Hi,
I am using SQLAlchemy to extract some rows from a table of 'events'.
>From the call to the DB I get a list of objects of the type
sqlalchemy.orm.state.InstanceState
I would like to print these rows to the terminal using the 'tabulate'
package, the documentation for which says
The module
Why is a whl-package called a ``wheel''? Is it just a pronunciation for
the extension WHL or is it really a name?
Also, it seems that when I install Python on Windows, it doesn't come
with pip ready to run. I had to say
python -m ensurepip
and then I saw that a pip on a whl-package was insta
Loris Bennett wrote at 2024-3-21 10:56 +0100:
> ...
>So as I understand it, I need to convert the InstanceState-objects to,
>say, dicts, in order to print them. However I also want to remove one
>of the keys from the output and assumed I could just pop it off each
>event dict, thus:
>
>event_d
I believe that the name "Wheel" was a reference to "reinventing the
wheel". But I cannot find a quote to support this claim. I think the
general sentiment was that it was the second attempt by the Python
community to come up with a packaging format (first being Egg), and so
they were reinventing th
r...@zedat.fu-berlin.de (Stefan Ram) writes:
> Johanne Fairchild wrote or quoted:
>>Why is a whl-package called a ``wheel''? Is it just a pronunciation for
>>the extension WHL or is it really a name?
>
> PyPi in its initial state was named "cheese shop", as the famous
> part in the show "Mon
On 2024-03-21 11:36, Johanne Fairchild via Python-list wrote:
Why is a whl-package called a ``wheel''? Is it just a pronunciation for
the extension WHL or is it really a name?
Also, it seems that when I install Python on Windows, it doesn't come
with pip ready to run. I had to say
python -
On 2024-03-21, MRAB via Python-list wrote:
> As it's recommended to use the Python Launcher py on Windows, I use
> that instead:
>
> py -m pip install something
>
> because it gives better support if you have multiple versions of
> Python installed.
I adopted that practice years ago on Linux as
On 3/21/2024 4:19 PM, Grant Edwards via Python-list wrote:
On 2024-03-21, MRAB via Python-list wrote:
As it's recommended to use the Python Launcher py on Windows, I use
that instead:
py -m pip install something
because it gives better support if you have multiple versions of
Python installe