Am 16.03.17 um 05:40 schrieb Ho Yeung Lee:
we have many TV that would like to be monitored,
how to embed non-tkinter VLC player into grid of tkinter with python?
below code can embeded xterm but not for VLC player
import vlc
from Tkinter import *
import os
root = Tk()
for r in range(2):
MRAB wrote:
Could you argue that the blades were a kind of wing? After all, they
rely on the same principle of moving through the air to produce lift.
Balloons, on the other hand, ... :-)
Also rockets.
--
Greg
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Am 16.03.17 um 04:12 schrieb Stefan Ram:
The syntax
a if c else b
looks as if Guido made it intentionally ugly so that it will
not be used?
[...]
. But now Guido has invented something totally new. Why?
The rationale can be read in PEP 308:
https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0308
Stefan Ram wrote:
a if c else b
Guido has invented something totally new. Why?
It's arguably closer to the way you would say such a
thing in English.
Consider the following sentences:
"I wear my red shirt if it's Tuesday, else my green one."
"I wear if it's Tuesday my red shirt, else my
On Thu, 16 Mar 2017 11:03:56 +1300, Gregory Ewing wrote:
> Steve D'Aprano wrote:
>> You probably can't make a whale fly just by changing the class to bird.
>> It will need wings, and feathers, at the very least.
>
> Some things succeed in flying with neither wings nor feathers.
> Helicopters, for
On Wed, 15 Mar 2017 19:10:17 -0700, Deborah Swanson wrote:
> MRAB wrote, on Wednesday, March 15, 2017 3:19 PM
>>
>> On 2017-03-15 22:03, Gregory Ewing wrote:
>> > Steve D'Aprano wrote:
>> >> You probably can't make a whale fly just by changing the class to
>> >> bird. It will need wings, and feat
Some Python users have told me that isn't a good idea, but
without any specifics.
We don't know *why* those people told you not to use these modules. We
also don't know your use case. So it is very hard to advise you.
Lutz
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On Thu, 16 Mar 2017 09:03 am, Gregory Ewing wrote:
> Steve D'Aprano wrote:
>> You probably can't make a whale fly just by changing the class to bird.
>> It will need wings, and feathers, at the very least.
>
> Some things succeed in flying with neither wings nor feathers.
> Helicopters, for examp
On 15/03/2017 13:53, Steve D'Aprano wrote:
You probably can't make a whale fly just by changing the class to bird. It
will need wings, and feathers, at the very least.
the whale in the Hitchhiker's Guide found itself flying without feathers or
wings
--
Robin Becker
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On 2017-03-16 09:45 AM, Robin Becker wrote:
On 15/03/2017 13:53, Steve D'Aprano wrote:
You probably can't make a whale fly just by changing the class to
bird. It
will need wings, and feathers, at the very least.
the whale in the Hitchhiker's Guide found itself flying without feathers
or wings
On 2017-03-16, Robin Becker wrote:
> On 15/03/2017 13:53, Steve D'Aprano wrote:
>> You probably can't make a whale fly just by changing the class to bird. It
>> will need wings, and feathers, at the very least.
>
> the whale in the Hitchhiker's Guide found itself flying without
> feathers or wings
On 16/03/17 13:45, Robin Becker wrote:
On 15/03/2017 13:53, Steve D'Aprano wrote:
You probably can't make a whale fly just by changing the class to
bird. It
will need wings, and feathers, at the very least.
the whale in the Hitchhiker's Guide found itself flying without feathers
or wings
It
On 16/03/2017 14:03, D'Arcy Cain wrote:
On 2017-03-16 09:45 AM, Robin Becker wrote:
On 15/03/2017 13:53, Steve D'Aprano wrote:
You probably can't make a whale fly just by changing the class to
bird. It
will need wings, and feathers, at the very least.
the whale in the Hitchhiker's Guide found
On Fri, Mar 17, 2017 at 1:21 AM, Robin Becker wrote:
>> Falling is not the same as flying unless you accidentally miss the ground.
>>
> well in English an arrow flies as well as time, the whale was very
> interested in the approaching ground and perhaps forgot to conjure up
> virtual wings or rock
On 03/16/2017 01:12 AM, Gregory Ewing wrote:
> Stefan Ram wrote:
>
>> a if c else b
>>
>> Guido has invented something totally new. Why?
>
> It's arguably closer to the way you would say such a
> thing in English.
>
> Consider the following sentences:
>
> "I wear my red shirt if it's Tuesday,
On 03/16/2017 01:12 AM, Gregory Ewing wrote:
> Stefan Ram wrote:
>
>> a if c else b
>>
>> Guido has invented something totally new. Why?
>
> It's arguably closer to the way you would say such a
> thing in English.
>
> Consider the following sentences:
>
> "I wear my red shirt if it's Tuesday,
>
> I think it would be nice to have a way of getting the 'true'
> value as the return with an optional value if false. The desire
> comes about when the thing I'm comparing is an element of a collection:
>
>drugs['choice'] if drugs['choice'] else 'pot'
>
> Then I'm tempted to do:
>
>
Robin Becker wrote:
> On 16/03/2017 14:03, D'Arcy Cain wrote:
> > On 2017-03-16 09:45 AM, Robin Becker wrote:
> >> On 15/03/2017 13:53, Steve D'Aprano wrote:
> >>> You probably can't make a whale fly just by changing the class to
> >>> bird. It
> >>> will need wings, and feathers, at the very leas
On Thu, 16 Mar 2017 03:12:32 +, Stefan Ram wrote:
> The syntax
>
> a if c else b
>
> looks as if Guido made it intentionally ugly so that it will not be
> used?
>
> Being able to detect patterns that are in widespread use among
> programming languages enhances readability.
>
> II
On Thu, 16 Mar 2017 14:04:19 +, Jon Ribbens wrote:
> On 2017-03-16, Robin Becker wrote:
>> On 15/03/2017 13:53, Steve D'Aprano wrote:
>>> You probably can't make a whale fly just by changing the class to
>>> bird. It will need wings, and feathers, at the very least.
>>
>> the whale in the Hit
William Mayor writes:
>> I think it would be nice to have a way of getting the 'true' value as
>> the return with an optional value if false. The desire comes about
>> when the thing I'm comparing is an element of a collection:
>>
>>drugs['choice'] if drugs['choice'] else 'pot'
>>
>> Th
For a couple of years we've used SimpleHTTPServer to serve pages to internal
users at low volumes, and we find it to be reliable and trivial to set up. We
have not subjected it to a rigorous security assessment.
HTH,
Steve J. Martin
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I want to do (what I thought) would be quite a simple thing. I have an LDAP
entry that looks like this(in LDIF format):
dn: cn=myorg,ou=teams,ou=groups,o=company,c=us
cn: myorg
objectClass: top
objectClass: CompanyTeams
objectClass: groupOfUniqueNames
owner: cn=john,ou=people,o=company,c=us
uniqu
Chris Angelico wrote:
I just asked my father, and he believes that a satellite DOES fly, on
the basis that it is perpetually falling and forever missing the
ground.
Also, NASA people talk about "flying" the ISS, so it seems your
father is in good company.
--
Greg
--
https://mail.python.org/mai
Tobiah wrote:
To be fair, the proper comparison would be:
If it's Tuesday, I wear my red shirt, else my green one.
The Python analog of that would be
if it_is_tuesday:
wear(red_shirt)
else:
wear(green_shirt)
i.e. a statement rather than an expression. We're
On Fri, Mar 17, 2017 at 10:45 AM, Stefan Ram wrote:
> Gregory Ewing writes:
>>wear(red_shirt if it_is_tuesday else green_shirt)
>
> Operators in Python usually are written with special
> symbols, not with words, so a word usually indicates,
> "This is not an operator.".
>
Non-operators lik
Lutz Horn writes:
> We don't know *why* those people told you not to use these modules. We
> also don't know your use case. So it is very hard to advise you.
The use case is to have a very easily set up way to serve basic pages
and files, without a lot of configuration files and other
infrastruct
Steve D'Aprano wrote,on March 16, 2017 5:07 AM
>
> On Thu, 16 Mar 2017 09:03 am, Gregory Ewing wrote:
>
> > Steve D'Aprano wrote:
> >> You probably can't make a whale fly just by changing the class to
> >> bird. It will need wings, and feathers, at the very least.
> >
> > Some things succeed in
On Thu, Mar 16, 2017 at 7:56 PM, Dennis Lee Bieber
wrote:
> On Fri, 17 Mar 2017 10:03:04 +1300, Gregory Ewing
> declaimed the following:
>
>>Chris Angelico wrote:
>>> I just asked my father, and he believes that a satellite DOES fly, on
>>> the basis that it is perpetually falling and forever mis
On Fri, Mar 17, 2017 at 1:52 PM, Ian Kelly wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 16, 2017 at 7:56 PM, Dennis Lee Bieber
> wrote:
>> On Fri, 17 Mar 2017 10:03:04 +1300, Gregory Ewing
>> declaimed the following:
>>
>>>Chris Angelico wrote:
I just asked my father, and he believes that a satellite DOES fly, on
Hello, everybody:
I use python2.7.10 and want to add a c language library in python.
So how can i built it as a built-in module in python?
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Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
I'd say satellites do "not" fly, as they have no force/action opposing
the fall caused by the pull of gravity.
Arrows, bullets, thrown stones, etc. are often said to be
flying.
Seems to me the word gets applied to anything that is
moving while not contacting th
Stefan Ram wrote:
A postponed »if« can be found (x if a, otherwise y), but a
preceding »if« (if a, x, otherwise y) also is found often.
Yes, both forms occur in English. The point is that
Guido didn't just make the idea up, it was inspired
by natural language.
--
Greg
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https://mail.pytho
Chris Angelico wrote:
Maybe what the ISS does isn't flying - it's falling with style?
Yep. They didn't really launch it into orbit with rockets,
that was all faked. They actually hauled it up there with
a crane, let it go and pulled the earth away at the last
moment.
--
Greg
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https://mail.py
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