it comes to scripting, that I'm
just having a very hard time getting a hang of "The Python Way."
It's not the Python syntax that I'm ha
On Jan 29, 12:34 pm, William McBrine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Look at this -- from Python 2.5.1:
>
> >>> a = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
> >>> for x in a:
>
> ... if x == 3:
> ... a.remove(x)
> ... print x
> ...
> 1
> 2
> 3
> 5
>
> >>> a
> [1, 2, 4, 5]
>
> Sure, the resulting list is correc
I don't know much php either, but running a php app seems straight
forward enough.
Python seems to always use some sort of development environment vs
production environment scheme. For development, you are supposed to
run a local browser and load 127.0.0.1:5000 - or something like that.
Then to ru
I am having some issues writing a telnet program, using telnetlib. I
am not sure if it is the telnet on the connections end or it is my
program.
A little background, when I log in straight from the Linux Command
prompt. The only thing I get is a blinking cursor. Then I type in my
command 'FOO' ent
On Jan 24, 9:16 pm, "Guilherme Polo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 2008/1/24, William Pursell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
> Can I do it in Python?
>
>
> class A(object): pass
> class B(object): pass
>
> a = A()
> a.__class__ = B
>
> That ? Maybe you meant something else.
That is what I was referring
On Jan 29, 10:56 am, nik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thanks,
> that does help and now I have:
>
> >>> from datetime import datetime, tzinfo, timedelta
> >>> import time
> >>> class TZ(tzinfo):
>
> ...def utcoffset(self,dt): return timedelta(seconds=time.timezone)
> ...>>> print datetime(2008,2
On Jan 29, 2008 1:35 PM, Hannah Drayson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> It imports as a string of rubbish...
> i.e.
>
>
> >>> text = f.read()
> >>> print text
> ?F?C??y??>?
> @[EMAIL PROTECTED]@???/???8[EMAIL PROTECTED]/[EMAIL
> PROTECTED]@?Q???Q???Q???Q???Q??ǑR[???Q?
I want python code that given an instance of a type, prints the type name,
like:
typename (0) -> 'int'
I know how to do this with the C-api, (o->tp_name), but how do I do it from
python?
type(0) prints "", not really what I wanted.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Jan 29, 9:29 pm, abhishek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello group,
>
> I am having problem parsing following data set from XML. Please
> provide hints on how to rectify this problem.
You have provided no hints on what your problem is. What output do you
want? What have you tried? What output a
All:
I'm running into trouble figuring this one out. It seems that my
decision routine is not working as intended. Does anyone know why my
output continues to utilize the "else" portion of the routine.
Thank you,
Christopher
++
#!/usr/bin/python
import cgi
print "Content-type: text/
On Tue, 29 Jan 2008 11:51:04 -0800 (PST)
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Any elegant way of breaking out of the outer for loop than below, I
> seem to have come across something, but it escapes me
>
> for i in outerLoop:
>for j in innerLoop:
>if condition:
> break
>else:
>
En Mon, 21 Jan 2008 07:38:15 -0200, Vikas Jadhav <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
escribi�:
> We have setup of SVGMath* 0.3.2 (Converter- Mathml 2.0 coding to SVG).
> The
> setup folder contains setup.py file but we are not able to initiate this
> file. Kindly help us, resolution to this query will be appr
En Tue, 29 Jan 2008 14:42:55 -0200, Jean-François Houzard
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribi�:
> I'm a student at UCL Belgium and I have to write a paper about reflection
> and introspection in Python.
>
> It is somewhat difficult to find advanced information about reflection in
> Python, not only intr
On 29 Jan., 17:00, "Chris Mellon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Given the difficulty of statically analyzing Python, and the
> limitations you need to add for either static typing or type inference
> to be practical, I think that the real future for faster Python code
> is JIT, not static optimizat
Berteun Damman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Tue, 29 Jan 2008 09:23:16 -0800 (PST), [EMAIL PROTECTED]
><[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> If you're going to delete elements from
>> a list while iterating over it, then do
>> it in reverse order:
>
> Why so hard? Reversing it that way creates a copy,
En Tue, 29 Jan 2008 13:48:58 -0200, glomde <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribi�:
> I am going through some code and found
> import runscript
>
> BUT I cant find and information about this module. I searched Google
> did a grep in
> the /usr/lib/python directory.
>
> What is the purpose of this module and
En Tue, 29 Jan 2008 11:06:12 -0200, Tim Chase
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribi�:
> Just to follow up on this, I dropped the the 2.6 version of
> zipfile.py in my project folder (where the machine is currently
> running Python2.4), used the ZipFile.open() and it worked fine.
> [...]
> Anyways, thanks
Carl Banks wrote:
> On Jan 29, 7:48 am, Peter Schuller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>>> You can also put, in animal/__init__.py:
>>> from monkey import Monkey
>>> and now you can refer to it as org.lib.animal.Monkey, but keep the
>>> implementation of Monkey class and all related stuff into
>>> ..
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I need to extend the import mechanism to support another file type.
I've already written the necessary C library to read the file and
return a python code object.
I found one example which just sub-classed imputil.ImportManager like
this:
from myLib import pye_code as p
"[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I am having some issues writing a telnet program, using telnetlib. I
> am not sure if it is the telnet on the connections end or it is my
> program.
>
> A little background, when I log in straight from the Linux Command
> prompt. The only thing I g
kj wrote:
> Is there any good reading (to ease the transition) for Perl
> programmers trying to learn Python?
>
www.diveintopython.org
While it is a bit dated by now (Python 2.2), that thing worked wonders
for me. Shows you Python in action and presents a fair amount of its
philosophy along th
On Jan 30, 3:27 am, Greg Corradini <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
> I've never gotten this traceback error before using mx.ODBC.
"traceback error"?? I see no problem with the traceback.
> Any ideas about
> resolving this issue? The statement and the error it generates are listed
> below.
Th
On Jan 29, 4:00 pm, Christian Meesters <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > You didn't mention speed in your original post.
>
> Sorry, perhaps I considered this self-evident - which it is, of course, not.
>
> > What about using
> > array.array? Unless I am mistaken, these are just a thin wrapper
> > aro
Hi all,
I have a .bin file which python just won't play ball with-
Does anyone know what I'm doing wrong- is it simply incompatible?
I've read it fine using a C program - its 113 doubleword fields- apparently its
possible to handle these in python in a very similar way to C.
I can provide the c
Thanks,
that does help and now I have:
>>> from datetime import datetime, tzinfo, timedelta
>>> import time
>>> class TZ(tzinfo):
...def utcoffset(self,dt): return timedelta(seconds=time.timezone)
...
>>> print datetime(2008,2,29,15,30,11,tzinfo=TZ()).isoformat()
2008-02-29T15:30:11+8:00
But
On Jan 29, 2008 1:59 PM, Joe Riopel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> When reading the file, try using
> file = open('data.bin', 'rb')
> file.seek(0)
> raw = file.read()
>
> Do the unpack on "raw".
Ignore this, sorry for the confusion.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Thanks John. I now see it
John Machin wrote:
>
> On Jan 30, 3:27 am, Greg Corradini <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Hello,
>> I've never gotten this traceback error before using mx.ODBC.
>
> "traceback error"?? I see no problem with the traceback.
>
>> Any ideas about
>> resolving this issue? T
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