w invocation as a new plot, but to
> really overwrite the old one ?
You were able to get matplotlib to open a new plot each time (assuming
you closed the old one, too)? Can you show a simple example of this?
Thanks.
-- Lou Pecora (my views are my own) REMOVE THIS to email me.
--
h
k you need at least one symbol per operation (ignoring
possible algebraic simplifications and transformations for some
expressions).
-- Lou Pecora (my views are my own)
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times when the "bigger" package is imported (e.g. scipy) and then a
"subpackage" is also imported. Like this:
from scipi import *
from scipi import numpy
I know I've seen stuff like that, but I don't get it. The dependencies
are confusing to me.
I did a search
, but never got an answer.)
-- Lou Pecora (my views are my own) REMOVE THIS to email me.
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In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Diez B. Roggisch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Lou Pecora wrote:
>
> > I installed the SciPy superpackage and have pylab, matplotlib, scipy,
> > and numpy apparently running well. But I want to use matplotlib/pylab
>
think the
> default location is /usr/lib/python or something like that.
No, I did not use the install-scripts command line option. It was
installed from the Package (it's down there in
/Library/Frameworks/Python...blah, blah/site-packages/IPython).
-- Lou Pecora (my views a
at I have seen so far they are beautiful packages.
The only problem I'm having is getting ipython to run. Not installed in
/usr/local/bin (although all other IPython files look to be installed in
/Library/Framewaorks/python...blah/site-packages). I'm still searching
the web sites for answers.
But all else seems to run pretty smoothly.
-- Lou Pecora (my views are my own) REMOVE THIS to email me.
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In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Robert Kern <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Lou Pecora wrote:
>
> > The only problem I'm having is getting ipython to run. Not installed in
> > /usr/local/bin (although all other IPython files look to be installed in
> &g
tutils.cfg ?
>
> Yes, it does the same thing, only it will apply to all packages (probably
> what
> you want) and you only have to do it once instead of remembering to do it
> every
> time.
Robert, thanks for the insight and the solution.
-- Lou Pecora (my views are my own) REMOVE THIS to email me.
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ve a recommendation for a good Python text
> editor in OS 10.3?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Scott D.
>
Try TextWrangler. It's free. I use it's big brother BBEdit and like it.
-- Lou Pecora (my views are my own) REMOVE THIS to email me.
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and lots of code
available. I do all my new coding in it and then when I need speed in
some routine I rewrite it in C as a Python extension. I can develop
many times faster than I could in C/C++ or Fortran or BASIC (even). I
cannot compare, however, to the languages you mentioned. Sorry.
-
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Aahz)
wrote:
> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> Lou Pecora <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> > Bryan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >>
> >> what is a
it.
Many thanks to the author (Stephen Ferg) for producing EasyGUI.
By the way it was written on a Windows machine and worked perfectly (so
far) on my Mac OS X machine.
-- Lou Pecora (my views are my own) REMOVE THIS to email me.
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how well they work on OS X.
TextWrangler or BBEdit (it's bigger brother) can be used, too. Both are
nice GUI editors.
-- Lou Pecora (my views are my own) REMOVE THIS to email me.
--
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In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Robert Kern <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm told Xcode does a tolerable job with Python.
I just took a look at Xcode and it's not obvious how to run a script. I
suspect I need a project? Then run? The docs say nothing that I ca
d you put a dot in the argument of a
class method?
def afcn(.,x,y):
# stuff here
??
I still like it. self remains a wart on python for me after 5 years of
use despite a deep love of the language and developers' community.
--
-- Lou Pecora
When I was a kid my parents moved a lot, but I always found them.
(R.Dangerfield)
--
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In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
redcic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I've just downloaded scipy v 0.5.2 and I would like to be able to draw
> plots. I've tried:
> import scipy.gplt
> import scipy.plt
> import scipy.xplt
>
> and none of them work. Are these modules still included in s
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
redcic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I've already got this package. I just wanted to try something new.
>
> However, since you talk about it, I've got a question regarding this
> package. The execution of the code stops after the line:
> pylab.show()
> which is off
*In mod3.py
import mymodule as MM
Then mymodule is imported only once, but each module has access to it
through the module name (mod1 and mod2) and the alias MM (mod3). Is
that right?
I was concerned about multiple imports and efficiency.
Thanks for any info.
-- Lou Pecora (my views are my
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Lou Pecora wrote:
>
> > *In mod1.py
> >
> > import mymodule
> >
> > *In mod2.py
> >
> > import mymodule
&
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Bart Ogryczak" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mar 9, 3:30 pm, Lou Pecora <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Then mymodule is imported only once, but each module has access to it
> > through the module name (mod1 and mod2)
nteger object 123. Whereas
>
> <>.name2 = 123
>
> says "go into the module <>, and rebind its 'name2' to the integer
> object 123"; since you "went inside" to do the rebinding, any other code
> that also uses the <>.name2 referen
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Simon Brunning" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 3/9/07, Lou Pecora <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I have noticed that using from xxx import * can lead to problems when
> > trying to access variables in the xxx module.
&
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Ben Finney <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Lou Pecora <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > ['import mymodule' in three separate modules]
> >
> > Then mymodule is imported only once, but each module has access to
&g
Books);
> there's plenty of them out there.
Python in a Nutshell by Martelli (O'Reilly publ.) is very good.
I also liked Learning Python by Lutz and Ascher (O'Reilly publ.) when I
started Python, but I don't know if that's been updated recently.
-- Lou Pecora (my views are my own) REMOVE THIS to email me.
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go
> > with a combination of Python and C++.
>
> I think you're nuts to decide that you need C++ before you've
> tested a Python implementation, but it's your nickle. :)
It really sounds like it's the C++ legacy that's driving Mr. Edward's
decision. T
is easy: either use
> easy_install or sudo python setup.py. I've had no trouble building the
> stuff I need with 2.5.
And what is the stuff you need? So we can see what definitely works.
Thanks.
-- Lou Pecora (my views are my own) REMOVE THIS to email me.
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s large, then
you're attempt at inversion is dealing with differences between very
large and very small numbers and/or very small differences between two
large numbers which probably goes beyond the number of digits (bits) the
machine can provide to represent floating point numbers. No res
her words,
depending on your particular problem, there may be other ways to solve
it beside brute force inversion. Can you Use a QR or SVD approach?
-- Lou Pecora (my views are my own) REMOVE THIS to email me.
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In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi!
> How can I determine the smallest and largest values of numeric types
> (for example int) possible in my system? I think there exists a function
> for this task but I don't know it.
There is or was a module called "kinds" which was
r n in xrange(i):
fact=n*fact
return fact
There might even be an array method that can be adapted to get the
product. Is there a product method? (analogous to a sum method)
Then you could use,
arr=arange(i)+1
fact=arr.product() # or something like that
--
-- Lou Pecora
--
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factorial(3)
> 0.0
>
Whoops, should have xrange(i)+1 there. Or, better, xrange(2,n+1). Save a
multiplication. Just trying to show the OP the scheme for iteration
here.
--
-- Lou Pecora
--
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s that led some
> people to develop Numarray, which had some additional features.
> Finally, the numpy project was started to unify the two groups by
> providing some of the new features in a code base consistent with the
> old library as well.
I agree completely, having converted all
) to be helpful when I first started, but Nutshell is what I keep
going back to. Very good book.
--
-- Lou Pecora
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In article
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> http://www.tiobe.com/tpci.htm
But dreaded Ruby is coming up fast. Run Away! Run Away!
HAHAHAHAHAHA.
--
-- Lou Pecora
--
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more amazing is the rate C++ is losing ground:
> http://www.tiobe.com/tiobe_index/C__.html
>
> George
How about Visual Basic going up?
--
-- Lou Pecora
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the return value of the close function
--
-- Lou Pecora
--
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In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Bruno Desthuilliers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Lou Pecora a écrit :
> > In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> > Bruno Desthuilliers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >
> >>>Thus: close;
> &g
er __init__ will automatically run because I haven't overridden the
> ancesters __init__ method with my own.
>
> Did I get that straight?
> Thomas Bartkus
Sounds right to me. That's how I use it.
-- Lou Pecora (my views are my own) REMOVE THIS to email me.
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age
called wsMpl.py also puts a nice API on the matplotlib. You might want
to check that, too.
-- Lou Pecora (my views are my own) REMOVE THIS to email me.
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e a graph for me with axes, scaling, etc.
I second all other recommendations on matplotlib.
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le()
mf=open("Afile","r")
s=mf.myreadline() # Use my added function
mf.close()# Use the original file function
Possible in some way? Thanks in advance for any clues.
-- Lou Pecora (my views are my own) REMOVE THIS to email me.
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In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Diez B. Roggisch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Lou Pecora schrieb:
[cut]
> >
> > Then do something like (I know this isn't right, I'm just trying to
> > convey the idea of what I would like)
> >
>
.xml').myreadline()
> yo
>
> In [22]:
BINGO! This is exactly what I want. I didn't realize that I could open
using file itself instead of open. I did find this in another section
of Python in a Nutshell thanks to your suggestion.
Thank you.
And thanks to all who answered.
-- Lou Pecora (my views are my own) REMOVE THIS to email me.
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2.close()
>>>
The file content looks like this:
[2.3341, 7, 'Some stuff here']
easy to see what is saved to the file.
It works! Thanks, again. Comments welcome.
-- Lou Pecora (my views are my own) REMOVE THIS to email me.
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of
time, but isn't. I've heard it used seriously like time in some movie.
--
-- Lou Pecora
--
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are the decendents of a long, lost civilization who
colonized Earth and used it as a base for their operations to the point
of adopting it as their own home?
... You Betcha!
:-)
--
-- Lou Pecora
--
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In article
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Feb 8, 2:53?pm, Lou Pecora <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> > ?Grant Edwards <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
>
to set two things (accidentally) equal to a
mutable object instead of copying. Then modify one and get and error
when the other object is used since they were the same object. I know
better, but I have a half life on this of about 4 months which means
that about twice a year thi
mmers today started with Python. Most of
> them came to Python for a reason.
Exactly right in my case. In fact this observation is directly related
to the one your the previous paragraph. Python is a good language in
which to start a progrom.
--
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, here's an
> equivalent example:
>
> #include
> #include
> #include
[cut a lot of C++ code]
I realize the original point was about dynamic allocation and GC, but
for me the raw juxtaposition of the *one* line of clear Python code with
the equivalent mass of C++ code is shocking. Thanks for that.
--
-- Lou Pecora
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o None is good, too, since many times if I use one before
setting a value I'll get an exception or really bad results that I can
easily trace to the unset variable.
> I'm not a big fan of dogmatic rules, other than the rule that says you
> should make your code as easy for someb
am I missing:
A=[1,2,3]
print A
A=[2*a for a in A]
print A
--
-- Lou Pecora
--
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increase it easily. Programming speed is incredible. I can get
substantial object oriented code up and running much faster than
anything I've ever used.
--
-- Lou Pecora
--
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y launches the scripts in a Terminal Window). Why it
happened is lost on me. I don't know if Python, BBEdit, or Terminal
munged the property list. At least I managed to track it down.
I hope this helps someone if you've had this problem.
--
-- Lou Pecora
--
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eferences. I don't know why the preferences got
a bad command while I was running Python scripts. Maybe nothing to do
with Python, maybe it does. Not sure.
--
-- Lou Pecora
--
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Python wrote:
On 16 mrt 2009, at 22:10, Lou Pecora wrote:
why don't you just execute the script directly form the terminal?
then you will be able to read all error messages...
and you can delete all the files you want
just my 2c
Arno
Because the shell process in the Terminal w
Python wrote:
On 16 mrt 2009, at 22:15, Lou Pecora wrote:
Because the shell process in the Terminal window would exit right after
it started even when I was just trying to open a new window (not even
running a script), i.e. command-N in Terminal. So I could not run
anything from the Terminal
if they don't help us in reality. so we should try to adapt
> computing to real world, not our world to computers).
There is nothing more practical than a good theory.
--- James Clerk Maxwell
You said you came from the C world (besides Fortran). If so, you have
alre
You can really do a lot with lists and
tuples. When you do you will see Chris' point emphatically.
--
-- Lou Pecora
--
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rritory") zero
> indexing could be more intuitive ?
This has become a moving target. I thought your original complaint was
about Python (the programming language) vs. Fortran (the programming
language) and C (the programming language used in an odd way).
--
-- Lou Pecora
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In article ,
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> So an ordinality of zero just means the number
> of elements of something that doesn't exist.
You do realize that will give most people headaches. :-)
--
-- Lou Pecora
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ems/computer guy. Just a scientist who does a lot of
number crunching. But I have found out that even in that case you end
of traversing lists, tuples, etc. a lot. Slicing and dicing them. And
you quickly come to appreciate the 0 based approach to indexing and soon
don't miss the Fortr
In article
<5c92e9bd-1fb4-4c01-a928-04d7f6733...@e21g2000yqb.googlegroups.com>,
Aaron Brady wrote:
> On Apr 2, 6:34 pm, Tim Wintle wrote:
> > On Thu, 2009-04-02 at 15:16 -0700, Emile van Sebille wrote:
> > > Lou Pecora wrote:
> > > > Confusion
Always something to learn. I've used Numpy for several
years, but still have not plumbed the depths. Just tried this script
and, yep, it works.
arr=array([-1,1.0,2.2,-10.0,1.1, 0.9,-0.9])
cond= arr < 1.0
print cond
brr=arr[cond]
print brr
Output:
[ True Fal
In article ,
Robert Kern wrote:
> http://docs.scipy.org/doc/numpy/reference/arrays.indexing.html
That helps, thanks. So I can RTFWP, too. :-)
--
-- Lou Pecora
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In article <747te7f1209a...@mid.individual.net>,
Peter Pearson wrote:
> On Thu, 09 Apr 2009 09:09:18 -0400, Lou Pecora wrote:
> >
> > Really, I've gotta RTFM. :-)
>
> Hey, if you find TFM, please tell me where it is. I haven't
> found anything Fin
eers,
> > Chris
"Python in a Nutshell" -- Absolutely! Covers a lot in an easily
accessible way. The first book I reach for. I hope Martelli updates it
to 3.0.
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-- Lou Pecora
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eems like the only sane way to do it. In all other directions lies madness.
Agreed. I've done this several times and it works fine. Once I'm in C
I'm really in C++ and can use all my C++ code and libraries. Not a big
problem really. But maybe I'm missing something.
--
-- Lou Pecora
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=1, then your code should be consistent with that
usage.
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-- Lou Pecora
--
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wo values
at one domain point without adding branch cuts (see complex functions
like ln(z), z is complex). That's not well defined -- in your sense.
You are choosing a branch cut and you must make sure the rest of your
math and code are consistent with that. You should also tell any users
of your code about that decision.
--
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solution. To this end, we have developed Ch, an embeddable
C/C++ interpreter for cross-platform scripting, shell programming, 2D/3D
plotting, numerical computing, and embedded scripting [1].
--
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need to diagram a sentence
I will come to you. You're the man. :-)
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-- Lou Pecora
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f a language. And it is a stretch. Anyone
speak C?
Sheeze.
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Python 2.4, here's what I get:
In [3]: dis.dis(lambda: 3+4)
1 0 LOAD_CONST 1 (3)
3 LOAD_CONST 2 (4)
6 BINARY_ADD
7 RETURN_VALUE
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In article
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Apr 21, 9:28 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Aahz) wrote:
> >
> >
> > Why is this newsgroup different from all other newsgroups?
>
> Different is a verbally atomic relation.
It's a Passover
*implied* it.
> > Installing Python in /usr/bin is not common.
>
> It is common. That's where it's installed by almost all Linux
> distributions.
MacOS X system python (or links to them) is in the same place.
--
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or negative)
> > raised to the power of 0 is ALWAYS 1 (a positive number 1 that is).
>
> No python is correct. you're expression parses this way, when converted
> to a lisp-ish prefix expression:
>
> (- (123 ** 0 ))
Yeah, it's just the standard parser. For other sit
ent better. But...
I've also heard the very similar a**b is a multiplied by a b-1 times.
That gives 0**0=0*(1/0). Uh, Oh! If you want consistency with the
treatment of exponents that might cause problems. Tough situation when
you have a "discontinuity" at 0 for x^x.
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In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Terry Reedy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> "Lou Pecora" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> | In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> | "Terry Reedy" <[EMAIL PROTECT
e system
/bin directories. So your .bash_profile should have something like this
line in it:
PATH="/usr/local/:/usr/local/bin/:${PATH}"
export PATH
Bottom line: your installs and Apples' Python are separate and that's
how it should be.
Hope that helps. Others: please co
x27;switch' to set in Python to choose which behavior you want.
-- Lou Pecora (my views are my own) REMOVE THIS to email me.
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can do this:
>
> sudo rm /usr/bin/python
> sudo ln -s \
> /System/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.4/bin/python \
> /usr/bin/python
YIKES! Don't do that. Don't mess with Apple's python. Not
recommended. Check the MacPython FAQ and Wiki pages. Pyt
nd I get lost. I have no idea where to go with this.
Thanks for any pointers.
--
-- Lou Pecora
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string to a file
-- no formatting necessary-- three lines of code. Later reading in the
string version (no formatting necessary), and hitting it with an eval()
function returned all the values I originally had in those variables.
How simple, but beautiful. I was making it harder when Python was
making it easier. Trained on the wrong language.
--
-- Lou Pecora
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In article <87eil1ddjp.fsf...@castleamber.com>,
John Bokma wrote:
> Lou Pecora writes:
>
> > That's a pretty accurate description of how I transitioned to Python
> > from C and Fortran.
>
> Not C, but C++ (but there are also C implementations): YAML, see:
In article <7x8wb9j4r2@ruckus.brouhaha.com>,
Paul Rubin wrote:
> Lou Pecora writes:
> > after much noodling around and reading it hit me that I could just put
> > all that output of different types of variables into a list, hit it
> > with a repr() function t
In article <00f4bb3a$0$15566$c3e8...@news.astraweb.com>,
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On Thu, 04 Feb 2010 09:57:59 -0500, Lou Pecora wrote:
>
> > Well, that looks a bit more complicated than I would like, but maybe
> > it's doing more stuff than I can grok. Here
age. You should not get an error.
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k "Python in a Nutshell" by Martelli.
It may be a little dated now, but it covers many Python topics in good
detail without becoming a bloated reference. Nicely written. It's still
the first book I reach for after 6 years of Python coding and it rarely
disappoints.
--
-- Lou Pecora
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In article ,
Steve Holden wrote:
> On 11/16/2010 2:22 PM, Lou Pecora wrote:
> > I'll jump in and recommend the book "Python in a Nutshell" by Martelli.
> > It may be a little dated now, but it covers many Python topics in good
> > detail without becoming
In article <7xr5ei1p2j@ruckus.brouhaha.com>,
Paul Rubin wrote:
> Lou Pecora writes:
> >> > I'll jump in and recommend the book "Python in a Nutshell" by Martelli.
> >> It's encyclopedic.
> > Indeed. I hope Martelli updates it. I
quot; .
E.g. for the Mac there are programs (utilities that run in the
background) like Quickeys and TypeItForMe that allow you to do all sorts
of automatic inserting of commonly used text. They're cheap and easy to
use. There must be something like this for Linux and Windows, no?
--
-- Lou Pecora
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;, but not "in try". Is this observation consistent
Try putting a flush in after the 2nd print statement in case the output
is left in some I/O buffer when the thing terminates. e.g.
import sys
try:
print 'in try"
sys.stdout.flush()
--
-- Lou Pecora
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t;. Not the
greatest image to English speakers. I say "num pie". Makes more sense
to me since the "pie" sound is already in python a root for the name.
This, of course, is a burning issue for us all.
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-- Lou Pecora
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