Hi,
I have some wxPython code created with wxGlade that I am customizing.
I have a label created under the def __init__() section of the Frame
Class. It states...
self.Question = wx.StaticText(self, -1, "My question...")
if I insert a new line character in this string like this then
Am 01.06.2012 05:06, schrieb Qi:
> On 2012-5-31 23:01, Ulrich Eckhardt wrote:
>> I can only guess what you are doing, maybe you should provide a simple
>> piece of code (or, rather, one C++ piece and a Python piece) that
>> demonstrates the issue. What I could imagine is that the Python
>> interpre
On Thu, May 31, 2012 at 3:02 PM, Matteo Landi wrote:
> On Thu, May 31, 2012 at 3:42 AM, Terry Reedy wrote:
>> On 5/30/2012 6:19 PM, Matteo Landi wrote:
>>>
>>> On May/28, Matteo Landi wrote:
Hi list,
recently I started to work on an application [1] which makes use of the
Tkint
Hi All,
Can some one suggest me a module to access SVN repository so that i could
download any given branch.
Thanks
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On 01/06/2012 07:24, Simon Cropper wrote:
Hi,
I have some wxPython code created with wxGlade that I am customizing.
I have a label created under the def __init__() section of the Frame
Class. It states...
self.Question = wx.StaticText(self, -1, "My question...")
if I insert a new li
I'm getting towards an actual non-beta release, which means even more
tests, polishings, cleaning up of various things, and actual
documentation. :)
However, I am wondering about my current record API:
Currently, one does things like:
record.scatter_fields()
or
record.has_been_deleted
Is there a good way to trace what's going on under the hood wrt operator
overloading?
I am trying to understand what is happening in the code and output listed
below.
Why doesn't __getitem__ in mylist return the same result as the builtin
list object?
Does it have something to do with the start a
On 2012-6-1 15:46, Ulrich Eckhardt wrote:
Don't use PyRun_SimpleString() or catch the exception there. The point
is that it runs the whole string as a module, like running a script from
the commandline, and a pending exception on exit is then reported to stdout.
Good hint, thanks.
--
WQ
--
h
Can any one clarify what "while stack:" mean?
Regards,
David
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I've got a bit of a problem - my project uses weak sets in multiple
areas, the problem case in particular being to indicate what objects
are using a particular texture, if any, so that its priority in OpenGL
can be adjusted to match at the same time as it being (de)referenced
by any explicit calls.
Hi,
I have multiple Pythons locally installed so that I can test against
different versions. (On a 64-bit Debian stable system.)
All of them use the system's Tcl/Tk installation. However, I want to
make some of them use a locally build Tcl/Tk that has a small
customization.
There doesn't seem to
On Fri, 1 Jun 2012 18:59:57 +0100 (BST)
David Shi wrote:
> Can any one clarify what "while stack:" mean?
>
> Regards,
>
> David
>
Formal explanation:
http://docs.python.org/reference/compound_stmts.html#while
Informal introduction:
http://learnpythonthehardway.org/book/ex33.html
Simplistic
On Fri, 1 Jun 2012 15:38:58 +0530
prakash jp wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> Can some one suggest me a module to access SVN repository so that i
> could download any given branch.
>
> Thanks
Doing some basic googling, I found:
http://pysvn.tigris.org/
I imagine you could also shell out.
--
Corey Rich
On Sat, Jun 2, 2012 at 3:59 AM, David Shi wrote:
> Can any one clarify what "while stack:" mean?
It iterates as long as 'stack' has something that evaluates as true.
My guess is that stack is a list, and the loop is removing elements
from that list, so it'll keep going as long as there's anything
On 01/06/2012 18:59, David Shi wrote:
Can any one clarify what "while stack:" mean?
By convention, an empty container is considered false and a non-empty
container true in Boolean tests.
Therefore, assuming that "stack" is a container, it means "while the
stack isn't empty".
--
http://mail.pyt
On 01/06/2012 18:50, Ethan Furman wrote:
I'm getting towards an actual non-beta release, which means even more
tests, polishings, cleaning up of various things, and actual
documentation. :)
However, I am wondering about my current record API:
Currently, one does things like:
record.scatte
On Fri, Jun 1, 2012 at 9:39 AM, Josh Benner wrote:
>
> Is there a good way to trace what's going on under the hood wrt operator
> overloading?
>
> I am trying to understand what is happening in the code and output listed
> below.
>
> Why doesn't __getitem__ in mylist return the same result as the
MRAB wrote:
On 01/06/2012 18:50, Ethan Furman wrote:
I'm getting towards an actual non-beta release, which means even more
tests, polishings, cleaning up of various things, and actual
documentation. :)
However, I am wondering about my current record API:
Currently, one does things like:
On 6/1/2012 11:23 AM, Temia Eszteri wrote:
I've got a bit of a problem - my project uses weak sets in multiple
areas, the problem case in particular being to indicate what objects
are using a particular texture, if any, so that its priority in OpenGL
can be adjusted to match at the same time as i
On 06/01/12 15:05, Ethan Furman wrote:
> MRAB wrote:
>> I'd probably think of a record as being more like a dict (or an
>> OrderedDict)
>> with the fields accessed by key:
>>
>> record["name"]
>>
>> but:
>>
>> record.deleted
>
> Record fields are accessible both by key and by attribute --
On Fri, 01 Jun 2012 18:42:22 -0400, Terry Reedy
wrote:
>I gather that the .references attribute is sometimes/always a weakset.
>To determine its boolean value, it computes its length. For regular
>sets, this is sensible as .__len__() returns a pre-computed value.
Indeed. Back when I was using
On 01/06/12 23:13, Tim Chase wrote:
On 06/01/12 15:05, Ethan Furman wrote:
MRAB wrote:
I'd probably think of a record as being more like a dict (or an
OrderedDict)
with the fields accessed by key:
record["name"]
but:
record.deleted
Record fields are accessible both by key and by
On Thu, May 24, 2012 at 9:25 AM, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Thu, May 24, 2012 at 9:58 PM, Rita wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> A vendor provided a C, C++ and Java API for a application. They dont support
>> python so I would like to create a library for it. My question is, how
>> hard/easy would it be to
On 06/01/12 19:05, Jon Clements wrote:
> On 01/06/12 23:13, Tim Chase wrote:
>>dbf.scatter_fields
>>
>> *always* trump and refer to the method.
>
> I did think about *trumping* one way or the other, but both *ugh*.
For the record, it sounded like the OP wanted to be able to use the
dot-notati
On Fri, 01 Jun 2012 08:23:44 -0700, Temia Eszteri wrote:
> I've got a bit of a problem - my project uses weak sets in multiple
> areas, the problem case in particular being to indicate what objects are
> using a particular texture, if any, so that its priority in OpenGL can
> be adjusted to match
On 02 Jun 2012 03:05:01 GMT, Steven D'Aprano
wrote:
>I doubt that very much. If you are using threads, it is more likely your
>code has a race condition where you are modifying a weak set at the same
>time another thread is trying to iterate over it (in this case, to
>determine it's length), a
Tim Chase wrote:
On 06/01/12 19:05, Jon Clements wrote:
On 01/06/12 23:13, Tim Chase wrote:
dbf.scatter_fields
*always* trump and refer to the method.
I did think about *trumping* one way or the other, but both *ugh*.
For the record, it sounded like the OP wanted to be able to use the
do
On 6/1/2012 7:40 PM, Temia Eszteri wrote:
Given that len(weakset) is defined (sensibly) as the number of currently
active members, it must count. weakset should really have .__bool__
method that uses any() instead of sum(). That might reduce, but not
necessarily eliminate your problem.
Think i
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