miliar enough with the boost.python library, Python C API, or Python
itself to know how to set it up. So My question is this:
How can I either make the first method of adding an enum work and not
throw the exception, OR once I create the BOOST_PYTHON_MODULE in an
embedded python c++ program how to I then import that module into my
embedded python?
Thanks in advance for any help
-Cory
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
oking here:
http://members.gamedev.net/sicrane/articles/EmbeddingPythonPart1.html
It's odd to me that little tidbit got left out of the boost.python
tutorial page on embedding... I must have looked at it 100 times.
On Oct 18, 12:59 am, Cory <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
>
#!/whereverpythonis/python
Has anyone else encountered this?
Cheers,
Cory.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Thanks Albert.
I already do use #!/usr/bin/env python in my package directory, but the
build_scripts part of "setup.py install" changes this line to #!None
before copying to my bin directory.
Cheers,
Cory.
Albert Hofkamp wrote:
On Wed, 12 Jan 2005 10:09:03 +, Cory Davis <[EM
remove incase it disturbs my linux
distribution (Fedora Core 2).
Its also possible that I have done something silly to an environment
variable. To check this I will try installing my package either as root
or another user.
Cheers,
Cory.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Thanks for the help Chris. I tried the -E option, and also installing as
root with no change - the scripts in the bin directory still end up with
#!None on the first line. Next step is to reinstall Python 2.4, and if
that doesn't work I'll just stick with 2.3.4.
Cheers,
Cory.
Chri
Problem solved. I was actually using scipy_distutils and not distutils,
without good reason. Changing setup.py to use distutils made the
problem go away.
Cory.
Cory Davis wrote:
Hi all,
I have been successfully deploying my own python package with distutils
for some time now, but lately
I would personally use re here.
test_string = ' [{blah blah blah'
matches = re.findall(r'[^\s]', t)
result = ''.join(matches)[:2]
>> '[{'
On Thu, Dec 31, 2015 at 10:18 AM, wrote:
> I need to check a string over which I have no control for the first 2
> non-white space characters (which should
I am using line.rfind to parse a particular line of html code. For example,
this is the line of html code I am parsing:
79°Lo 56°
and this is the code I use to split the line to (in this case) pull out the
'79'.
position0 = line.rfind('{}'.format(date1.strftime("%a")))
if position0 > 0 :
MS
Visual Studio redistributable package, which I did with no change in
outcome. I really have no idea what to do.
Any help is appreciated.
Thanks,
Cory
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
computer and the fact that it isn't
there is the sign of some other problem?
Thanks
Cory
From: Sridhar Ratnakumar [mailto:sridh...@activestate.com]
Sent: Monday, February 22, 2010 11:54 AM
To: Nardin, Cory L.
Cc: python-list@python.org
Subject: Re: P
11 matches
Mail list logo