Ami Tavory wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Running the unit tests for some generator code, prints, as a side
> effect,
> numerous messages of the form:
>
> ...
> Exception NameError: "global name 'l' is not defined" in _dagpype_internal_fn_act at 0x9d4c500> ignored
> Exception AttributeError: "'NoneType
On 13 fév, 21:24, 8 Dihedral wrote:
> Rick Johnson於 2013年2月14日星期四UTC+8上午12時34分11秒寫道:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > On Wednesday, February 13, 2013 1:10:14 AM UTC-6, jmfauth wrote:
>
> > > >>> d = {ord('a'): 'A', ord('b'): '2', ord('c'): 'C'}
>
> > > >>> 'abcdefgabc'.translate(d)
>
> > > 'A2CdefgA2C'
>
> >
On Wed, 13 Feb 2013 21:54:43 -0800, stephenwlin wrote:
>> I believe the idea of slice literals has been rejected.
>>
>>
> That's too bad...do you have a link to prior discussion on this and what
> the reasoning was for rejection?
http://osdir.com/ml/python.python-3000.devel/2006-05/msg00686.ht
>
>
> >> I believe the idea of slice literals has been rejected.
>
> >>
>
> >>
>
> > That's too bad...do you have a link to prior discussion on this and what
>
> > the reasoning was for rejection? There doesn't seem to be any particular
>
> > downside and things would be more consistent wi
On Thursday, February 14, 2013 3:03:50 AM UTC-5, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On Wed, 13 Feb 2013 21:54:43 -0800, stephenwlin wrote:
>
>
>
> >> I believe the idea of slice literals has been rejected.
>
> >>
>
> >>
>
> > That's too bad...do you have a link to prior discussion on this and what
>
> Hah, yes. I basically wrote that exact example in my reply to Steven at the
> same time you replied. numpy.s_ is similar (although I think it does some
> extra work for odd reasons).
Oops, this is silly in retrospect...sorry, wasn't looking at the From: line
carefully enough and didn't realiz
On 02/13/2013 09:38 PM, Rex Macey wrote:
I am sure I have python installed. I have been running it. in command line the window title is
c:\python33\python.exe. The first line begins Python 3.3.0. Later in the line is the string
"64 bit ] on Win32".
Thus it appears I am trying to run a 32bit n
On 14 February 2013 05:29, Terry Reedy wrote:
> On 2/13/2013 9:38 PM, Rex Macey wrote:
>>
>> I am sure I have python installed. I have been running it. in command
>> line the window title is c:\python33\python.exe. The first line
>> begins Python 3.3.0. Later in the line is the string "64 bit ]
>
This PEP seems to be gathering dust:
http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0316/
I was thinking the other day, would contracts and invariants not be better than
unit tests? That is, they could do what unit tests do and more, bc they run at
execution time and not just at development time?
--
htt
Am 13.02.2013 um 17:14 schrieb Rick Johnson:
Q1: How could a line in the "try" block ever be considered
offensive? Because it throws an error?
try:
rrick.go_and_fuck_yourself()
finally:
rrick.get_lost()
See, wasn't that difficult, was it? :D
Are you serious?
No, I just coul
stephenw...@gmail.com wrote:
> Would it be feasible to modify the Python grammar to allow ':' to
> generate slice objects everywhere rather than just indexers and
> top-level tuples of indexers?
>
Would this be a dict with a slice as key or value, or a set with a slice
with a step?:
{1:2:3
my tv.txt is :
http://202.177.192.119/radio5 香港电台第五台(可于Totem/VLC/MPlayer播放)
http://202.177.192.119/radio35 香港电台第五台(DAB版,可于Totem/VLC/MPlayer播放)
http://202.177.192.119/radiopth 香港电台普通话台(可于Totem/VLC/MPlayer播放)
http://202.177.192.119/radio31 香港电台普通话台(DAB版,可于Totem/VLC/MPlayer播放)
octoshape:rthk
ISLAM and the AIM of LIFE
What is your purpose in life? What is the rationale behind our life?
Why do we live in this life? These questions frequently intrigue
people who try to find accurate answers.
People provide different answers to these questions. Some people
believe the purpose of life is to
On 2013-02-14 14:13, python wrote:
my tv.txt is :
http://202.177.192.119/radio5 香港电台第五台(可于Totem/VLC/MPlayer播放)
http://202.177.192.119/radio35 香港电台第五台(DAB版,可于Totem/VLC/MPlayer播放)
http://202.177.192.119/radiopth 香港电台普通话台(可于Totem/VLC/MPlayer播放)
http://202.177.192.119/radio31 香港电台普通话台(DAB版,可于Totem/VL
>
> You can't just allow ':' to generate slice objects everwhere without
>
> introducing ambiguity, so your proposal would have to be to allow slice
>
> objects in wider but still restricted contexts.
Yeah, I mentioned that in a follow-up. I'm pretty sure of just allowing it
within [] and ()
On Wednesday, February 13, 2013 11:47:36 AM DaGeek247 wrote:
> I am using the windows api feature getasynckeystate() to check the status of
> every key pressed; like this;
>
> #always checking
> while(True):
> #iterate through list of ascii codes
> for num in range(0,127):
> #if as
Hey,
Iv installed OpenCV on my windows machine. I can successfully view the camera
stream from my laptop so the installation was successful. However when i edited
the code adding in the address of my IP camera like so
import cv2
cv2.namedWindow("preview")
vc =
cv2.VideoCapture('http://192
I don't know anything about the status of this PEP or why it hasn't been
implemented, but here's what strikes me as obviously complex:
Doesn't one need to traverse the entire class hierarchy on every
function call? So if I have
class A:
def foo(self):
return 1
class B(A):
"inv: True"
d
On 2013-02-14 06:05:13 +, Tim Roberts said:
Chris Hinsley wrote:
New to Python, which I really like BTW.
First serious prog. Hope you like it. I know it needs a 'can't move if
your King would be put into check' test. But the weighted value of the
King piece does a surprising emergent job
On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 10:03 AM, Philipp Hagemeister wrote:
> So any implementation has to choose one of the following:
>
> 1. Ignore invariants and postconditions of inherited classes - defeats
> the purpose.
> 2. Only respect definitions in classes and methods in the original
> definition, whic
On 2013-02-14 17:25, Sam Berry wrote:
Hey,
Iv installed OpenCV on my windows machine. I can successfully view the
> camera stream from my laptop so the installation was successful.
> However when i edited the code adding in the address of my IP camera
> like so
import cv2
cv2.namedWindow
On 2013-02-14 18:05, Ian Kelly wrote:
On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 10:03 AM, Philipp Hagemeister wrote:
So any implementation has to choose one of the following:
1. Ignore invariants and postconditions of inherited classes - defeats
the purpose.
2. Only respect definitions in classes and methods in
using ubuntu 12.10 i am trying to run a python block, namely OP25, in GNU Radio
Companion v3.6.3-35-g4435082f. i get the following error:
Executing: "/home/matt/op25_grc.py"
Imported legacy fsk4
Using Volk machine: ssse3_32
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/home/matt/op25_grc.py", line
On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 10:48 AM, Chris Hinsley wrote:
> Is a Python list as fast as a bytearray ? I didn't copy a C prog BTW !
>>> from timeit import Timer
>>> t1 = Timer("board[36] = board[20]; board[20] = ' '", "board =
>>> bytearray('RNBQKBNR
>>> p
On 02/14/2013 10:05 AM, Ian Kelly wrote:
On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 10:03 AM, Philipp Hagemeister wrote:
So any implementation has to choose one of the following:
1. Ignore invariants and postconditions of inherited classes - defeats
the purpose.
2. Only respect definitions in classes and methods
Please post the code, or a link to the code...
Also, what version of python are you running this code over?
*Matt Jones*
On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 12:26 PM, wrote:
> using ubuntu 12.10 i am trying to run a python block, namely OP25, in
> GNU Radio Companion v3.6.3-35-g4435082f. i get the foll
On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 1:03 AM, Steven D'Aprano
wrote:
> E.g.:
>
> if x:
> pass
>
>
> Is that intended as "if slice(x, None, None)" with a missing colon, or
> "if x" with colon supplied?
That's not ambiguous, because the former is simply invalid syntax.
However, consider the following.
if 1
Hello All,
I am a newbie to python language. I need your help in implementation of
Binary tree in python. I have a count of nodes and I need to draw a binary
tree. Suppose if count is 5 then tree will look like
1
Hello All,
I am a newbie to python language. I need your help in implementation of
Binary tree in python. I have a count of nodes and I need to draw a binary
tree. Suppose if count is 5 then tree will look like
1
On 02/14/2013 11:18 AM, Megha Agrawal wrote:
Hello All,
I am a newbie to python language. I need your help in implementation
of Binary tree in python. I have a count of nodes and I need to draw a
binary tree. Suppose if count is 5 then tree will look like
1
From: Peter Otten <__pete...@web.de>
To: python-list@python.org
Cc:
Date: Thu, 14 Feb 2013 09:00:58 +0100
Subject: Re: "Exception ... in ignored" Messages
Ami Tavory wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Running the unit tests for some generator code, prints, as a side
> effect,
> numerous messages of the form:
Sending back to the maillist
*Matt Jones*
-- Forwarded message --
From:
Date: Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 1:42 PM
Subject: Re: Re:
To: Matt Jones
thanks for replying Matt. I am using version 2.7.3. im not sure if this
is right but here is the code from
"/usr/local/lib/python2.7/d
Hi, I've searched both this group and the web but was unable to find an answer,
sorry if it has already been answered, it seems such a common problem that I’m
sure someone has asked before.
We have a WebServices platform that must reply in XML, JSON, or JSONP. Having
to convert between these fo
Hi Chris
On Wednesday, 13 February 2013 23:25:09 UTC, Chris Hinsley wrote:
> New to Python, which I really like BTW.
Welcome aboard! But aren't you supposed to be writing Forth? ;-)
Cheers
Jon N
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I am using ubuntu 12.10 and python version 2.7.3. i run the following command
in terminal:
matt@matt-Inspiron-1525:~$ python -m trace --count -C . op25_grc.py
Here is the output with an error:
Imported legacy fsk4
Using Volk machine: ssse3_32
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/lib/p
On 02/14/2013 04:16 PM, md...@nycap.rr.com wrote:
I am using ubuntu 12.10 and python version 2.7.3. i run the following command
in terminal:
def connect(self, *points):
"""
Connect two or more block endpoints. An endpoint is either a (block,
port)
tuple or a block instance. In the latter
Hello all,
The Python Software Foundation is the organisation which protects and
manages the "boring" bits of keeping a big open source project alive: the
legal and contractual parts, funding for projects, trademarks and
copyrights.
If you are based in Europe, or know somebody who uses Python in
On Thursday, February 14, 2013 1:58:06 PM UTC-5, Ian wrote:
>
> That's not ambiguous, because the former is simply invalid syntax.
>
> However, consider the following.
>
>
>
> if 1: 2:
>
>
>
> That could be either a one-line if statement where the condition is 1
>
> and the body is slice(2
On 2013-02-14 21:14:03 +, jkn said:
Hi Chris
On Wednesday, 13 February 2013 23:25:09 UTC, Chris Hinsley wrote:
New to Python, which I really like BTW.
Welcome aboard! But aren't you supposed to be writing Forth? ;-)
Cheers
Jon N
Well, I'm experimenting with other things too
Hi,
I've just uploaded pypiserver 1.1.0 to the python package index.
pypiserver is a minimal PyPI compatible server. It can be used to serve
a set of packages and eggs to easy_install or pip.
pypiserver is easy to install (i.e. just 'pip install pypiserver'). It
doesn't have any external depende
On Thu, Feb 14, 2013, at 04:39 PM, Dave Angel wrote:
[... snip]
> For those of us using text-based email, the program in this message is
> totally unreadable. This is a text mailing-list, so please put your
> email program in text mode, or you'll lose much of your audience.
For those of us n
I want to make a guess the number game (Which i have), but i want to make the
computer play the game against itself. How would i do this?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 14 February 2013 23:34, eli m wrote:
> I want to make a guess the number game (Which i have), but i want to make the
> computer play the game against itself. How would i do this?
Your question would make more sense if you would show your program and
also explain how you would like the output
On Feb 14, 5:00 pm, Ian Kelly wrote:
> 2. If you're going to criticize someone for their spelling, at least
> be sure to spell correctly the name of the person you are addressing.
> You've consistently misspelled Steven's surname in several posts that
> I've noticed.
The correct spelling conflict
On Thursday, February 14, 2013 4:09:37 PM UTC-8, Oscar Benjamin wrote:
> On 14 February 2013 23:34, eli m wrote:
>
> > I want to make a guess the number game (Which i have), but i want to make
> > the computer play the game against itself. How would i do this?
>
>
>
> Your question would make
the regex--- pat = r'([a-z].+?\s)(.+)(?:(\(.+\)))?' ,do not work at all.
>>> rfile.close()
>>> import re
>>> rfile=open("tv.txt","r")
>>> pat1 = r'([a-z].+?\s)(.+)((\(.+\)))?'
>>> for line in rfile.readlines():
... Match=re.match(pat1,line)
... print "1group is ",Match.group(1),"2group
On 2013-02-15 00:32, python wrote:
the regex--- pat = r'([a-z].+?\s)(.+?)((\(.+\)))?$' ,do not work at all.
[snip]
Sorry, that should be:
pat1 = r'([a-z].+?\s)(.+?)((\(.+\)))?$'
Group 2 should've been lazy "(.+?)", and because of that it should've
forced matching the end of the line with "$".
On Thursday, February 14, 2013 4:01:39 PM UTC-6, steph...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Thursday, February 14, 2013 1:58:06 PM UTC-5, Ian wrote:
>
> [snip: quote noise!]
>
Dude! Please trim this quote noise from your posts. I know Google's quoting
mechanism is buggy, but dammit man YOU'RE A PROGRAMER!
See the python extension called "Vigil": https://github.com/munificent/vigil
.
mark
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Thursday, February 14, 2013 6:01:51 AM UTC-6, Ulrich Eckhardt wrote:
> [...]
>
> try:
> rrick.go_and_[edit]_yourself()
> finally:
> rrick.get_lost()
Oops, you forgot to catch "FloatingPointError" and so your code choked in the
try block -- typical newbie mistake.
--
http://mail.pyt
On Thursday, February 14, 2013 11:48:10 AM UTC-6, Chris Hinsley wrote:
> Is a Python list as fast as a bytearray?
Why would you care about that now? Are you running this code on the Xerox Alto?
Excuse me for the sarcasm but your post title has perplexed me:
"First attempt at a Python prog (Che
On Fri, Feb 15, 2013 at 1:56 PM, Rick Johnson
wrote:
> On Thursday, February 14, 2013 6:01:51 AM UTC-6, Ulrich Eckhardt wrote:
>> [...]
>>
>> try:
>> rrick.go_and_[edit]_yourself()
>> finally:
>> rrick.get_lost()
>
> Oops, you forgot to catch "FloatingPointError" and so your code choked
Acácio Centeno writes:
> Hi, I've searched both this group and the web but was unable to find an
> answer, sorry if it has already been answered, it seems such a common problem
> that I am sure someone has asked before.
>
> We have a WebServices platform that must reply in XML, JSON, or JSONP.
On Friday, February 15, 2013 12:18:17 AM UTC-6, Chris Angelico wrote:
> And yet it is still a perfect example of how a line of
> code inside a 'try' block can indeed be offensive.
Oh nice try, but we are not fooled by your straw-man. My exact statement that
provoked this whole thing was:
"""
Q1:
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