Vijay Anantha Murthy, 09.08.2011 07:37:
Is there any compiler which will help me convert my python code to proper C
code?
In my python code I am using the XML.dom.minidom module to parse an xml and
process the results obtained by ElementsByTagName.
I don't know of any such compiler which will hel
On Tue, Aug 9, 2011 at 6:37 AM, Vijay Anantha Murthy
wrote:
> My main impediment here is writing out the C code manually myself, my C
> skills are quite poor and it would require a huge effort to sharpening my
> C skills before writing the code myself, I can not afford that luxury of
> time.
Writ
azrael writes:
> OK, now. Isn't it maybe time to throw out TK once and for all?
no, because Tk has a clear advantage over many other UI tolkits
Tk _was designed_ and it was designed by very competent people [1]
good luck with smurfs' hunting [2], ciao
I have a client that is a part of a local network.This client has a
local address( not public).Is there a way how I can connect to this
client from outside world?
What software must I install so that I can connect and control that
client from outside?
Thanks
B
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/
Unless you have the router configured to allow connections through to your
local client, you will need the client to connect *outwards*, either to you
or to an intermediate server.
On Tue, Aug 9, 2011 at 12:10 PM, Johny wrote:
> I have a client that is a part of a local network.This client has
On Sat, Aug 6, 2011 at 3:35 AM, Vipul Raheja wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have wrapped a library from C++ to Python using SWIG. But when I
> import it in Python, I am able to work fine with it, but it gives a
> segmentation fault while exiting. Following is the log:
>
> vipul@vipul-laptop:~/ossim-svn/src/py
On Aug 2, 12:57 am, Gregory Ewing wrote:
> Thijs Engels wrote:
> > argv[0] returns the name of the current file (string), but no path
> > information if I recall correct.
>
> It's the path that was used to specify the script by whatever
> launched it, so it could be either absolute or relative to
In <81a681e7-0be1-4edc-9e27-b492e8b63...@a17g2000yqk.googlegroups.com> Johny
writes:
> I have a client that is a part of a local network.This client has a
> local address( not public).Is there a way how I can connect to this
> client from outside world?
When you say the client's address is "no
Johny wrote:
> I have a client that is a part of a local network.This client has a
> local address( not public).Is there a way how I can connect to this
> client from outside world?
> What software must I install so that I can connect and control that
> client from outside?
How is that a Python p
Greetings!
Does anyone know/recall the original purpose of __all__?
I had thought it was primarily to specify what would be imported when
`from ... import *` was executed, such as for tk; today, it seems it is
also used to specify the API for the module, and so the help() subsystem
will only
Ethan Furman wrote:
> Greetings!
>
> Does anyone know/recall the original purpose of __all__?
To customise the names available for `from ... import *`:
http://docs.python.org/whatsnew/2.1.html#other-changes-and-fixes
> I had thought it was primarily to specify what would be imported when
> `f
Hi everyone,
to calculate the definite integral of a function or an array of sampled
data scipy provides (among others) the quad and trapz functions.
So it is possible to compute e. g. the definite integral of cos(t) over
some range by doing
definite_integral= scipy.integrate.quad(cos,lower_limit
Hi!,
I have a very simple syntax question. I want to evaluate a library
function f receiving an arbitrary number of arguments (like
itertools.product), on the elements of a list l. This means that I
want to compute f(l[0],l[1],...,l[len(l)-1]).
Is there any operation "op" such that f(op(l)) will g
On Tue, Aug 9, 2011 at 6:02 PM, Antonio Vera wrote:
> Hi!,
> I have a very simple syntax question. I want to evaluate a library
> function f receiving an arbitrary number of arguments (like
> itertools.product), on the elements of a list l. This means that I
> want to compute f(l[0],l[1],...,l[len
On 08-08-11 21:50, Croepha wrote:
Hello Python list:
I am doing research into doing network based propagation of python
objects. In order to maintain network efficiency. I wan't to just
send the differences of python objects, I was wondering if there
was/is any other research or development in
-Original Message-
From: python-list-bounces+ramit.prasad=jpmorgan@python.org
[mailto:python-list-bounces+ramit.prasad=jpmorgan@python.org] On Behalf Of
Antonio Vera
Sent: Tuesday, August 09, 2011 12:02 PM
To: python-list@python.org
Subject: Passing every element of a list as argu
The gurus will have to correct me if this is not an accepted practice, but I
know some projects (Fabric is the one that comes to mind) will define a
submodule specifically for the 'from blah import *' situation. The submodule
would be called "api", or something like that, so you can do: 'from
mymod
Hi,
I am just curious. There is no real use case:
If I have a class and I want that its instances are iterable I can just
add a class metohod named __iter__()
example:
class MyClass(object):
def __iter__(self):
for val in range(10):
yield val
On Aug 1, 10:11 am, Andrew Berg wrote:
> Hmm
> How about Rainbow Video Encoder Wrapper (Rainbow View for short - RView
> is taken, possibly multiple times)?
> I added an arbitrary word to a generic name, and the result doesn't seem
> to be taken by anything software-related. It wraps more than
You can using metaclasses (untested):
>>>class MyMetaClass(type):
>>>def __iter__(self):
>>>return [1, 2, 3, 4]
>>>class MyClass(object):
>>>__metaclass__ = MyMetaClass
>>>for value in MyClass:
>>>print value
1
2
3
4
Chris
On Tue, Aug 9, 2011 at 2:43 PM, Gelonida N wrote:
On 8/6/2011 10:53 AM, sturlamolden wrote:
On Aug 1, 5:33 pm, aliman wrote:
I've read the recipe at [1] and understand that the way to sort a
large file is to break it into chunks, sort each chunk and write
sorted chunks to disk, then use heapq.merge to combine the chunks as
you read them.
Or
Hi world and every living thing on it !
I just want to give a headsup to the fact that i released the first
beta of GOZERBOT 0.9.3. This release brings in a lot of bug fixes, so
please try it out ;]
Download is at http://gozerbot.googlecode.com, please if you find
problems with the bot file a tic
Gelonida N wrote:
> Now I wondered whether there is any way to implement a class such, that
> I can write
>
>
> for val in MyClass:
> print val
One way to make an object iterable (there are others) is to add an __iter__
method to the object's class.
Unlike in some languages, classes in Pyth
On 8/9/2011 5:43 PM, Gelonida N wrote:
Now I wondered whether there is any way to implement a class such, that
I can write
for val in MyClass:
print val
And what are the items in a class that you expect that to produce?
I am pretty sure you can already do
for val in MyClass.__dict__
numpy/scipy questions are best asked on the numpy/scipy user lists.
--
Terry Jan Reedy
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 08/09/2011 07:11 PM, Terry Reedy wrote:
On 8/9/2011 5:43 PM, Gelonida N wrote:
Now I wondered whether there is any way to implement a class such, that
I can write
for val in MyClass:
print val
And what are the items in a class that you expect that to produce?
I can see doing som
On 8/9/2011 8:29 PM, Tim Chase wrote:
On 08/09/2011 07:11 PM, Terry Reedy wrote:
On 8/9/2011 5:43 PM, Gelonida N wrote:
Now I wondered whether there is any way to implement a class such, that
I can write
for val in MyClass:
print val
And what are the items in a class that you expect that to
Hi all,
I am trying to write a Python script which will read the output file
of a numerical model, and then copy some of that information into a
new file in a new format. The output file of the numerical model is
basically
54321 # number of points
1234 # number of time steps
__a whole bunch of
On Wed, 10 Aug 2011 01:00 pm Etay wrote:
> Is there some simple way to skip over the lines I don't need, and then
> inform Python about the format of the lines with the data I do need
> within a loop?
Yes. It's called "programming" :)
f = open('some file')
for line in f:
if some_condition(li
Hi, I'm having problems with an empty Queue using multiprocessing.
The task:
I have a bunch of chapters that I want to gather data on individually
and then update a report database with the results.
I'm using multiprocessing to do the data-gathering simultaneously.
Each chapter report gets put
Hi all,
When writing a long expresion, one usually would like to break it into multiple
lines. Currently, you may use a '\' to do so, but it looks a little awkward
(more like machine-oriented thing). Therefore I start wondering why not allow
line breaking at an operator, which is the standard w
On Tue, Aug 9, 2011 at 9:42 PM, Yingjie Lan wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> When writing a long expresion, one usually would like to break it into
> multiple lines. Currently, you may use a '\' to do so, but it looks a little
> awkward (more like machine-oriented thing). Therefore I start wondering why
>
On Tue, Aug 9, 2011 at 9:42 PM, Yingjie Lan wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> When writing a long expresion, one usually would like to break it into
> multiple lines. Currently, you may use a '\' to do so, but it looks a little
> awkward (more like machine-oriented thing). Therefore I start wondering why
>
Hi All,
I'm trying to execute some external commands from multiple database.
I'm using threads and subprocess.Popen ( from docs, all the popen*
functions are deprecated and I was told to use subprocess.Popen) to
execute the external commands in parallel, but the commands seems to
hang.
My quest
On Tue, Aug 9, 2011 at 11:38 PM, Danny Wong (dannwong)
wrote:
> Hi All,
> I'm trying to execute some external commands from multiple database.
> I'm using threads and subprocess.Popen ( from docs, all the popen*
> functions are deprecated and I was told to use subprocess.Popen) to
> execute the
Hi Chris,
Here is the code,
try:
cmd_output = subprocess.Popen(['scm', 'load', '--force', '-r',
nickname, '-d', directory, project], stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
status = cmd_output.wait()
print "In load status is: %s" % status + "\n"
except:
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