On Fri, Sep 23, 2011 at 3:59 PM, Nobody wrote:
> It doesn't even
>
You intrigue me, sir. Does it odd?
What is the remainder of this aborted sentence?
ChrisA
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Hi All,
I'm happy to announce a new release major release of TestFixtures.
This release is 99% backwards compatible, but a lot has changed under
the hood and there's some major new functionality, so thought it was
time for a bump.
The big changes are:
- compare now uses a registry of compare
Jesramz wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am trying to deploy an app on google app engine using bottle, a
> micro-framework, similar to flask.
[...]
> ImportError: No module named zlib
What happens if you explicitly launch Python2.5 and then try to import zlib?
--
Steven
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http://mail.python.org/mai
I wanted to add a couple of parameters to a class from a given library
(paste-script), but without changing the original code.
So I thought, I create a wrapper class which adds what I need, and then
dispatch all the calls to the super class.
My following attempt gives, however, a recursion erro
Matt wrote:
> I'm curious about what people's opinions are about using mixins in
> Python. I really like, for example, the way that class based views
> were implemented in Django 1.3 using mixins. It makes everything
> extremely customizable and reusable. I think this is a very good
> practice to
Andrea Crotti wrote:
> I wanted to add a couple of parameters to a class from a given library
> (paste-script), but without changing the original code.
> So I thought, I create a wrapper class which adds what I need, and then
> dispatch all the calls to the super class.
>
> My following attempt g
On 09/23/2011 10:31 AM, Peter Otten wrote:
Inside __getattribute__() you ask for self.first_var which triggers another
__getattribute__() call that once again trys to determine the first_var
attribute before it returns...
Try using __getattr__() instead which is only triggered for non-existent
On 23/09/11 00:47, Mark Hammond wrote:
On 20/09/2011 8:34 PM, Mateusz Loskot wrote:
I'm trying to dig out details about what exactly is the return
value the of PyEval_EvalCodeEx function in Python 3.x
The documentation is sparse, unfortunately.
Perhaps I'm looking at wrong function.
My aim is
Hi
I have following piece of code in file f1.py
# f1.py starts here ###
def f():
pass
def main():
import profile
profile.run('f()')
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()
# -- end of f1.py
executing f1.py works as expected.
Now I have a file f2.py
# f2.py star
Develop inter-dependent eggs:
On a Linux machine I have many eggs to develop, for example
- egg1
- egg2
...
Now the eggs depend from each other, so running
"python setup.py develop" in order, doesn't work, because if the
dependency required is not already installed then easy_install tries to
Hi,
I'am trying to write a mass html downloader, and it processes files after it
downloaded them. I have problems with encodings, and decodings. Sometimes I
get UnicodeDecodeErrors, or
I get half-pages in after processing part. Or more generally, some things
don't feel right. Can you check my appr
On 23/09/2011 08:46, Chris Withers wrote:
I'm happy to announce a new release major release of TestFixtures.
This release is 99% backwards compatible, but a lot has changed under
the hood and there's some major new functionality, so thought it was
time for a bump.
Of course, a 2.0.0 release wou
Hi Matt,
Enjoyed your list options :)
I'm a consultant and have to do what your subject line asks at
most clients I work at.
Here's the technique I recommend:
Install Python for the ***current user*** on another workstation
with the appropriate priviledges. Then xcopy this Python folder
to a US
On Sep 23, 2011, at 7:44 AM, Yaşar Arabacı wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'am trying to write a mass html downloader, and it processes files after it
> downloaded them. I have problems with encodings, and decodings. Sometimes I
> get UnicodeDecodeErrors, or
> I get half-pages in after processing part. Or mor
Andrea Crotti wrote:
On 09/23/2011 10:31 AM, Peter Otten wrote:
Inside __getattribute__() you ask for self.first_var which triggers
another
__getattribute__() call that once again trys to determine the first_var
attribute before it returns...
Try using __getattr__() instead which is only tri
On 2011.09.22 03:12 AM, Chris Angelico wrote:
> In theory, this should mean that you load it fresh every time - I
> think. If not, manually deleting entries from sys.modules might help,
> either with or without the list of modules.
I've played around with sys.modules, and it seems there are issues
Jean-Michel Pichavant writes:
> Did you consider subclassing your Var class ? This is how you extend a
> class behavior in OOP.
>
> class PSIVar(var):
>def __init__(self, name, desc, other=None, fun=None):
>var.__init__(self, name, desc)
>if other is not None:
>sel
I like the Python in my mobile phone.But a don't have the enough money
to buy a new phone.And my mobile type is Nokia N72 which is a part of
S60v2.And I could program in some boring classes.But the version of my
mobile's python is to old.So I hope I coule learn how to compile it
for my N72.My note
Andrea Crotti wrote:
> I wanted to add a couple of parameters to a class from a given library
> (paste-script), but without changing the original code.
> So I thought, I create a wrapper class which adds what I need, and then
> dispatch all the calls to the super class.
You don't need to use a wr
I have used pyWin for several years now with out issue. I recently
installed build 216 for python 2.7 on windows XP pro. The program
crashes every time I exit a wxPython program and has crashed a few
other times. I does not seem that pyWin has been updated since
February of this year. Is the
On Fri, Sep 23, 2011 at 09:25, python wrote:
> I have used pyWin for several years now with out issue. I recently
> installed build 216 for python 2.7 on windows XP pro. The program
> crashes every time I exit a wxPython program and has crashed a few
> other times. I does not seem that pyWin
On Sep 23, 12:08 am, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Fri, Sep 23, 2011 at 3:59 PM, Nobody wrote:
> > It doesn't even
>
> You intrigue me, sir. Does it odd?
>
> What is the remainder of this aborted sentence?
>
> ChrisA
That is odd, I also find it odd that it deadlocks the entire python
system, even t
Python 2.5.6 (r256:88840, Sep 22 2011, 13:45:58)
[GCC 4.5.2] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import zlib
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "", line 1, in
ImportError: No module named zlib
>>>
But if I run Python2.7 I get:
Python 2.7.1+
Hi Steve
On 22/09/2011 13:58, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
(7) If all else fails, as an absolute last resort, simply run the Windows
installer as a regular, unprivileged user, after selecting the option for a
Non-Admin Install under Advanced Options first.
Thanks for this, will send on to my friend
On Sep 23, 7:58 am, Atherun wrote:
> On Sep 23, 12:08 am, Chris Angelico wrote:
>
> > On Fri, Sep 23, 2011 at 3:59 PM, Nobody wrote:
> > > It doesn't even
>
> > You intrigue me, sir. Does it odd?
>
> > What is the remainder of this aborted sentence?
>
> > ChrisA
>
> That is odd, I also find it o
On 22/09/11 Ian Ward said:
> Announcing Urwid 1.0.0
> --
Congrats.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Fri, 23 Sep 2011 06:59:12 +0100, Nobody wrote:
>> kernel32.dll!WaitForSingleObject+0x12
>> python26.dll!_Py_svnversion+0xcf8
>
> I haven't a clue how this happens. _Py_svnversion just returns a string:
In retrospect, I think that's a red herring. 0xcf8 seems like too large an
offset for such
On Sep 23, 10:47 am, Nobody wrote:
> On Fri, 23 Sep 2011 06:59:12 +0100, Nobody wrote:
> >> kernel32.dll!WaitForSingleObject+0x12
> >> python26.dll!_Py_svnversion+0xcf8
>
> > I haven't a clue how this happens. _Py_svnversion just returns a string:
>
> In retrospect, I think that's a red herring. 0
Example script.py: """
def f(arg):
return g(arg)
def g(arg):
return arg
"""
Reading the Lib/runpy.py I've found, that the temporary module created
inside the run_path() calls, is destroyed right after the script.py code
executed in the resulting namespace.
I've got an idea. It would
Hi!
I've just had fun with the runpy module in Python 2.7. I'm writing to
share it :)
What I've tried is to "load" a python script using runpy.run_path(), take a
function from the resulting namespace and call it with arbitrary arguments.
All the functions in the namespace seem to be ok. r
A few weeks ago, I wrote a class that creates an iterator for solving the
general unlabeled-balls-in-labeled boxes occupancy problem. Chris Rebert
converted my code to a generator, which made the code cleaner, and I
subsequently simplified it somewhat further.
My problem is the following: All of
On 23 September 2011 21:09, Dr. Phillip M. Feldman
wrote:
>
> A few weeks ago, I wrote a class that creates an iterator for solving the
> general unlabeled-balls-in-labeled boxes occupancy problem. Chris Rebert
> converted my code to a generator, which made the code cleaner, and I
> subsequently s
Am 23.09.2011 17:41, schrieb Jesramz:
> Python 2.5.6 (r256:88840, Sep 22 2011, 13:45:58)
> [GCC 4.5.2] on linux2
> Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
import zlib
> Traceback (most recent call last):
> File "", line 1, in
> ImportError: No module named zli
Thank You Christian
Im running on Ubuntu Natty and I am not running a self-compiled
install, its a regular release. In order to do this:
$ make distclean
$ export LDFLAGS="-L/usr/lib/$(dpkg-architecture -
qDEB_HOST_MULTIARCH)"
$ ./configure
$ make
$ make install
$ unset LDFLAGS
I don't know how many times I stared at that code without seeing the error.
Thanks so much!
Phillip
On Fri, Sep 23, 2011 at 1:26 PM, Arnaud Delobelle wrote:
> On 23 September 2011 21:09, Dr. Phillip M. Feldman
> wrote:
> >
> > A few weeks ago, I wrote a class that creates an iterator for solv
Terry Reedy wrote:
it is normal to look for special methods on the class (and superclasses)
> of an object rather than starting with the object itself.
I suspect there was a deliberate change to correct an anomaly, though
this might have been done as part of some other change.
It's a necess
No idea, as I said before, if you ask for it they might put in the alpha.
On Sat, Sep 24, 2011 at 8:30 AM, Jesse Ramirez
wrote:
>
> Thanks Alec, might you know when the 2.7 support might come?
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http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Thank You Christian
Im running on Ubuntu Natty and I am not running a self-compiled
install, its a regular release. In order to do this:
$ make distclean
$ export LDFLAGS="-L/usr/lib/$(dpkg-architecture -
qDEB_HOST_MULTIARCH)"
$ ./configure
$ make
$ make install
$ unset LDFLAGS
I
Hi everyone
I'm trying to use the cgi library to create a python script and loading it from
a web page. I have already done the necessary imports, and the default commands
to receive data from "html" are written too. The final version is something
like this:
#!/usr/bin/python
import subprocess
On 24/09/2011 02:42, Ricardo wrote:
Hi everyone
I'm trying to use the cgi library to create a python script and loading it from a web
page. I have already done the necessary imports, and the default commands to receive data
from "html" are written too. The final version is something like this:
how do you get the call stacks like this?
On Sat, Sep 24, 2011 at 3:59 AM, Atherun wrote:
> On Sep 23, 10:47 am, Nobody wrote:
>> On Fri, 23 Sep 2011 06:59:12 +0100, Nobody wrote:
>> >> kernel32.dll!WaitForSingleObject+0x12
>> >> python26.dll!_Py_svnversion+0xcf8
>>
>> > I haven't a clue how thi
The topic says it all:
Why is shutil named shutil? What does it stand for? This is just a
mild curiosity of mine.
The shutil module for reference:
http://docs.python.org/library/shutil.html#module-shutil
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On 24/09/2011 12:25 AM, python wrote:
I have used pyWin for several years now with out issue. I recently
installed build 216 for python 2.7 on windows XP pro. The program
crashes every time I exit a wxPython program and has crashed a few
other times.
There are a number of issues using Pytho
On Fri, Sep 23, 2011 at 8:36 PM, Fletcher Johnson wrote:
> The topic says it all:
> Why is shutil named shutil? What does it stand for? This is just a
> mild curiosity of mine.
"sh" is short for "shell", in line with Unix convention, where the
default shell is located at /bin/sh.
http://en.wikipe
On Sep 23, 11:58 pm, Chris Rebert wrote:
> On Fri, Sep 23, 2011 at 8:36 PM, Fletcher Johnson
> wrote:
> > The topic says it all:
> > Why is shutil named shutil? What does it stand for? This is just a
> > mild curiosity of mine.
>
> "sh" is short for "shell", in line with Unix convention, where t
On Sep 23, 7:03 pm, Matt Joiner wrote:
> how do you get the call stacks like this?
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Sat, Sep 24, 2011 at 3:59 AM, Atherun wrote:
> > On Sep 23, 10:47 am, Nobody wrote:
> >> On Fri, 23 Sep 2011 06:59:12 +0100, Nobody wrote:
> >> >> kernel32.dll!WaitForSingleObject+0x12
> >> >> p
Ricardo wrote:
> Hi everyone
> I'm trying to use the cgi library to create a python script and loading it
> from a web page. I have already done the necessary imports, and the
> default commands to receive data from "html" are written too. The final
> version is something like this:
>
> #!/usr/bi
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