On Oct 9, 3:12 am, Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
> On Thu, 8 Oct 2009 14:52:33 -0700 (PDT), Luc
> declaimed the following in gmane.comp.python.general:
>
>
>
> > On Oct 8, 11:13 pm, "Diez B. Roggisch" wrote:
> > > Luc schrieb:
>
> > > > Hi all,
>
> > > > I read data from a binary stream, so I get hex
Does any one know of a good wrappers for both of these search engines?
There seem to a few but, wondering what people experience with them.
Vitaly Babiy
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Hi all,
I read data from a binary stream, so I get hex values as characters
(in a string) with escaped x, like "\x05\x88", instead of 0x05.
I am looking for a clean way to add these two values and turn them
into an integer, knowing that calling int() with base 16 throws an
invalid literal excepti
Is there anybody here that can help me out with some configuration
issues concerning using the Lamson mail server(http://
lamsonproject.org/)?
1. I would like to use it as my main MTA
2. I would like it to mange 3 domains on one box
Thanks
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Is there a way to:
1. save windows clipboard content temporarily in a variable
2. (the clipboard content is then overwritten by some other
applications)
3. restore the saved data back into the clipboard.
?
I've tried win32clipboard's GetClipboardData, SetClipboardData.
The GetClipboardData metho
John Yeung writes:
> I think the choice of epoch is not a big deal, once you pick one far
> enough back. Ben Finney's suggestion to use 4004 BCE is not
> appreciably different (computationally) from JDN. (Though I will say
> that the Wikipedia link he provided doesn't mention 4004 BCE, and if
> a
kakarukeys:
> Restoring the data with that format could result in information loss,
> for example when HTML text is saved in ordinary text format. There is
> no format that could preserve 100% of any kind of clipboard content.
>
> Does anyone has a brilliant solution?
Enumerate all the clipbo
Hi!
On windows, you can record sound who play on the local sound-card.
It is not really Python scripting, but Python can launch it.
@+
--
Michel Claveau
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http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Oct 8, 7:15 pm, J Wolfe wrote:
> Thank you both for your replies. I had something similar to this:
>
> def incr():
> var.set(1 + var.get())
> root.after(1000, incr)
>
> except I had an extra set of parenthesis...
> def incr():
> var.set(1 + var.get())
> root.after(1000, incr())
>
> on
On Sep 23, 10:58 pm, Brian Hammond
wrote:
> On Aug 25, 12:51 am, Denis wrote:
>
> > You can also atgevent
>
> >http://pypi.python.org/pypi/gevent
>
> Please, please document this! There are a lot of people who would
> love to use this but give up when they don't find a guide or something
> simil
Luc schrieb:
On Oct 8, 11:13 pm, "Diez B. Roggisch" wrote:
Luc schrieb:
Hi all,
I read data from a binary stream, so I get hex values as characters
(in a string) with escaped x, like "\x05\x88", instead of 0x05.
I am looking for a clean way to add these two values and turn them
into an intege
Hi,
I'm trying to get gnuplot to display multiple data series on a single
plot using gnuplot in python. I've searched around and haven't found
a solution to how to do this when I have a variable-length list of
plots to add.
For example, the following code will work:
plotData1 = Gnuplot.PlotItems
Hello,
Is there any python class to display the drive and folder structure as
a tree(As you see in the windows explorer window)??
Thanks,
Girish..
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John Yeung wrote:
> On Oct 6, 4:10 pm, Stef Mientki wrote:
>>
>> thanks guys,
>> mx works a bit better
>
> Another popular Python date library is dateutil:
>
> http://labix.org/python-dateutil
>
> It gives a certain amount of credit to mxDateTime (praising it but not
> being very clear
En Fri, 09 Oct 2009 06:36:45 -0300, Rob Garrett
escribió:
I'm trying to get gnuplot to display multiple data series on a single
plot using gnuplot in python. I've searched around and haven't found
a solution to how to do this when I have a variable-length list of
plots to add.
For example,
On Oct 9, 5:02 am, Girish wrote:
> Is there any python class to display the drive and folder structure as
> a tree(As you see in the windows explorer window)??
You could use a recursive function to print it out of course or you
will need to use a GUI kit. wxPython has a tree widget, i think TIX
Month arithmetic is a bit of a mess, since it's not clear how
to map e.g. Jan 31 + one month.
"Jan 31 + one month" usually means "add one to the month value
and then keep backing off the day if you get an exception making
the date", so you'd get Feb 31, exception, Feb 30, exception, Feb
29, p
On Oct 9, 11:30 am, Neil Hodgson
wrote:
> kakarukeys:
>
> > Restoring the data with that format could result in information loss,
> > for example when HTML text is saved in ordinary text format. There is
> > no format that could preserve 100% of any kind of clipboard content.
>
> > Does anyone has
Hmm. I didn't bother to look at the "comparison post". The indenting looks
right to me. I reread my post and I believe my question is straight-forward.
The crux of the issue is my sentence at the bottom. I believe that details
what my objective is. Not sure what I should do here. I hope you can cla
b...@creue-consulting schrieb:
Dear comp.lang.python users,
Firstly, this a is a Job post for a on-site Freelance Python Job in
Belgium, I know
this is frowned upon by some, so I am very sorry if it is not well
received,
but as it is such a great job, I have been encouraged to post this to
the l
On Oct 1, 2:19 pm, John wrote:
> cx_freeze v4.01
> Python 2.6
> Ubuntu Jaunty
>
> Following the example of 'cx-freeze hello.py', I'm getting the error
> message below. I put all of the error keywords into google and found no
> hits.
>
> Some people in various posts have said to use Python 2.5 but
On Fri, Oct 9, 2009 at 7:13 AM, Victor Subervi wrote:
> Hmm. I didn't bother to look at the "comparison post". The indenting looks
> right to me. I reread my post and I believe my question is straight-forward.
> The crux of the issue is my sentence at the bottom. I believe that details
> what my o
Diez,
Thanks for pointing this out. It maybe that we are talking about TG
1.1 in that case. I will double check with the TA.
Sorry for any confusion! - I'll let you know.
Thanks again.
Cheers,
Ben
On Oct 9, 3:36 pm, "Diez B. Roggisch" wrote:
> b...@creue-consulting schrieb:
>
> > Dear comp.l
On Oct 9, 10:45 am, "Diez B. Roggisch" wrote:
> Luc schrieb:
>
>
>
> > On Oct 8, 11:13 pm, "Diez B. Roggisch" wrote:
> >> Luc schrieb:
>
> >>> Hi all,
> >>> I read data from a binary stream, so I get hex values as characters
> >>> (in a string) with escaped x, like "\x05\x88", instead of 0x05.
>
Well, as sometimes happens, the response to Dennis' response caught my
attention (out of context) and I didn't notice Dennis' response! Thanks for
bringing it to my attention. I will look at it tonight, and follow-up
tomorrow after I've had a chance to digest it and work with it. (And thank
you Den
Hi;
I have the following code:
elif table[0] == 't': # This is a store subtype table
bits = string.split(table, '0')
sst.append(bits[2])
sstp.append(bits[1])
subtypes = dict(zip(sstp, sst))
When I print these out to screen, I get this:
sst: ['doctors', 'patient']
sstp: ['
On Fri, Oct 9, 2009 at 10:02 AM, Victor Subervi wrote:
> Hi;
> I have the following code:
>
> elif table[0] == 't': # This is a store subtype table
> bits = string.split(table, '0')
> sst.append(bits[2])
> sstp.append(bits[1])
> subtypes = dict(zip(sstp, sst))
>
> When I pr
On Fri, Oct 9, 2009 at 10:10 AM, Stephen Hansen wrote:
>
>
> On Fri, Oct 9, 2009 at 10:02 AM, Victor Subervi
> wrote:
>
>> Hi;
>> I have the following code:
>>
>> elif table[0] == 't': # This is a store subtype table
>> bits = string.split(table, '0')
>> sst.append(bits[2])
>>
You're right...how strange. Here's the whole code:
tables = []
bst = []
bdt = []
spt = []
sst = []
sstp = []
cursor.execute('show tables;')
all = cursor.fetchall()
for a in all:
tables.append(a[0])
for table in tables:
if table[0] == 'b': # This is a basic table
i
Changing the line:
> subtypes = dict(zip(sstp, sst))
> to:
> subtypes = dict(zip(sst, sstp))
> as I believe Stephen misread it to be causes the zip operation to return:
> [('doctors', 'prescriptions'), ('patient', 'prescriptions')]
> and thus the dict will contain:
> {'patient': 'prescriptions', '
ryniek90 wrote:
> So maybe someone, someday decide to
> put in Python an alternative, really great implementation of scanf() ?
My idea of a "great scanf() function" would be a clever combination of
re.match(), int(), and float().
j
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http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
So, because the results in sstp were duplicates ( ['prescriptions',
'prescriptions'] ) it only returned one result in the dict(zip()) statement.
Weird. Bug or feature? ;)
Thanks,
V
On Fri, Oct 9, 2009 at 12:37 PM, Stephen Hansen wrote:
>
>
> Changing the line:
>> subtypes = dict(zip(sstp, sst))
On Fri, Oct 9, 2009 at 11:04 AM, Victor Subervi wrote:
> So, because the results in sstp were duplicates ( ['prescriptions',
> 'prescriptions'] ) it only returned one result in the dict(zip()) statement.
> Weird. Bug or feature? ;)
> Thanks,
> V
Feature.
zip() returned two results, but dictiona
hello,
I'm working on a kind of IDE, to build and distribute Python programs.
One of the parts is editing a build file for py2exe and running the
modified script.
In the script editor I've an accelerator key, to launch these tasks:
- save modified script file
- run modified script file
- cat
I personally find it much cleaner this way. Also, why should any code care
in which thread it is executed? Why should I have to derive a class from
some other only because I want to run one of its functions in a separate
thread?
I think you are right! Especially that you can (and probably wi
I've seen evidence about this being done wrt what looks like insanely
complex stuff on this list but I'm wondering if there is something to
do this with any number of nodes and just farm out random
classes/objects to them?
Designing and opreating distributed systems is a complex thing.
Esp
On Oct 9, 11:15 am, Stef Mientki wrote:
> hello,
>
> I'm working on a kind of IDE, to build and distribute Python programs.
>
> One of the parts is editing a build file for py2exe and running the
> modified script.
>
> In the script editor I've an accelerator key, to launch these tasks:
> - save
On Oct 8, 5:03 am, Ulrich Eckhardt wrote:
> sturlamolden wrote:
> > On 8 Okt, 09:17, Ulrich Eckhardt wrote:
>
> >> I'm looking at the 'threading' module and see that other than the
> >> 'thread' module it doesn't have a simple function to start a new thread.
> >> Instead, you first have to instan
Thanks to all for the answers!
:)
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http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
thanks Carl,
in the mean while I found a good working solution thorugh wx.Execute.
cheers,
Stef
Carl Banks wrote:
On Oct 9, 11:15 am, Stef Mientki wrote:
hello,
I'm working on a kind of IDE, to build and distribute Python programs.
One of the parts is editing a build file for py2exe and
I'm getting the error:
smtplib.SMTPServerDisconnected: please run connect() first
when I run code that is essentially identical to the code given in
http://docs.python.org/library/email-examples.html
The error happens at the line (copied verbatim from the example
linked to above):
s.
Laszlo Nagy wrote:
> IMHO it is much cleaner to implement this as a decorator. Pro:
> transparent passing of positional and keyword arguments, keeps function
> documentation.
You are entitled to your opinion but I STRONGLY recommend against your
decorator. You MUST NOT start threads a a side eff
A puzzlement:
I used easy_install the other day to get xlutils on my system. It
automatically installed xlrd and xlwt as well. This is cool. What's
not so cool are my tracebacks. E.g.
Python 2.5.4 (r254:67916, Dec 23 2008, 15:10:54) [MSC v.1310 32 bit
(Intel)] on win32
Type "help", "cop
kj wrote:
I'm getting the error:
smtplib.SMTPServerDisconnected: please run connect() first
when I run code that is essentially identical to the code given in
http://docs.python.org/library/email-examples.html
The error happens at the line (copied verbatim from the example
linked to
On Oct 5, 2:15 pm, "Rami Chowdhury" wrote:
> On Mon, 05 Oct 2009 13:46:09 -0700, Buck wrote:
> > Thanks. I think we're getting closer to the core of this.
>
> > To restate my problem more simply:
>
> > My core goal is to have my scripts in some sort of organization better
> > than a single direct
I have been following this group for quite some time and I figured
(after searching enough on google --and on this group-- and not
finding anything useful) I could pose this question here. Can anyone
shed some light on python's performance on Solaris? My code seem to
return lookups from a in memory
On Fri, Oct 9, 2009 at 5:02 PM, Ethan Furman wrote:
> A puzzlement:
>
> I used easy_install the other day to get xlutils on my system. It
> automatically installed xlrd and xlwt as well. This is cool. What's not so
> cool are my tracebacks. E.g.
>
> Python 2.5.4 (r254:67916, Dec 23 2008, 15:10
On Oct 5, 8:12 pm, Steven D'Aprano
wrote:
> The Original Poster is confusing installation difficulties with code
> organization -- his problem is that users have special requirements for
> installation, and he's trying to work around those requirements by
> organizing his code differently.
I beli
On 2009-10-09 19:08 PM, David Robinow wrote:
On Fri, Oct 9, 2009 at 5:02 PM, Ethan Furman wrote:
A puzzlement:
I used easy_install the other day to get xlutils on my system. It
automatically installed xlrd and xlwt as well. This is cool. What's not so
cool are my tracebacks. E.g.
Python 2
On Oct 9, 4:37 pm, Buck wrote:
> We don't have any such convention. The production code is at a well-
> known path, but I need the code to be fully relocatable (cp -r /known/
> path ~/mydir) for testing purposes.
>
> Here's a scenario. A user does a cvs checkout into some arbitrary
> directory and
Robert Kern wrote:
On 2009-10-09 19:08 PM, David Robinow wrote:
On Fri, Oct 9, 2009 at 5:02 PM, Ethan Furman wrote:
A puzzlement:
I used easy_install the other day to get xlutils on my system. It
automatically installed xlrd and xlwt as well. This is cool. What's
not so
cool are my tra
Luc schrieb:
On Oct 9, 10:45 am, "Diez B. Roggisch" wrote:
Luc schrieb:
On Oct 8, 11:13 pm, "Diez B. Roggisch" wrote:
Luc schrieb:
Hi all,
I read data from a binary stream, so I get hex values as characters
(in a string) with escaped x, like "\x05\x88", instead of 0x05.
I am looking for
En Fri, 09 Oct 2009 21:49:46 -0300, Ethan Furman
escribió:
Besides missing the source lines, I was also wondering why the path in
the traceback is showing incorrectly; I have the egg in
c:\python25\Lib\site-packages, not where the trackback says I have it.
In an effort to get it looking
David Robinow wrote:
On Fri, Oct 9, 2009 at 5:02 PM, Ethan Furman wrote:
A puzzlement:
I used easy_install the other day to get xlutils on my system. It
automatically installed xlrd and xlwt as well. This is cool. What's not so
cool are my tracebacks. E.g.
Python 2.5.4 (r254:67916, Dec 2
In Ethan Furman
writes:
>The line preceeding it,
>s = smtplib.SMTP()
>needs to have an e-mail server specified. E.g.
>s = smtplib.SMTP('localhost') # from the 2.5 docs
Perfect. Thanks!
kynn
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http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Christian Heimes wrote:
Laszlo Nagy wrote:
IMHO it is much cleaner to implement this as a decorator. Pro:
transparent passing of positional and keyword arguments, keeps function
documentation.
You are entitled to your opinion but I STRONGLY recommend against your
decorator. You MUST NOT sta
In Nobody
writes:
>You could always lift the code from Popen._communicate(), which uses
>threads for Windows and select() for POSIX.
Thanks. A lot of useful advice in your replies.
G.
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http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I am Lisp programmer and I write an article on issues
as macros, fexprs and eval. I want to compare opinions
of programmers of various programming languages on eval.
If you want to contribute your opinion on eval in Python
(or you want to look at result), the adress is:
http://kazimirmajorinc.bl
Luc wrote:
Hi all,
I read data from a binary stream, so I get hex values as characters
(in a string) with escaped x, like "\x05\x88", instead of 0x05.
I am looking for a clean way to add these two values and turn them
into an integer, knowing that calling int() with base 16 throws an
invalid li
Sorry about being interpreted as being vague. `et me try to narrow it down.
program a creates objects b c d which each need to use 1 disk space 2 ram 3
processor time. I would like to create a heckpoint which would save the work of
the object to be later used and then delete it from memory [whic
I would like to put a statement on line N of my program that prints the line
number that is currently executing. This may sound fairly trivial, but I
don't want to hard code the line number because N will change if lines are
inserted or deleted above that point. Any advice will be appreciated.
--
On Fri, Oct 9, 2009 at 8:46 PM, Dr. Phillip M. Feldman
wrote:
>
> I would like to put a statement on line N of my program that prints the line
> number that is currently executing. This may sound fairly trivial, but I
> don't want to hard code the line number because N will change if lines are
> i
Does anyone know of any modules for dealing with the IRC protocol,
that will work with Python 3.1? It doens't have to be super great,
just less time consuming then playing with sockets directly (and obv.
stable). The only module in my systems package manager is irclib for
Python 2.6. I can live wit
hrg...@gmail.com wrote:
The purpose of this email is to inform the Python-list mailing-list
subscribers of an Internet-search website that is run by software
written in Python.
All the site seems to do is frame the results from other search engines.
What does the Python code do?
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