[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> >So you're using Putty to telenet/ssh into the FreeBSD server, but what
> >editor on you using on the FreeBSD server?
>
> I use pico for that.
> That Samba isn't available but I can install it.
>
> Or are there other editors for FreeBSD that I can run with putty ?
I use
Jim wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm using reStructuredText as a format for some group documentation,
> and often my co-workers take notes during meetings in Word's outline
> mode. Does anyone already have a python script that will convert from
> Word (or the Open Office file format version of a word document
Xah Lee wrote:
> Dear Peter Hansen,
> My messages speak themselfs. You and your cohorts's stamping of it does
> not change its nature. And if this is done with repetitiousness, it
> gives away your nature.
Taunt not the cohorts of Peter Hansen!
Graham
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/
Grzegorz Slusarek wrote:
> Hello everyone. I have to get data from Lotus Notes and i curious is it
> possible doing it with Python. I heard that Lotus Notes using COM, so
> the Python does so maybe it can be done? Anyone have any experiences
> doing that?
> Ane help will by apreciated
Yes, it's p
Ben Finney wrote:
> Howdy all,
>
> I'd like to have an Abstract Data Type for a scalar value that is
> restricted to a small set of values. Like an Enum, I suppose.
>
> What I would like is to be able to use simple 'str' values in most of
> the code, but where the values are actually used in a sema
Marco Aschwanden wrote:
> The second line of your code is already a show stopper in my case:
>
> from win32com.client import Dispatch
> session = Dispatch('Lotus.NotesSession')
> session.Initialize('my_secret_passwort')
>
> When started, ends:
> [snip]
> AttributeError: Lotus.NotesSession.Initiali
Matthew Thorley wrote:
> Greetings, I have a question I hope some one with more back ground can
> give me a little help with.
>
> I want to write a simple internet monitoring script for windows that
> watches out bound http traffic and keeps a list of all the site visited.
>
> I am thinking that I
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I'm using GNU Emacs 21.3.1 with python-mode 1.0alpha under Windows XP.
> Whenever I execute a command in an edit window (with
> py-execute-region), the output window steals the focus. How can I stop
> this happening?
[snip]
> I commented out the command
> (pop-to-buffer
Dieter Vanderelst wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I'm having a problem with playing WAV files using Winsound.
>
> If I use winsound to play a certain WAV files only the first few seconds
> of the file get played. I think this comes because these files contain
> some parts of silence. There winsound seems the s
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> Speaking as an Australia, ...
> [snip]
> But don't worry, there is one thing we all agree on throughout the
> English-speaking world: you Americans don't speak English.
And lest you feel Steven's observation don't bear much weight, keep in
mind that he is speaking as an en
In translating natural language to SQL, be sure you're not introducing
opportunities for SQL injection attacks. Code like
sql = 'SELECT %s FROM %s' % (this, that)
is considered dangerous, because a well-crafted value for "that" can be
used to, e.g., delete rows from your tables, run system com
Sebastian Bassi wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I have to parse a text file (was excel, but I translated to CSV) like
> the one below, and I am not sure how to store it (to manipulate it
> later).
>
> Here is an extract of the data:
>
[snip]
This looks a lot like 2D data (row/column), not 3D. What's the third
Sebastian Bassi wrote:
> On 20 Jul 2005 10:47:50 -0700, Graham Fawcett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > This looks a lot like 2D data (row/column), not 3D. What's the third
> > axis? It looks, too, that you're not really interested in storage, but
> > in analy
Kreedz wrote:
> Could Windows version have anything to do with this?? Else I've got
> some really weird issue...
>
> I'm on Windows 2000 Professional
Yes, that definitely counts as a wierd issue.
I couldn't reproduce the bug either.
C:\temp>python
ActivePython 2.4.1 Build 247 (ActiveState Corp
Luis M. Gonzalez wrote:
> Hey Dimitri,
>
> I completely agree with you in that Python needs once for all a cool
> logo.
> I like your design very much, but I have a few thoughts about it:
>
> 1) I think that Python's logo should reflect its power.
> If we use a mascot as its image, we would be givi
Peter Hansen wrote:
> francisl wrote:
> > How can we get a full directory size (sum of all his data)?
> > like when we type `du -sh mydir`
> >
> > Because os.path.getsize('mydir') only give the size of the
directory
> > physical representation on the disk.
>
> os.popen('du -sh mydir') would be one
Fuzzyman wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> I'm writing a module that takes user input as strings and (effectively)
> translates them to function calls with arguments and keyword
> arguments.to pass a list I use a sort of 'list constructor' - so the
> syntax looks a bit like :
>
>checkname(arg1, "arg 2",
Cameron Laird wrote:
> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> .
> >Well, this may be the CPython way of open source but I don't know if
> >that is "Open source" in general. Another way is that if someone(or
> >group) don't like the current state of a p
Steve Holden wrote:
> > Nicola Musatti wrote:
> > Of course, I'm going on vacation next week and there was talk
> > about a one-way ticket to Mexico. The real question is will they let me
> > *back* in? :-)
> >
> I would be careful coming back across the border. I heard that the PSU
[suspicous pre
Peter Hansen wrote:
> Graham Fawcett wrote:
> > Steve Holden wrote:
> >>>Nicola Musatti wrote:
> >>>Of course, I'm going on vacation next week and there was talk
> >>>about a one-way ticket to Mexico. The real question is will they let me
>
puff wrote:
> I'm able to catch IE's events including DocumentComplete with:
>
> def OnDocumentComplete(self, pDisp, URL):
>
> so i have pDisp. Self is the object returned by:
>
> self.ie = DispatchWithEvents("InternetExplorer.Application",
> InternetExplorerEvents)
>
> that created th
Tommy R wrote:
> I need some way to execute a string and pass arguments to the functions
> inside the string. We have discussed a solution where we first load the
> string (containing some funcs) and then run something similar to
> Py_RunString("foo(1.0, 'str')"); We need to do this in a generic w
chris patton wrote:
> Hi everyone.
>
> Has anyone seen that problem with running a python cgi script in a
> server?
> It takes you to myspace.com/redmartian or something. Anyway, does
> anyone know when this problem will be fixed?
It could be solved much sooner if you follow these steps:
(1) Care
Casey Hawthorne wrote:
> For Large Dictionaries Could One Use Separate Dictionaries Where Each
> Dictionary Covers an Interval of the Input Range?
One Could, But Why? :-) You wouldn't see any performance improvements.
Looking up a key in a dictionary is done in constant-time, i.e. it
doesn't matte
On 5/16/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Graham> Looking up a key in a dictionary is done in constant-time,
> Graham> i.e. it doesn't matter how large the dictionary is.
>
> Doesn't that depend on how many keys hash to the same value? For small
> dictionaries keeping th
WENDUM Denis 47.76.11 (agent) wrote:
> While testing recursive algoritms dealing with generic lists I stumbled
> on infinite loops which were triggered by the fact that (at least for my
> version of Pyton) characters contain themselves.
[snip]
> Leading to paradoxes and loops objects which contain
Sion Arrowsmith wrote:
> Unfortunately:
> >>> print 'a'+'bc' |ips| 'abc'
> True
>
> Which might not be what you want. On the other hand, it's a simple
> fix:
> >>> ips = Infix(lambda a, b: (a != b) and (a in b))
> >>> print 'a'+'bc' |ips| 'abc'
Ah, good point.
Graham
--
http://mail.python.org/m
27 matches
Mail list logo