Hi there,
I would like users of my web application to be able to download a backup
file of a database (using* *MySQL's *mysqldump* command).
My strategy is to use *zipfile* to create a zip file object (with the *
mysqldump* output as the contents of the zipped file) and then use *
sys.stdout* to
Hi there,
I would like users of my web application to be able to download a backup
file of a database (using* *MySQL's *mysqldump* command).
My strategy is to use *zipfile* to create a zip file object (with the *
mysqldump* output as the contents of the zipped file) and then use *
sys.stdout* to
Since when should a machine (that's what a computer is after all), be
forced to contort itself into something that is capable of reflecting
the laws of physical matter?
Better perhaps to look at it from another angle - it's
counter-intuitive to think that the digital should mirror the
analogue. Th
Python is a programming language, and like practically any programming
language it can do all those things. I'm not sure your requirements
are based on a full understanding of the implications. A "health care
center' cannot be made with a few "drag and drop", "plug and play"
modules that you manipu
> On IDE's, I'm afraid I'm not going to be much help because I don't use
> them. I prefer to use a decent editor (Emacs in my case, others have
> their own preferences) and run my scripts from the command line. That
> said, IDLE (which comes packaged with Python) is a perfectly decent
> little ID
Speaking of itch, that's exactly the phrase Eric Steven Raymond uses
for the same purpose in his famous essay: "Cathedral and the Bazaar"
(http://www.catb.org/~esr/writings/cathedral-bazaar/). Someone
Something, you should read this essay first, before anything else.
Cheers,
Brendon
PS: I agree w
>
> Anyway, for simple web programming, frameworks are not worth the
> hassle. Just use the cgi module.
>
>
I can vouch for what Paul says. I started in Python 3 years ago, and I did
so with a web application (still working on it!). I'm using the cgi
approach, and it certainly teaches you the conc
On 19 February 2010 08:07, Mark Lawrence wrote:
> Muhammad Alkarouri wrote:
>>
>> Your question is borderline if not out of topic in this group. I will
>> make a few comments though.
>
> This might be a Python group, but threads often drift way off topic, which
> added to the language itself make
"i had once considered you one of the foremost intelligent minds
within this group. However, after your display within this thread i am
beginning to doubt my original beliefs of you."
"Oh ... grow a spine already, really. I can't help but thinking of the
spineless Robert Ford every time you open y
Hi there,
My web application uses a cookie to set/get a session id. This is
working fine. However, I'm unable to work out how to get the cookie
"expires" value.
Below is test code that replicates the problem. It creates a simple
web page and shows a cookie value if it's found, or creates a new on
>
>
> The interface really should be configurable by the user according to their
> needs. The code doesn't need to *know* the position or dimensions of
> a widget, or its label or colour or spacing, let alone dictate them.
>
Perhaps...but the user needs a framework in order to understand the
funct
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