On 18/10/2020 12:58, Mladen Gogala via Python-list wrote:
On Sat, 17 Oct 2020 22:51:11 +, Mladen Gogala wrote:
On Sat, 17 Oct 2020 18:12:16 -0400, Steve wrote:
with open("HOURLYLOG.txt", 'r') as infile:
works but, when I rename the file, the line:
with open("HOURLY-LOG.txt", 'r') as infile
I am not sure if what I did to repair it but the problem is gone.
A copy/paste/rename was performed on the original code file and now I do not
get the error. No need for "r" or "\"...
WTH? I hate it when that happens.
Steve
Footnote:
"What rhymes with orange?"
"No it doesn't.."
-Original M
On 10/18/20 5:55 AM, Steve wrote:
I am not sure if what I did to repair it but the problem is gone.
A copy/paste/rename was performed on the original code file and now I do not
get the error. No need for "r" or "\"...
WTH? I hate it when that happens.
Could that original hyphen have been a uni
Are there Python ways to execute queries on PostgreSQL without getting data
over?
Are there ways just to fire off PostgreSQL queries and not get data into
Python?
Regards,
David
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 10/18/20 5:53 AM, Shaozhong SHI wrote:
> Are there Python ways to execute queries on PostgreSQL without getting data
> over?
>
> Are there ways just to fire off PostgreSQL queries and not get data into
> Python?
>
> Regards,
>
> David
>
When you "execute" the query, you don't get back the d
On 2020-10-18 06:35:03 -, Mladen Gogala via Python-list wrote:
> On Sat, 17 Oct 2020 21:23:40 -0600, Jason Friedman wrote:
> >> I'm looking to insert values into an oracle table (my_table) using the
> >> query below. The insert query works when the PROJECT is not NULL/empty
> >> (""). However w
We’re happy to announce that all edited videos of this year’s conference
are now available on our YouTube channel:
* EuroPython 2020 Playlist *
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CvbQArKEFes&list=PL8uoeex94UhHgMD9GOCbEHWku7pEPx9fW
We have 131 videos available in total, coveri
On Sun, Oct 18, 2020 at 10:32 PM D'Arcy Cain wrote:
>
> On 10/18/20 5:55 AM, Steve wrote:
> > I am not sure if what I did to repair it but the problem is gone.
> > A copy/paste/rename was performed on the original code file and now I do not
> > get the error. No need for "r" or "\"...
> >
> > WTH?
On 2020-10-17 21:03:26 -, Mladen Gogala via Python-list wrote:
> On Thu, 15 Oct 2020 21:30:15 +, Stefan Ram wrote:
> > Tony Flury writes:
> >> >>> a = r'end' + chr(92)
> >
> > Or maybe,
> >
> > a = r'''
> > end\
> > '''[ 1: -1 ]
> >
> > ? The first and the last line are messy, but i
On Sun, 18 Oct 2020 21:00:18 +1300, dn wrote:
> On 18/10/2020 12:58, Mladen Gogala via Python-list wrote:
>> On Sat, 17 Oct 2020 22:51:11 +, Mladen Gogala wrote:
>>> On Sat, 17 Oct 2020 18:12:16 -0400, Steve wrote:
>>>
with open("HOURLYLOG.txt", 'r') as infile:
works but, when I rena
On Sun, 18 Oct 2020 16:13:16 +0200, Peter J. Holzer wrote:
>
> Ah, I see, that the sillyness of Perl's grammar-altering modules (which
> let you write Perl in Latin (with proper declensions and conjugations,
> of course) or Chinese) has found its way to Python
>
To tell the truth, I only instal
On 10/18/20 11:07 AM, Mladen Gogala via Python-list wrote:
> The fundamental
> difference between the two languages is that Perl is procedural while
> Python is a fully OO language. Discussion of Perl vs Python necessarily
> devolves into the discussion of procedural vs OO paradigms.
Python cert
On 19/10/2020 05:58, Mladen Gogala via Python-list wrote:
On Sun, 18 Oct 2020 21:00:18 +1300, dn wrote:
On 18/10/2020 12:58, Mladen Gogala via Python-list wrote:
On Sat, 17 Oct 2020 22:51:11 +, Mladen Gogala wrote:
BTW, I used this
cp /var/log/syslog ./in-file.log
#!/usr/bin/env python3
imp
Even worse is that, in some cases, an addition called serviceRatings as a
key occur with new data unexpectedly.
How to produce a robust Python/Panda script to coping with all these?
Regards,
David
u'historicRatings': [{u'overall': {u'keyQuestionRatings': [{u'name':
u'Safe', u'rating': u'Require
On 19/10/2020 09:09, Shaozhong SHI wrote:
Even worse is that, in some cases, an addition called serviceRatings as a
key occur with new data unexpectedly.
"Even worse" than what?
Do you need to keep a list of acceptable/applicable/available keys?
(and reject or deal with others in some alternat
On 10/18/20 2:09 PM, Shaozhong SHI wrote:
> Even worse is that, in some cases, an addition called serviceRatings as a
> key occur with new data unexpectedly.
>
> How to produce a robust Python/Panda script to coping with all these?
>
> Regards,
>
> David
>
> u'historicRatings': [{u'overall': {u
On Sun, 18 Oct 2020 12:19:18 -0600, Michael Torrie wrote:
> Python certainly is procedural. A script starts at the top and executes
> through to the bottom and ends, barring any flow control in the middle.
> Like Perl you can use it in many different ways and paradigms including
> OO if you desi
If I may, a couple of items of list-etiquette (polite behavior), as I
understand them:
1 please reply to the list (cf only myself) because @Mats (who responded
earlier) and others on this list are much smarter than me, and might be
able to help you more quickly
2 top-posting seems to take the fo
On 10/18/20 5:37 PM, Mladen Gogala via Python-list wrote:
> On Sun, 18 Oct 2020 12:19:18 -0600, Michael Torrie wrote:
>
>> Python certainly is procedural. A script starts at the top and executes
>> through to the bottom and ends, barring any flow control in the middle.
>> Like Perl you can use i
Dear Sir
I am unable to find the *formula for covariance* used in np.cov syntax in
PYTHON given in link
https://numpy.org/doc/stable/reference/generated/numpy.cov.html. Could you
please help me out.
Thanks
Meghna
On Tue, Oct 13, 2020 at 11:46 AM Christian Gollwitzer
wrote:
> Am 13.10.20 um 06
Am 19.10.20 um 07:23 schrieb Meghna Karkera:
I am unable to find the *formula for covariance* used in np.cov syntax in
PYTHON given in link
https://numpy.org/doc/stable/reference/generated/numpy.cov.html. Could you
please help me out.
As said, you should click on the link [source] just at the
On Mon, 19 Oct 2020 02:44:25 +, Stefan Ram wrote:
> Mladen Gogala writes:
>>In Perl, there are no classes.
>
> If there are no classes in Perl, then what does
>
> bless REF,CLASSNAME
>
> do?
bless \$ref will make the given reference a reference to the class. And classes
is Perl
are
On Mon, Oct 19, 2020 at 5:26 PM Mladen Gogala via Python-list
wrote:
> bless \$ref will make the given reference a reference to the class. And
> classes is Perl
> are called "modules". However, Perl classes are not the classes in the real
> sense. There
> is no inheritance. You can have a simil
23 matches
Mail list logo