Paul Rubin :
> Marko Rauhamaa writes:
>> Yes, RHEL, CentOS and OracleLinux still only support Python2. It may
>> be another year before Python3 becomes available on them.
>
> Debian's default Python is also Python2. I don't say it *only*
> supports python2 since you can optionally install python3
On 30.03.2018 16:46, Ben Bacarisse wrote:
>> Yup, but why? I mean, at the point of definition of "z", the only
>> definition of "collections" that would be visible to the code would be
>> the globally imported module, would it not? How can the code know of the
>> local declaration that only comes
Paul Rubin :
> All the scripts that say #!/usr/bin/python at the top will still use
> python2.
Which is how it should be till the end of times.
Unfortunately, ArchLinux decided otherwise, which has caused quite a bit
of grief in the office, where a coworker uses it.
We thought we could get aroun
On Sat, 31 Mar 2018 12:32:31 +0300, Marko Rauhamaa wrote:
> Paul Rubin :
>
>> Marko Rauhamaa writes:
>>> Yes, RHEL, CentOS and OracleLinux still only support Python2. It may
>>> be another year before Python3 becomes available on them.
>>
>> Debian's default Python is also Python2. I don't say i
On Sat, 31 Mar 2018 12:39:48 +0300, Marko Rauhamaa wrote:
> Paul Rubin :
>> All the scripts that say #!/usr/bin/python at the top will still use
>> python2.
>
> Which is how it should be till the end of times.
Don't be silly -- they should use Python 1, of course, as nature
intended. In 20 year
Johannes Bauer wrote:
> On 30.03.2018 13:25, Johannes Bauer wrote:
>
>>> This mention of collections refers to ...
>>>
}
for (_, collections) in z.items():
>>>
>>> ... this local variable.
>>
>> Yup, but why? I mean, at the point of definition of "z", the only
>> definition of "collect
On 30/03/2018 21:13, C W wrote:
Hello all,
I want to create a dictionary.
The keys are 26 lowercase letters. The values are 26 uppercase letters.
The output should look like:
{'a': 'A', 'b': 'B',...,'z':'Z' }
I know I can use string.ascii_lowercase and string.ascii_uppercase, but how
do I u
On behalf of the PyPA, I am pleased to announce that a beta release
10.0.0b1 of pip has just been released for testing by the community.
We're planning on a final release in 2 weeks' time, over the weekend
of 14/15 April.
To install pip 10.0.0.b1, you can run
python -m pip install --upgrade -
On Friday, March 30, 2018 at 8:59:16 PM UTC-5, Chris Angelico wrote:
[...]
> You can pooh-pooh any statistic.
Yeah, except the ones supported by actual _facts_.
> So far, though, you have provided NO statistics of your
> own, just your own gut feeling.
Uh huh. And what do you call drawing naiv
On Sat, Mar 31, 2018 at 11:29 PM, Rick Johnson
wrote:
> Under no circumstance is PersonB required to prove PersonA'a
> assertions. The onerous is on PersonA.
Assertion: Rick doesn't know what "onerous" means.
Under no circumstance is Rick required to prove me right. But he
obliged anyway. Very k
Quick note: we've implemented the fix Terry Jan Reedy suggested
regarding window width and filters to fix
https://github.com/pypa/warehouse/issues/3454 , so thank you to everyone
who helped us nail this down.
The next IRC/Twitter livechat hour with PyPI maintainers is Tuesday,
April 3rd at 15:00 U
On Sat, Mar 31, 2018 at 6:29 AM, Rick Johnson
wrote:
> On Friday, March 30, 2018 at 8:59:16 PM UTC-5, Chris Angelico wrote:
>> Wanna provide some competing information showing that other
>> languages are more used?
>
> Chris, here is how debate works:
>
> PersonA asserts X.
>
> PersonB dem
On Saturday 31 March 2018 10:16:13 Ian Kelly wrote:
> On Sat, Mar 31, 2018 at 6:29 AM, Rick Johnson
>
> wrote:
> > On Friday, March 30, 2018 at 8:59:16 PM UTC-5, Chris Angelico wrote:
> >> Wanna provide some competing information showing that other
> >> languages are more used?
> >
> > Chris, her
Hi,
I was just wondering, could the fact that the Python community is
willing to discontinue using and developing Python 2 softwares, does
that mean we are stopping to support standard computers and laptops as well?
Furthermore, does it bother you to develop code primarly oriented
towards mo
On 03/31/2018 08:58 AM, Etienne Robillard wrote:
> I was just wondering, could the fact that the Python community is
> willing to discontinue using and developing Python 2 softwares, does
> that mean we are stopping to support standard computers and laptops
> as well?
I've tried several times bu
Le 2018-03-31 à 11:40, Michael Torrie a écrit :
On 03/31/2018 08:58 AM, Etienne Robillard wrote:
I was just wondering, could the fact that the Python community is
willing to discontinue using and developing Python 2 softwares, does
that mean we are stopping to support standard computers and
On Sun, Apr 1, 2018 at 2:58 AM, Etienne Robillard wrote:
>
>
> Le 2018-03-31 à 11:40, Michael Torrie a écrit :
>>
>> On 03/31/2018 08:58 AM, Etienne Robillard wrote:
>>>
>>> I was just wondering, could the fact that the Python community is
>>> willing to discontinue using and developing Python 2 s
On 31/03/2018 16:58, Etienne Robillard wrote:
Le 2018-03-31 à 11:40, Michael Torrie a écrit :
On 03/31/2018 08:58 AM, Etienne Robillard wrote:
I was just wondering, could the fact that the Python community is
willing to discontinue using and developing Python 2 softwares, does
that mean we
På Sat, 31 Mar 2018 11:58:39 -0400
Etienne Robillard skrev:
> Are you trolling? Do you understand that a modern mobile device
> typically require a Internet subscription and an additional subscription
> for the smart phone?
I think the question is why you equate python3 with the need for inte
On Mar 31, 2018 09:58, "Etienne Robillard" wrote:
Le 2018-03-31 à 11:40, Michael Torrie a écrit :
> On 03/31/2018 08:58 AM, Etienne Robillard wrote:
>
>> I was just wondering, could the fact that the Python community is
>> willing to discontinue using and developing Python 2 softwares, does
>>
On 2018-03-31, Etienne Robillard wrote:
> Are you trolling? Do you understand that a modern mobile device
> typically require a Internet subscription and an additional subscription
> for the smart phone?
Huh? What is "an internet subscription"?
Why would you need two of them if all you have
On 3/31/2018 11:58 AM, Etienne Robillard wrote:
Do you really think people in Somalia can afford theses things like in
the US?
No, many cannot afford $600 Caddilac-style phones to take 10 megapixel
pictures and watch UTube videos. Instead they buy $100 VWBug-style
phones that let them get c
Grant Edwards wrote:
> Etienne Robillard wrote:
>
> > Do you understand that a modern mobile device typically
> > require a Internet subscription and an additional
> > subscription for the smart phone?
>
> Huh? What is "an internet subscription"? Why would you
> need two of them if all you have
Hi,
On Sat, Mar 31, 2018 at 06:16:51PM -0400, Sumana Harihareswara wrote:
> The new Python Package Index at https://pypi.org is now in beta.
Yep!
I read that the new Warehouse does not offer GPG signature files for
download.
Why not? How can I still get them (append .asc to the source downlaod
Paul Moore writes :
If you discover any bugs while testing the new release, please report
> them at https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues.
Link not working (on pipermail archive -- remove the period on the end)
https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues
PS: was looking forward to PIP improvements on Windo
On Sat, 31 Mar 2018 10:58:51 -0400, Etienne Robillard wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I was just wondering, could the fact that the Python community is
> willing to discontinue using and developing Python 2 softwares, does
> that mean we are stopping to support standard computers and laptops as
> well?
That se
On Sat, 31 Mar 2018 14:07:37 -0400, Terry Reedy wrote:
> On 3/31/2018 11:58 AM, Etienne Robillard wrote:
>
>> Do you really think people in Somalia can afford theses things like in
>> the US?
>
> No, many cannot afford $600 Caddilac-style phones to take 10 megapixel
> pictures and watch UTube vi
On Sun, 01 Apr 2018 03:17:51 +0300, Mikhail V wrote:
> PS: was looking forward to PIP improvements on Windows, on 9.0.3 still
> some issues. E.g. trying to redirect output from 'pip search ... >
> a.txt' gives a wall of errors. it's on Windows 10.
Don't be shy, tell us what those errors are.
-
Steven D'Aprano writes:
>>
>> PS: was looking forward to PIP improvements on Windows, on 9.0.3 still
>> some issues. E.g. trying to redirect output from 'pip search ... >
>> a.txt' gives a wall of errors. it's on Windows 10.
>
>
>
> Don't be shy, tell us what those errors are.
You meant - don't
On 2018-04-01 02:50, Mikhail V wrote:
Steven D'Aprano writes:
PS: was looking forward to PIP improvements on Windows, on 9.0.3 still
some issues. E.g. trying to redirect output from 'pip search ... >
a.txt' gives a wall of errors. it's on Windows 10.
Don't be shy, tell us what those errors
On 03/31/2018 06:26 PM, Dominik George wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Sat, Mar 31, 2018 at 06:16:51PM -0400, Sumana Harihareswara wrote:
>> The new Python Package Index at https://pypi.org is now in beta.
>
> Yep!
>
> I read that the new Warehouse does not offer GPG signature files for
> download.
>
> Why
MRAB writes:
> > UnicodeEncodeError: 'charmap' codec can't encode character
> >
> > when it meets a non-ascii char.
> >
> > e.g. tried this:
> > pip search pygame > a.txt
> >
> Well, _I_ didn't get an error!
>
> One of the lines is:
>
> kundalini (0.4)- LրVE-like PyGame API
>
> So
I might be entirely off my face, but figured I'd ask anyways given I
haven't figured out a clean solution to this problem myself yet:
I'm trying to write a REST API client that supports both async and
synchronous HTTP transports (initially requests and aiohttp). So far,
I've tried a few approaches
Hi Sumana,
> I've been trying to reach out to the Debian Python community via IRC,
> personal connections, tickets, and mailing lists to ensure a smooth
> transition; I see now that a post I tried to get onto the debian-python
> list a few weeks ago did not get posted there, so I've re-sent it. I'
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