In a message of Sat, 22 Aug 2015 06:53:21 -, ali ranjbar writes:
>hi dear friend
>
>I have python version 2.4.3
>
>Which version of PIL is appropriate for me and how can I add it to my systems?
>
>Regards
>
>--
>https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
If you really have python 2.
On 23Aug2015 09:28, Laura Creighton wrote:
In a message of Sat, 22 Aug 2015 06:53:21 -, ali ranjbar writes:
I have python version 2.4.3
Which version of PIL is appropriate for me and how can I add it to my systems?
If you really have python 2.4.3 then you badly need a newer Python.
If h
Mark Lawrence writes:
> I was always led to believe that the subject was a difficult thing to
> do, but here
> https://www.reddit.com/r/learnpython/comments/3huz4x/how_to_do_math_inside_raw_input/
> is a safe solution in only 23 characters, or are there any discernable
> flaws in it?
Related:
h
Yuzhi Xu schrieb am 23.08.2015 um 08:10:
> I find out that python's VM seems to be very unfriendly with CPU-Cache.
> see:
> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/32163585/how-to-handle-cpu-cache-in-python-or-fastest-way-to-call-a-function-once
> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/32153178/python-funct
On Sun, 23 Aug 2015 04:10 pm, Yuzhi Xu wrote:
> I find out that python's VM seems to be very unfriendly with CPU-Cache.
Possibly. More comments below.
> for example:
> ***
> import time
> a = range(500)
>
> sum(a)
>
> for i in range(100): #just to c
Hi,
>> for i in range(100): #just to create a time interval, seems this disturb
>> cpu cache?
>> pass
Python interpreter consumes memory quite extensively because
"everything is object". So constructions like:
range(100):
_take_ memory. Additionally it will trigger garbage collec
On Sun, 23 Aug 2015 10:07 pm, Vladimir Ignatov wrote:
> Hi,
>
>>> for i in range(100): #just to create a time interval, seems this
>>> disturb cpu cache?
>>> pass
>
> Python interpreter consumes memory quite extensively because
> "everything is object". So constructions like:
>
> range
On Sunday 23 Aug 2015 03:05 CEST, Chris Angelico wrote:
>> But in principal I have found the problem. (Not the reason.) The
>> problem is Firefox. (So it is not bottle and also not AngularJS.)
>> When using Chrome there is no problem. Not even when I do 15 times
>> a refresh. With Firefox there is
I understood that with sqlite3 in Python you can not use prepared
statements. Below the way I solved this.
Also an URL is unique, so I need to check that if it is found, the
values are the same as the ones I wanted to insert.
This is my code.
==
On Sun, Aug 23, 2015 at 11:18 PM, Cecil Westerhof wrote:
> Also an URL is unique, so I need to check that if it is found, the
> values are the same as the ones I wanted to insert.
And if they aren't? Currently, all you do is print out a message and
continue on; what happens if you get the same UR
On 22.08.2015 16:15, Christian Gollwitzer wrote:
> Probably yes. You should take a look at the OP again and compare the
> time stamps. It says that in between two consecutive calls of the same
> program, the request was served once in a second, and once with serious
> delays. Despite that the serv
I want to host my web application on pythonanywhere so that the people
of Mozilla can investigate the problem it has with this application. I
do not find documentation that is useful for me. Has anyone a good
resource?
The application I want to deploy on pythonanywhere:
https://github.com/Ceci
On Sunday 23 Aug 2015 16:05 CEST, Johannes Bauer wrote:
> On 22.08.2015 16:15, Christian Gollwitzer wrote:
>
>> Probably yes. You should take a look at the OP again and compare
>> the time stamps. It says that in between two consecutive calls of
>> the same program, the request was served once in
On 2015-08-23 16:20, Cecil Westerhof wrote:
On Sunday 23 Aug 2015 16:05 CEST, Johannes Bauer wrote:
On 22.08.2015 16:15, Christian Gollwitzer wrote:
Probably yes. You should take a look at the OP again and compare
the time stamps. It says that in between two consecutive calls of
the same prog
On Mon, Aug 24, 2015 at 2:17 AM, Dennis Lee Bieber
wrote:
> SQLite3 supports the non-standard
>
> INSERT OR REPLACE ...
>
> (or one can do INSERT OR IGNORE; the OR XXX has a number of values that are
> allowed to control behavior... BUT the OR clause only applies if a UNIQU
On Sunday 23 Aug 2015 17:44 CEST, MRAB wrote:
>> I never blamed bottle, I was asking if it could be a problem with
>> bottle.
>>
> The subject says otherwise. :-)
Yeah, my communication skills can take some improvement. I meant: I
have this problem. I think it could have to do something with bott
On 08/23/2015 08:05 AM, Johannes Bauer wrote:
> By git bisect he can find out where
> he introduced the bug.
Like Cecil said, this is of little help. There was no code changed from
when he didn't notice the behavior until he did.
>> Note that this says nothing about the location of the bug, in c
On 23.08.2015 18:47, Michael Torrie wrote:
> Since this is an ajax thing, I can entirely
> understand that Firefox introduces random delays. Practically all
> ajax-heavy sites I've ever used has had random slowdowns in Firefox.
This would imply that random six-second delays have somehow passed t
If I understand correctly asyncio, coroutines, etc. (and, of course,
Threads) are not simultaneously executed, and that if one wants that one
must still use multiprocessing. But I'm not sure. The note is still
there at the start of threading, so I'm pretty sure about that one.
The requiremen
Anyone?
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Charles Hixson writes:
> If I understand correctly asyncio, coroutines, etc. (and, of course,
> Threads) are not simultaneously executed, and that if one wants that
> one must still use multiprocessing. But I'm not sure. The note is
> still there at the start of threading, so I'm pretty sure ab
Johannes Bauer writes:
> You're entirely right that this kind of personal feud and immature
> mockery is inappropriate for a mailing list and you're also right that
> it does create a toxic atmosphere. Since Python is the lanauge I'm
> most passionate about a detrimental effect on the Python comm
On Saturday, May 2, 2015 at 8:50:22 PM UTC+1, lbertolotti wrote:
> Can I:
> 1.Enable a variable browser in Canopy editor similar to the Spyder editor?
> 2.Writing a function say log( gives me the function help, but I can't read
> the whole documentation
> 3.Eclipse had a auto-complete, can I enabl
On Mon, Aug 24, 2015 at 8:09 AM, lbertolotti via Python-list
wrote:
> Anyone?
When you post a follow-up like this, it helps to provide some context.
Fortunately for you, I have a threaded email client, but not everyone
does - and not everyone was subscribed to the list when you first
posted.
If
"C.D. Reimer" writes:
> I'm writing a chess engine to learn about Python classes and inheritance, and
> using pytest for the unit test. I've created a Piece class, which has 99% of
> the functionality for a chess piece, and subclass the other pieces -- Bishop,
> King, Knight, Pawn, Queen, Rook
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