* Andrew Berg (Sat, 30 Jul 2011 22:10:43 -0500)
> I'm looking for pointers on design. I'm inexperienced but cautious and
> am mostly wondering if there's an easier way to "format" this data or
> if this approach will lead to problems.
The "QueueItem.x264['avs']['filter']['fft3d']['ffte'])" example
"OKB (not okblacke)" writes:
> Yeah, what I'm suggesting as the cleanest way is to simply make it
> all one long string literal, which is wrapped by the editor to the
> proper indentation point. I can't show this in a newgroup post, but
> it'd be like:
>
> def somefunc():
> if som
Hi Ulrich,
Thanks for your idea.
I resolved the issue by making use of integers instead of strings.
Earlier I had many duplicate strings in different rows retrieved from database.
I created a list to have unique strings and their indexes are used in
actual computations. So lot of space is saved by
On Sun, Jul 31, 2011 at 9:38 AM, Rama Rao Polneni wrote:
> Earlier I had many duplicate strings in different rows retrieved from
> database.
> I created a list to have unique strings and their indexes are used in
> actual computations. So lot of space is saved by having integers
> instead of stri
100 functions/second
installed to global namespace doesn't sound well.
What on earth are you doing needing to use exec to create hundreds of
functions??
:-)
Have you considered not using exec at all, and using a good old-fashioned
factory function and closures?
def factory(x):
def i
Hi All,
I have a package with more layers of code. Bottom layer contains classes
and methods for dealing with tabular data. Second layer works with
multi-dimensional data. It provides a data model with unified API for
accessing multi dimensional databases. Top layer is responsible for
disp
Also happens with python3.1 and OSX 10.6.8
import tkinter #yields:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "imptk.py", line 1, in
import tkinter
File
"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.1/lib/python3.1/tkinter/__init__.py",
line 39, in
import _tkinter # If this fail
> So far so good. The problem is that a CubeGrid instance is also a wx.Grid
instance. However, different naming conventions apply there. All method
names in wxPython are coming from C++. They use CamelCase method names.
There is a naming conflict. What should I do?
>
> Solution #1: Mix CamelCase an
Hi all,
on behalf of the IPython development team, I'm thrilled to announce,
after more than two years of development work, the official release of
IPython 0.11.
This release brings a long list of improvements and new features
(along with hopefully few new bugs). We have completely refactored
IP
On 2011.07.31 02:41 AM, Thorsten Kampe wrote:
> The "QueueItem.x264['avs']['filter']['fft3d']['ffte'])" example does not
> look right. Especially the mix of "." and "[]" references. Actually,
> dictionaries in a dictionary don't look right to me either.
QueueItem is the class; x264 is a dictionar
On Jul 13, 1:04 pm, ccc31807 wrote:
> On Jul 12, 7:54 am, Xah Lee wrote:
>
> > maybe this will be of interest.
>
> > 〈What Programing Language Are the Largest Website Written
> > In?〉http://xahlee.org/comp/website_lang_popularity.html
>
> About five years ago, I did some pretty extensive researc
In article <201173191847use...@terrranews.com>,
Joel Godin wrote:
> Also happens with python3.1 and OSX 10.6.8
>
> import tkinter #yields:
>
>
> Traceback (most recent call last):
> File "imptk.py", line 1, in
> import tkinter
> File
> "/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Version
I've using MySQLdb for years, but always on servers where I had
system-wide access.
I have an account on Hostmonster and would like to do some
development there, but although python2.6 is available, MySQLdb is
not installed. I do not believe there is a system-wide access, nor
do I expect sysadmins
* Tim Johnson [110731 11:01]:
> I've using MySQLdb for years, but always on servers where I had
> system-wide access.
>
> I have an account on Hostmonster and would like to do some
> development there, but although python2.6 is available, MySQLdb is
> not installed. I do not believe there is a sy
On Sun, Jul 31, 2011 at 11:36 AM, Andrew Berg wrote:
> On 2011.07.31 02:41 AM, Thorsten Kampe wrote:
>> Another approach would be named tuples instead of dictionaries or flat
>> SQL tables.
> What would the advantage of that be?
Less punctuation noise:
QueueItem.x264.avs.filter.fft3d.ffte
vs.
Qu
* Andrew Berg (Sun, 31 Jul 2011 13:36:43 -0500)
> On 2011.07.31 02:41 AM, Thorsten Kampe wrote:
> > Another approach would be named tuples instead of dictionaries or
> > flat SQL tables.
> What would the advantage of that be?
QueueItem.x264['avs']['filter']['fft3d']['ffte'] would be
QueueItem.x26
On 2011.07.31 02:51 PM, Chris Rebert wrote:
> Less punctuation noise:
> QueueItem.x264.avs.filter.fft3d.ffte
> vs.
> QueueItem.x264['avs']['filter']['fft3d']['ffte']
>
> It would also make clear that your sets of "keys" are static (unlike
> typical dictionary usage).
I see what Thorsten meant by "
On Jul 31, 2011, at 4:04 PM, Thorsten Kampe wrote:
> * Andrew Berg (Sun, 31 Jul 2011 13:36:43 -0500)
>> On 2011.07.31 02:41 AM, Thorsten Kampe wrote:
>>> Another approach would be named tuples instead of dictionaries or
>>> flat SQL tables.
>> What would the advantage of that be?
>
> QueueItem.x
On 2011.07.31 03:53 PM, Philip Semanchuk wrote:
> To the OP -- if you're looking to write this to disk, I recommend XML or
> SQLite.
I have a method that writes the data to disk, but at this point, I don't
see any problems with just pickling the class instance. XML might be a
good way to provide
I think I'll stick with Maven for the module, but the two others really
need names, and I have nothing.
--
CPython 3.2.1 | Windows NT 6.1.7601.17592 | Thunderbird 5.0
PGP/GPG Public Key ID: 0xF88E034060A78FCB
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http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Andrew Berg writes:
> I think I'll stick with Maven for the module, but the two others really
> need names, and I have nothing.
Maven is already a well-established name for an existing free-software
work http://maven.apache.org/>.
I recommend choosing a name which isn't already taken by any wel
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On behalf of the PySAL development team, I'm happy to announce the
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On 2011.07.31 09:15 PM, Ben Finney wrote:
> Maven is already a well-established name for an existing free-software
> work http://maven.apache.org/>.
Well of course. All the good names are taken. :P
I even came up with cavelib and it was taken (
http://www.mechdyne.com/cavelib.aspx ).
Maybe I'll jus
from matplotlib.matlab import *
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "", line 1, in
ImportError: No module named matlab--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I've noticed that python-list gets significantly more spam than the
other lists I subscribe to. There's an example below.
I'm wondering how the list is managed. Can anyone post, or only
members? I've picked the email addresses of the list managers out of
the list info page, but I wonder if you
Lets say I have a program that is running a python interpreter in the main
thread.
I come along, write a .DLL and throw it into the program. My .dll has its
own thread (right?), separate from the main thread, and then makes a
pyrun_simplestring call to the pythonxx.dll. The pyrun_simplestring call
On Mon, Aug 1, 2011 at 5:56 AM, Ghodmode wrote:
> I'm willing, but probably not qualified. I've been lurking on the
> list for a while, but I don't contribute much because I'm not very
> proficient with Python.
>
I don't see Python proficiency as a prerequisite for recognizing
spammers :) If you
On Mon, Aug 1, 2011 at 6:04 AM, Ira Gray wrote:
> I come along, write a .DLL and throw it into the program. My .dll has its
> own thread (right?),
Not unless you actually create one. A DLL is simply a puddle of code;
the application calls your code, you do whatever you do, you return.
At no time
On Sun, Jul 31, 2011 at 9:56 PM, Ghodmode wrote:
> I've noticed that python-list gets significantly more spam than the
> other lists I subscribe to. There's an example below.
>
> I'm wondering how the list is managed. Can anyone post, or only
> members?
Since we're gatewayed to USENET's comp.la
Andrew Berg wrote:
Well of course. All the good names are taken. :P
I even came up with cavelib and it was taken (
http://www.mechdyne.com/cavelib.aspx ).
A couple of ideas that don't seem to turn up
anything software-related:
Flummux
Flavius
--
Greg
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinf
Andrew Berg wrote:
I have a method that writes the data to disk, but at this point, I don't
see any problems with just pickling the class instance.
Just keep in mind that if you're not careful, pickles
can end up being tied more closely that you would like
to various internal details of your p
Chris Rebert wrote:
On Sun, Jul 31, 2011 at 9:56 PM, Ghodmode wrote:
I'm wondering how the list is managed. Can anyone post, or only
members?
Since we're gatewayed to USENET's comp.lang.python anyway, I'd
strongly suspect the former.
You may get a better experience by reading the usenet g
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