Radhika Bauerle, 03.11.2011 01:05:
Hello eveyone:
Well, and here's the problem already: "everyone".
Note that it's commonly considered inappropriate to post job offers on this
list. Please use the Python job board instead:
http://python.org/community/jobs/
(easy to find by clicking on "pyt
A task like this is more suited to bash than Python:
find . -name '*.pyc' -exec rm '{}' ';'
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This can be added to git as a post-checkout hook:
In your project's .git/hooks/post-checkout:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
cd ./$(git rev-parse --show-cdup)
find . -name '*.pyc' -exec rm '{}' ';'
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This can be added to your project's .git/hooks/post-checkout:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
cd ./$(git rev-parse --show-cdup)
find . -name '*.pyc' -exec rm '{}' ';'
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Hi All,
I need help with the below mentioned script. The second time I
call a.execute, self.transport.open_session() fails with an EOF error.
Is this a paramiko bug or am I doing something wrong?
import paramiko
class Connection(object):
def __init__(self, host, username = None, passw
On 11/1/11 10:27 PM, Jack Keegan wrote:
Hi there,
I asked this question on the enthought chaco mailing list some time last by have
yet to receive a reply. Thought I'd ask here to see if anyone could shed some
light on things for me. I have been considering using chaco / traits for close
to a yea
Good afternoon,
I'm building a large e-commerce site, and it is very important that
what I write can:
- Handle larger server load
- Deliver pages quickly
- Make transactions quickly
as well as have a small development time (i.e. pre-built modules for
e-commerce are available, and extendible).
Ar
Hi all,
in my python application I am calling functions from a C library via
`ctypes` interface. Some fns from that C library calls `exit()` on
error. It causes that the python application crashes even without any
notification. Is it possible to catch library system exit calls from
such python app
Jonathan Hartley wrote:
> A task like this is more suited to bash than Python:
>
> find . -name '*.pyc' -exec rm '{}' ';'
You forgot to exclude the .svn directory from the search and didn't limit
the deletion to pyc-files whose corresponding py-file doesn't exist.
How would your line look with
Martin Landa wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> in my python application I am calling functions from a C library via
> `ctypes` interface. Some fns from that C library calls `exit()` on
> error. It causes that the python application crashes even without any
> notification. Is it possible to catch library syst
Am 03.11.2011 11:07, schrieb Martin Landa:
in my python application I am calling functions from a C library via
`ctypes` interface. Some fns from that C library calls `exit()` on
error.
Just curious, which library is that?
Uli
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On 2011-11-03, Ulrich Eckhardt wrote:
> Am 03.11.2011 11:07, schrieb Martin Landa:
>> in my python application I am calling functions from a C library via
>> `ctypes` interface. Some fns from that C library calls `exit()` on
>> error.
>
> Just curious, which library is that?
And who should we hav
I have written a fairly large DAG with python and I've run into an issue
when attempting to pickle the data to disk.
It will pickle fine the first time, but if I call pickle again, it
throws this error.
/usr/lib64/python2.6/copy_reg.py in _reduce_ex(self, proto)
68 else:
69
After digging around a while I discovered I was attempting to pickle a
third party class that can't be pickled. Initially I was removing it
before pickling and everything was kosher, but at some point it got back
onto the class. Apologies.
Brandon L. Harris
On 11/03/2011 09:42 AM, Brandon Ha
On 03/11/2011 09:22, Jacob Abraham wrote:
Hi All,
I need help with the below mentioned script. The second time I
call a.execute, self.transport.open_session() fails with an EOF error.
Is this a paramiko bug or am I doing something wrong?
import paramiko
class Connection(object):
d
we using RPM to install python 2.7.x and same issue there, can't import gzip
b/c zlib is missing. we used RPM to install zlib, but did not effect python.
you mentioned modules and uncommenting something. could you be more specific?
also , we are not compiling. would that be required for python af
All these ideas (shell and git hooks) are nice, but unfortunately
- it's svn not git
- it's windows not *nix
- we have to remove only the ones without the corresponding *py...
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Anybody is aware of any advanced course in Python preferably in north
america?
I've been partly coding in Python for couple of years now and have
used PyQt. What I'd like to learn more is a kind of advance OOP in
python. Any idea?
BTW, I'm not a computer engineer and have mechanical background.
On Thu, Nov 3, 2011 at 12:13 PM, Behnam wrote:
> Anybody is aware of any advanced course in Python preferably in north
> america?
>
> I've been partly coding in Python for couple of years now and have
> used PyQt. What I'd like to learn more is a kind of advance OOP in
> python. Any idea?
While I
Python newbie here. So, when creating dictionaries, I am noticing that each
time I print it out, that its not in the same order as when I typed it in. They
seem to be getting sorted somehow. Is there a way to not sort them and leave
the order as is?
Thanks!
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In <16245908.783.1320346014867.JavaMail.geo-discussion-forums@yqhd1> Scott Ware
writes:
> Python newbie here. So, when creating dictionaries, I am noticing that
> each time I print it out, that its not in the same order as when I typed
> it in. They seem to be getting sorted somehow. Is there a
Great! Thanks, John for the quick response!
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Note that there are a number of recipes available for free online, and
if you are using a newer version of Python (2.7 or higher), the
collections module includes an OrderedDict class
(http://docs.python.org/library/collections.html#collections.OrderedDict
- this also include a library for Python 2
Moreover, for on-the-fly ordering you can consider to use sorted() on
yourdict.keys(), like:
for k in sorted(yourdict.keys()):
print k, yourdict[k]
I think it has no side effects, except that the orderering can be slow on huge
data sets, and that you need to call it every time after updatin
On 11/3/2011 11:13 AM Behnam said...
Anybody is aware of any advanced course in Python preferably in north
america?
I've been partly coding in Python for couple of years now and have
used PyQt. What I'd like to learn more is a kind of advance OOP in
python. Any idea?
This list works well for t
On Fri, Nov 4, 2011 at 4:54 AM, Andrea Crotti wrote:
> All these ideas (shell and git hooks) are nice, but unfortunately
> - it's svn not git
> - it's windows not *nix
> - we have to remove only the ones without the corresponding *py...
Windows? Well, Windows shell scripting isn't quite as rich a
On 11/3/2011 2:46 PM, Scott Ware wrote:
Python newbie here. So, when creating dictionaries, I am noticing
that each time I print it out, that its not in the same order as when
I typed it in. They seem to be getting sorted somehow.
No, the entries are not being sorted at all.
> Is there a way t
http://www.dabeaz.com/pythonmaster.html
-- Original Message --
From: Emile van Sebille
Date: Thu, 03 Nov 2011 14:25:03 -0700
>On 11/3/2011 11:13 AM Behnam said...
>> Anybody is aware of any advanced course in Python preferably in north
>> america?
>>
>>
I've taken two Python classes from David Beazley and can second
Eric's recommendation. The "advanced" class is really advanced
and goes into some pretty mind-blowing stuff. The class comes with
lots of problems and solutions, and a book of all the slides which are
a great reference. Well worth
I've taken two Python classes from David Beazley and can second
Eric's recommendation. The "advanced" class is really advanced
and goes into some pretty mind-blowing stuff. The class comes with
lots of problems and solutions, and a book of all the slides which are
a great reference. Well worth
Try this out (Python 3.2.2 (default, Sep 5 2011, 04:52:19)):
global_variable = None
> (lambda *, keyword_only=global_variable: None) # Works, as
> expected
> (lambda: (lambda argument=global_variable: None))()# Works, as
> expected
> (lambda: (lambda *, keyword_only=global_var
On 11/03/11 16:36, Terry Reedy wrote:
> Is there a way to not sort them and leave the order as is?
CPython iterates (and prints) dict items in their arbitrary internal
hash table order, which depends on the number and entry order of the
items. It is a bug to depend on that arbitrary order in
On Fri, Nov 4, 2011 at 9:24 AM, Joshua Landau
wrote:
> Non-lambdas work as expected, but a lambda inside a non-lambda still
> exhibits this behaviour.
> Conclusion:
> When setting defaults to keyword-only arguments in lambdas which are inside
> non-global scopes, cPython is unable to access the gl
On Fri, Nov 4, 2011 at 10:01 AM, Tim Chase
wrote:
> list1 = list(d.iterkeys())
> list2 = list(d.iterkeys())
> assert list1 == list2
>
There is such a guarantee in Python 2. From
http://docs.python.org/library/stdtypes.html:
"If items(), keys(), values(), iteritems(), iterkeys(), and
itervalues
Tim Chase writes:
> On 11/03/11 16:36, Terry Reedy wrote:
> > CPython iterates (and prints) dict items in their arbitrary internal
> > hash table order, which depends on the number and entry order of the
> > items. It is a bug to depend on that arbitrary order in any way.
>
> Does this "never tru
On Thu, Nov 3, 2011 at 1:54 PM, Andrea Crotti wrote:
> All these ideas (shell and git hooks) are nice, but unfortunately
> - it's svn not git
> - it's windows not *nix
> - we have to remove only the ones without the corresponding *py...
> --
> http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
>
Sorry to resurrect this topic. By google search the last discussion was in 2003.
I would like to find out what is the current prevailing view or consensus (if
any) on the use of Design Pattern in python?
I am doing some 'fact-finding' in this area on request of my colleagues. Some
of them want
In article
<6097694.446.1320366784098.JavaMail.geo-discussion-forums@prap37>,
Anthony Kong wrote:
> Sorry to resurrect this topic. By google search the last discussion was in
> 2003.
What? We're bring it up again, SO SOON!?
> I would like to find out what is the current prevailing view or
On Thu, Nov 3, 2011 at 5:33 PM, Anthony Kong wrote:
> Sorry to resurrect this topic. By google search the last discussion was in
> 2003.
>
> I would like to find out what is the current prevailing view or consensus (if
> any) on the use of Design Pattern in python?
I can only speak for myself,
Hi All,
I am trying to concatenate several hundred files based on their filename..
Filenames are like this:
Q1.HOMOblast.fasta
Q1.mus.blast.fasta
Q1.query.fasta
Q2.HOMOblast.fasta
Q2.mus.blast.fasta
Q2.query.fasta
...
Q1223.HOMOblast.fasta
Q1223.mus.blast.fasta
Q1223.query.fasta
On Nov 3, 9:55 pm, Matt wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> I am trying to concatenate several hundred files based on their filename..
> Filenames are like this:
>
> Q1.HOMOblast.fasta
> Q1.mus.blast.fasta
> Q1.query.fasta
> Q2.HOMOblast.fasta
> Q2.mus.blast.fasta
> Q2.query.fasta
> ...
> Q1223.HOMOblast.fasta
In <31568428.553.1320375329695.JavaMail.geo-discussion-forums@prgt40> Matt
writes:
> But I can't figure out how to iterate this process over Q-numbers 1-1223
for i in xrange(1, 1224):
Q = "Q%d" % i
file1 = "%s.HOMOblast.fasta" % Q
file2 = "%s.mus.blast.fasta" % Q
file3 = "%s.query.fasta
I suggest that the use of dynamical page forwarding to different severs which
run the same software package. This can be done in python!
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On Thu, 03 Nov 2011 17:54:52 +, Andrea Crotti wrote:
> All these ideas (shell and git hooks) are nice, but unfortunately - it's
> svn not git
> - it's windows not *nix
> - we have to remove only the ones without the corresponding *py...
Does it matter? The other .pyc files will be recreated w
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