Chris Angelico writes:
> On Sun, Oct 9, 2011 at 12:07 AM, Jussi Piitulainen wrote:
> > But both negations can be avoided by modus tollens.
> >
> > "If you are able to start the car, the key is in the ignition."
>
> But this translation implies looking at the result and ascertaining
> the state, wh
>> My objective is to have the user put together some images html and embed the
>> image as a frame into a video file (any embeddable format e.g. swf).
>SWF isn't the easiest format to work with; it's not necessarily a
video, but might be a scripted object. Try working with real video
formats
I recently had a problem while trying to set up a Tkinter Canvas
widget as a progress bar. Everything seemed to be working, except
that at 100% completion the progress bar spanned only about 75% of the
canvas width. Eventually I tracked the problem down to the canvas bar
'width' property as read
Dart is the very new language created by Google to replace Javascript.
So Python was not able to do the job? Or may be they don't know about
Python at Google ;) ?
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Am 13.10.2011 11:45, schrieb candide:
> Dart is the very new language created by Google to replace Javascript.
> So Python was not able to do the job? Or may be they don't know about
> Python at Google ;) ?
What needs to be done to make Python replace JS in Browsers/HTML? (or at
least make it a vi
Wohaw. This means that this behavior is going to be default in a
foreseeable future ?
It's the default in 3.x. I can't imagine it ever being the default in 2.x.
2.7 is now in "bug-fix only" mode, so no new features, and there won't be a
2.8, so true division will never be the default in
On Thu, Oct 13, 2011 at 8:45 PM, candide wrote:
> Dart is the very new language created by Google to replace Javascript.
> So Python was not able to do the job? Or may be they don't know about Python
> at Google ;) ?
>
Python, as I found out to my detriment, is practically impossible to
sandbox e
On Thu, Oct 13, 2011 at 7:51 PM, J <1jason.whatf...@gmail.com> wrote:
> thank you for your response. I am format agnostic for processing so am happy
> to work with avi etc., however in displaying the final film to the user I
> think I'd need to convert whatever I've made to swf to make it a littl
On 10/13/2011 6:07 AM, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Thu, Oct 13, 2011 at 8:45 PM, candide wrote:
Dart is the very new language created by Google to replace Javascript.
So Python was not able to do the job? Or may be they don't know about Python
at Google ;) ?
Python, as I found out to my detrime
On Thu, Oct 13, 2011 at 3:07 AM, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 13, 2011 at 8:45 PM, candide wrote:
>> Dart is the very new language created by Google to replace Javascript.
>> So Python was not able to do the job? Or may be they don't know about Python
>> at Google ;) ?
>>
>
> Python, as I
candide wrote:
> Dart is the very new language created by Google to replace Javascript.
> So Python was not able to do the job? Or may be they don't know about
> Python at Google ;) ?
I take it you haven't actually looked at the Dart tools then? They're
largely written in Python.
--
Duncan B
Hello all,
I am trying to alter the init method of a class by source to AST -> alter AST
-> AST back to code -> f = types.FunctionType(code, {}, '__init__') ->
mt = types.MethodType(f, None, Foo) -> Foo.__init__ = mt
I have two problems, first I haven't yet figured out how to make the AST back
to
Hi All,
I m using the gp.ListFeatureClasses to make a list of file in my
directory (containing several hundreds of file)
however when I print the variable in which the List is supposed to be
stored, the print just return one file name
does any one have an idea
# Import system modules
impor
First of all let me say that I have no authority or knowledge of
language design or multi-processing except from a user point of view,
having a decade or so experience.
I would like your opinion and appreciate any feedback and value any
hints to documentation, procedures or related ramblings :-)
On Oct 13, 10:04 am, Laurent Claessens wrote:
> Thanks all for your ansers. I'll import division from __future__
> Most of what I'm using in Python is with Sage[1]. Thus I'm not about to
> step to 3.x :(
You should get in touch with the Sage developers. In the Sage FAQ they
say that "until SciPy
On Thu, Oct 13, 2011 at 11:35 PM, Martin P. Hellwig
wrote:
> What I would expect to happen that all statements within the ooo block may
> be executed out
> of order. The block itself waits till all statements are returned before
> continuing.
>
In a statically-typed language such as C, this can b
On 2011-10-13 14:00, yo wrote:
Hi All,
I m using the gp.ListFeatureClasses to make a list of file in my
directory (containing several hundreds of file)
however when I print the variable in which the List is supposed to be
stored, the print just return one file name
does any one have an idea??
Chris Angelico writes:
> On Thu, Oct 13, 2011 at 8:45 PM, candide wrote:
>> Dart is the very new language created by Google to replace Javascript.
>> So Python was not able to do the job? Or may be they don't know about Python
>> at Google ;) ?
>
> Python, as I found out to my detriment, is prac
Martin P. Hellwig, 13.10.2011 14:35:
I was wondering if there could be an advantage to add another control flow
statement.
Changes at that level must be very well justified, are often rejected for
the reason of being not too complicated to write in some other form and are
close to impossible
* Ned Deily [111012 18:12]:
> In article <20111013005244.gk6...@johnsons-web.com>,
> Tim Johnson wrote:
> > I'm most experienced with MySQLdb on ubuntu, which is installed via
> > apt-get or synaptic.
> >
> > I am setting up a mac mini with osX 10.7 (Lion). Macports makes
> > py27-mysql 1.2.2 a
On Thu, Oct 13, 2011 at 11:45:06AM +0200, candide wrote:
> Dart is the very new language created by Google to replace Javascript.
> So Python was not able to do the job? Or may be they don't know
> about Python at Google ;) ?
Google's a big supporter for Python...I think Guido working being
employ
On Thu, Oct 13, 2011 at 09:07:09PM +1100, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 13, 2011 at 8:45 PM, candide wrote:
> > Dart is the very new language created by Google to replace Javascript.
> > So Python was not able to do the job? Or may be they don't know about Python
> > at Google ;) ?
> >
>
>
FWIW, this looks rather like the 'PAR' construct of Occam to me.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occam_%28programming_language%29
J^n
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You should get in touch with the Sage developers. In the Sage FAQ they
say that "until SciPy is ported to run with Python 3.x and Cython
supports Python 3.x, Sage will continue to use Python 2.x."
``scipy.weave``."
So according to the Sage FAQ there is no reason why Sage shouldn't
support Pyt
2011/10/13 Kääriäinen Anssi :
> import parser
> import types
> st = parser.suite(src)
> dyn_func = parser.compilest(st)
> f = types.FunctionType(dyn_func, {}, '__init__')
> im = types.MethodType(f, None, Foo)
> Foo()
> Foo.__init__ = im
> Foo(1, 2, 3)
>
> The result is: TypeError: () takes no argum
Ian Kelly wrote:
"""
You can either pull the function code object out of the module code
object constants:
...
st_code = parser.compilest(st)
func_code = st_code.co_consts[0]
f = types.FunctionType(func_code, {}, '__init__')
...
But you should take care to ensure that the function code object
act
On 13/10/2011 15:13, Stefan Behnel wrote:
Martin P. Hellwig, 13.10.2011 14:35:
I was wondering if there could be an advantage to add another control
flow
statement.
Changes at that level must be very well justified, are often rejected
for the reason of being not too complicated to write in som
"candide" wrote in message
news:4e96b324$0$1007$426a3...@news.free.fr...
Dart is the very new language created by Google to replace Javascript.
So Python was not able to do the job? Or may be they don't know about
Python at Google ;) ?
The entire resources of Google available, and they re-
On Fri, Oct 14, 2011 at 8:38 AM, BartC wrote:
> The entire resources of Google available, and they re-invent C!
Syntactically, C has a lot going for it. If you want to invent a new
language and have developers grok it easily, borrowing syntax from C
will help a lot. But in this case, I think the
This is a continuing to a post I made in August:
http://groups.google.com/group/comp.lang.python/browse_thread/thread/b072cfadf998deae/ce6d4d09911e4107?lnk=gst&q=MrPink#ce6d4d09911e4107
I got some free time to work with Python again and have some followup
questions.
For example, I have a list in
As long as there are tools to translate scripts or source code between the two
languages. More new evolved powerful programming languages arenot problems at
all for experienced programmers.
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On Thu, 13 Oct 2011 15:33:27 +0100, jkn wrote:
FWIW, this looks rather like the 'PAR' construct of Occam to me.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occam_%28programming_language%29
I was going to say the same thing. Occam's answer to Stefan's
question about what to do if you want more than one sta
jkn:
> FWIW, this looks rather like the 'PAR' construct of Occam to me.
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occam_%28programming_language%29
Earlier than that, 'par' is from Algol 68:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ALGOL_68#par:_Parallel_processing
Neil
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On Thu, Oct 13, 2011 at 3:59 PM, MrPink wrote:
> This is a continuing to a post I made in August:
> http://groups.google.com/group/comp.lang.python/browse_thread/thread/b072cfadf998deae/ce6d4d09911e4107?lnk=gst&q=MrPink#ce6d4d09911e4107
>
> I got some free time to work with Python again and have s
On Oct 13, 10:59 pm, MrPink wrote:
> This is a continuing to a post I made in
> August:http://groups.google.com/group/comp.lang.python/browse_thread/thread/...
>
> I got some free time to work with Python again and have some followup
> questions.
>
> For example, I have a list in a text file like
How about iterable objects supported in python? Is a countable object
iterable definitely? Also the tail recursion technique is useful for the same
function with few arguments that calls itself. The lisp compiler would emit
machine codes with fast jumps and passing arguments in registers or
Martin P. Hellwig wrote:
> I was wondering if there could be an advantage to add another control
> flow statement.
> For the purpose of this writing let's say "ooo" which stands for 'out of
> order'.
[...]
> What I would expect to happen that all statements within the ooo block
> may be executed o
I've got to write some tests in python which simulate getting a page of
HTML from an http server, finding a link, clicking on it, and then
examining the HTML on the next page to make sure it has certain features.
I can use urllib to do the basic fetching, and lxml gives me the tools
to find the
On Oct 14, 3:19 am, Roy Smith wrote:
> I've got to write some tests in python which simulate getting a page of
> HTML from an http server, finding a link, clicking on it, and then
> examining the HTML on the next page to make sure it has certain features.
>
> I can use urllib to do the basic fetch
On Oct 14, 3:19 am, Roy Smith wrote:
> I've got to write some tests in python which simulate getting a page of
> HTML from an http server, finding a link, clicking on it, and then
> examining the HTML on the next page to make sure it has certain features.
>
> I can use urllib to do the basic fetch
In article
<2323f3d7-42ff-4de5-9006-4741e865f...@a9g2000yqo.googlegroups.com>,
Jon Clements wrote:
> On Oct 14, 3:19 am, Roy Smith wrote:
> > I've got to write some tests in python which simulate getting a page of
> > HTML from an http server, finding a link, clicking on it, and then
> > exami
IIRC mechanize can do that.
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On 10/13/2011 07:19 PM, Roy Smith wrote:
I've got to write some tests in python which simulate getting a page of
HTML from an http server, finding a link, clicking on it, and then
examining the HTML on the next page to make sure it has certain features.
I can use urllib to do the basic fetching,
In article ,
Gary Herron wrote:
> Try mechanize
>http://wwwsearch.sourceforge.net/mechanize/
> billed as
>Stateful programmatic web browsing in Python.
Wow, this is cool, thanks! It even does cookies!
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Is it possible to specify a zero-length switch? Here's what I mean.
I have a use case where some users would have to enter a section name on the
command line almost every time, whereas other users (the ones using only one
section) will never have to enter the section name. I don't want to burd
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