On 13/06/2011 11:55 PM, zainul franciscus wrote:
Iknow you guys must be thinking "Hmm, Miranda, isn't that an IM
application ?"; Yep I hear you, I'll change the name once I get a good
name. I am open for any suggestions.
Actually I was thinking "isn't that a functional programming language?"
M
On 08/03/2011 8:58 AM, Cross wrote:
I know meta tags contain keywords but they are not always reliable. I
can parse xhtml to obtain keywords from meta tags; but how do I verify
them. To obtain reliable keywords, I have to parse the plain text
obtained from the URL.
I think maybe what the OP is
On 18/03/2011 5:33 PM, Jon Herman wrote:
I am pretty new to Python and am trying to write data to a file.
However, I seem to be misunderstanding how to do so. For starters, I'm
not even sure where Python is looking for these files or storing them.
The directories I have added to my PYTHONPATH var
On 08/04/2011 11:31 AM, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Sat, Apr 9, 2011 at 12:41 AM, MRAB wrote:
On 08/04/2011 08:25, Chris Angelico wrote:
[snip]
I don't know what's the most Pythonesque option, but if you already
have specific Python code for each of your functions, it's probably
going to be easi
On the slim chance that (a) somebody worked on something like this but
never uploaded it to PyPI, and (b) the person who did (a) or heard about
it is reading this list ;) --
I'm looking for some code that will take a Snowball program and compile
it into a Python script. Or, less ideally, a Sno
A third (more-than-) possible solution: google("python snowball");
the first page of results has at least 3 hits referring to Python
wrappers for Snowball.
There are quite a few wrappers for the C-compiled snowball stemmers, but
I'm looking for a pure-Python solution. It doesn't seem like there
Someone seems to be spamming PyPI by uploading multiple stupid packages. Not
sure if it's some form of advertising spam or just idiocy.
Don't know if we should care though... maybe policing uploads is worse than
cluttering PyPI's disk space and RSS feed with dumb 1 KB packages.
> girlfriend 1.0
Hi,
I'm having a problem with the multiprocessing package.
I'm trying to use a simple pattern where a supervisor object starts a
bunch of worker processes, instantiating them with two queues (a job
queue for tasks to complete and an results queue for the results). The
supervisor puts all the
On 3/2/2010 3:59 PM, Matt Chaput wrote:
> I'm trying to use a simple pattern where a supervisor object starts a
> bunch of worker processes, instantiating them with two queues (a job
> queue for tasks to complete and an results queue for the results). The
> supervisor puts al
If the main process doesn't get the results from the queue until the
worker processes terminate, and the worker processes don't terminate
until they've put their results in the queue, and the pipe consequently
fills up, then deadlock can result.
The queue never fills up... on platforms with qsiz
Are there any editors/IDEs with good support for line-coloring from Python test
coverage results? (I normally use Eclipse + PyDev but PyDev's current coverage
support isn't much better than nothing.)
Thanks,
Matt
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Does anyone know the "right" way to write a unit test for code that uses
multiprocessing on Windows?
The problem is that with both "python setup.py tests" and "nosetests",
when they get to testing any code that starts Processes they spawn
multiple copies of the testing suite (i.e. the new proc
Does anyone know the "right" way to write a unit test for code that uses
multiprocessing on Windows?
The problem is that with both "python setup.py tests" and "nosetests",
when they get to a multiprocessing test they spawn multiple copies of
the testing suite. The test runner in PyDev works pr
On 18/02/2011 2:54 AM, Terry Reedy wrote:
On 2/17/2011 6:31 PM, Matt Chaput wrote:
Does anyone know the "right" way to write a unit test for code that uses
multiprocessing on Windows?
I would start with Lib/test/test_multiprocessing.
Good idea, but on the one hand it doesn
On 17/02/2011 8:22 PM, phi...@semanchuk.com wrote:
Hi Matt,
I assume you're aware of this documentation, especially the item
entitled "Safe importing of main module"?
http://docs.python.org/release/2.6.6/library/multiprocessing.html#windows
Yes, but the thing is my code isn't __main__, my uni
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