On Jun 20, 1:21 am, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On Mon, 18 Jun 2012 07:00:01 -0700, jmfauth wrote:
> > On 18 juin, 12:11, Steven D'Aprano > +comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info> wrote:
> >> On Mon, 18 Jun 2012 02:30:50 -0700, jmfauth wrote:
> >> > On 18 juin, 10:28, Benjamin Kaplan wrote:
> >> >> The u
Am 18.06.2012 20:45, schrieb Terry Reedy:
> The simultaneous reintroduction of 'ur', but with a different meaning
> than in 2.7, *was* a problem and it should be removed in the next release.
FYI: http://hg.python.org/cpython/rev/8e47e9af826e
Christian
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On Jun 20, 11:22 am, Christian Heimes wrote:
> Am 18.06.2012 20:45, schrieb Terry Reedy:
>
> > The simultaneous reintroduction of 'ur', but with a different meaning
> > than in 2.7, *was* a problem and it should be removed in the next release.
>
> FYI:http://hg.python.org/cpython/rev/8e47e9af826e
[This announcement is in German since it targets a local user group
meeting in Düsseldorf, Germany]
ANKÜNDIGUNG
Python Meeting Düsseldorf
http://pyddf.de/
Ein Treffen v
Hi,
i have some trouble to split a pattern like s. Even have this
problems with the first and last match. Some greedy problems?
Thanks in advance
Christian
import re
s='v1=pattern1&v2=pattern2&v3=pattern3&v4=pattern4&v5=pattern5&x1=patternx'
pattern =r'(?=[a-z0-9]+=)(.*?)(?<=&)'
regex = re.co
On 20/06/2012 14:30, Christian wrote:
Hi,
i have some trouble to split a pattern like s. Even have this
problems with the first and last match. Some greedy problems?
Thanks in advance
Christian
import re
s='v1=pattern1&v2=pattern2&v3=pattern3&v4=pattern4&v5=pattern5&x1=patternx'
pattern =r'
On Thu, Jun 21, 2012 at 1:18 AM, wrote:
> On 2012-06-17, Jon Clements wrote:
>> I generally find a separate partition with an encrypted file-system
>> (which is fairly straight forward on *nix systems or I think there's a
>> product out there that works with Windows), is a lot easier and puts th
On 12-06-20 11:18 AM, elvis-85...@notatla.org.uk wrote:
On 2012-06-17, Jon Clements wrote:
Whatever you do - *do not* attempt to write your own algorithm.
very true
As "they" say, random number generation is too important to be left
to chance. :-)
--
D'Arcy J.M. Cain | Democrac
Am 20.06.2012 17:25, schrieb D'Arcy Cain:
> As "they" say, random number generation is too important to be left
> to chance. :-)
Hilarious! You made my day! :)
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On Tue, 2012-06-19 at 19:19 -0700, rantingrickjohn...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Tuesday, June 19, 2012 10:55:48 AM UTC-5, Frederic Rentsch wrote:
> > If I copy your event descriptors into my program, the button-release
> > callback still fails. It works in your code, not in mine. Here is what
> > my co
I am looking for the fastest way to parse a log file.
currently I have this... Can I speed this up any? The script is written to
be a generic log file parser so I can't rely on some predictable pattern.
def check_data(data,keywords):
#get rid of duplicates
unique_list = list(set(data))
I'm in need for a function that is able to make a screenshot from a directx
full screen. PIL is only able to take a snapshot from the desktop, but not from
any directx screen.
Has someone a tip for an existing module?
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I see one issue;)
# if last doesn't exist or is greater than current
This else doesn't catch the last greater than current:
This is a little messy.
with open(filename) as f:
print "Here is filename:%s" %filename
f.seek(0, 2)
eof = f.tell()
print "Here is eof:%s" %eof
if la
In article ,
Chris Angelico wrote:
> Well, for communication it's even easier. Pick up an SSL or SSH
> library and channel everything through that!
+1 on this. Actually, plus a whole bunch more than 1. I worked on a
project which had rolled their own communication layer (including
encryption).
I had reason to build Python 2.6.8 with Microsoft Visual Studio 2010. I was
able to get the pcbuild solution to build, and I have the necessary
exes/dlls/pyds in the amd64 build directory. What is not clear to is how to
complete the build and make an installation. I could not find any
docume
On Wed, 20 Jun 2012 01:12:00 -0700, jmfauth wrote:
> Python 3.3.0a4 (v3.3.0a4:7c51388a3aa7+, May 31 2012, 20:15:21) [MSC v.
> 1600
> 32 bit (Intel)] on win32
---
> running smidzero.py...
> ...smidzero has been executed
What is "smidzero.py", and what is it doing?
---
> input(':')
> :él
execnet-1.1 is a backward compatible beta release of the popular
(>53000 pypi downloads of 1.0.9) cross-interpreter execution library.
If you are in need of connecting Python2 and Python3 and/or want
to throw PyPy in your deployment mix, then you might want to join
Quora and many others and try o
elvis-85...@notatla.org.uk writes:
> On 2012-06-17, Jon Clements wrote:
>
>> Whatever you do - *do not* attempt to write your own algorithm.
>
> very true
If everyone took that advice then we'd have a problem
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On 6/20/2012 2:24 PM, KACVINSKY Tom wrote:
I had reason to build Python 2.6.8 with Microsoft Visual Studio 2010. I
was able to get the pcbuild solution to build, and I have the necessary
exes/dlls/pyds in the amd64 build directory. What is not clear to is
how to complete the build and make an i
On 6/20/2012 2:24 PM, Sverre wrote:
I'm in need for a function that is able to make a screenshot from a directx
full screen. PIL is only able to take a snapshot from the desktop, but not from
any directx screen.
Has someone a tip for an existing module?
Perhaps pygame has (or wraps) such a f
Terry,
At this stage, I don't want or need an MSI. I just want something that will
bundle the executables/dynamic load libraries + compiled Python files and stick
them into a compliant directory structure.
Regards,
Tom
-Original Message-
From: python-list-bounces+tky=3ds@python.or
On Jun 18, 2012 8:07 AM, "jmfauth" wrote:
> A string is a string, a "piece of text", period.
>
> I do not see why a unicode literal and an (well, I do not
> know how the call it) a "normal class " should behave
> differently in code source or as an answer to an input().
Strings are a data type th
Hi All,
I'm pleased to announce the release of xlrd 0.7.9:
http://pypi.python.org/pypi/xlrd/0.7.9
This release fixes an annoying merge bug on my part that resulted in a
"NameError: global name 'BYTES_X00' is not defined" error where opening
certain Excel files.
Barring any more brown bag is
Hi,
Is python a interpreted or compiled language?
What does happen after this command: python f.py
I knew python makes file.pyc file to store the bytecode. For java , .class file
is the bytecode file, someone can run that file from any machine. So is the
.pyc file executale like java?
Can anyo
On Wed, Jun 20, 2012 at 5:30 PM, gmspro wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> Is python a interpreted or compiled language?
Like other languages that use a VM bytecode, it's a little bit of
both. The actual Python code is compiled into Python bytecode. The
bytecode is interpreted.
> What does happen after this c
Does Jython 2.5 honour the PYTHONSTARTUP environment variable? According
to my testing, it doesn't.
There used to be a page describing the differences between Jython and
CPython here:
http://www.jython.org/docs/differences.html
but it appears to have been eaten by the 404 Monster.
--
Steve
On 06/20/2012 07:30 PM, gmspro wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Is python a interpreted or compiled language?
> What does happen after this command: python f.py
>
> I knew python makes file.pyc file to store the bytecode. For java , .class
> file is the bytecode file, someone can run that file from any machine. S
On Wednesday, June 20, 2012 12:07:04 PM UTC-5, Frederic Rentsch wrote:
> [...]
> Googling I chanced on an excellent introduction "Thinking in
> Tkinter" [...] He sets out identifying a common problem with
> tutorials: The problem is that the authors of the books want to rush
> into telling me abou
On Thu, Jun 21, 2012 at 10:53 AM, Dave Angel wrote:
> With java, one has to explicitly compile the java code, while with
> CPython, the runtime logic compiles imported modules if they're not
> already compiled.
Putting it another way:
Java's bytecode and source code are two distinct languages, b
On Wed, 20 Jun 2012 18:27:53 -0600, Ian Kelly wrote:
> On Wed, Jun 20, 2012 at 5:30 PM, gmspro wrote:
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> Is python a interpreted or compiled language?
>
> Like other languages that use a VM bytecode, it's a little bit of both.
> The actual Python code is compiled into Python byteco
On 6/20/2012 19:53, Dave Angel wrote:
> But since you mention java, I'd like
> to point out a few things that are different between the two
> environments. He and I are describing CPython; jython and other
> implementations don't use .pyc files, and they behave differently.
There's one more impo
On Wed, Jun 20, 2012 at 7:27 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
> Java's bytecode and source code are two distinct languages, both well
> documented and separately usable (and with their own distinct
> limitations - there are things you can do in Java bytecode that you
> cannot do in Java source).
I can t
Dave Angel, 21.06.2012 02:53:
> On 06/20/2012 07:30 PM, gmspro wrote:
>> Is python a interpreted or compiled language?
>
> Ian has given you a good answer. But since you mention java, I'd like
> to point out a few things that are different between the two
> environments. He and I are describing C
from multiprocessing import Pool
from itertools import product
def sym(lst):
x,y=lst
tmp=x*y
if rec(tmp):
return tmp
else:
return None
def rec(num):
num=str(num)
if num == "".join(reversed(num)):return True
else:return False
if __name__ == "__m
The multiprocessing module allows the programmer to fully leverage *multiple
* processors on a given machine (python docs). This allows the operating
system to take advantage of any parallelism inherent in the hardware design.
If you are using the module on non-multiprocessor machines, I think you
On 06/21/2012 01:05 AM, Yesterday Paid wrote:
> from multiprocessing import Pool
> from itertools import product
>
> def sym(lst):
> x,y=lst
> tmp=x*y
> if rec(tmp):
> return tmp
> else:
> return None
>
> def rec(num):
> num=str(num)
> if num == "".join(rever
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