post were exactly the same.
I wonder if his postings are related to the phases of the moon? It
might explain a lot.
Axel
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ly spam, I
simply do not read them and delete them immediately. But then I
use Pine rather than a web browser... and while some forms of HTML
may be rendered, nothing is automatically pulled down.
Axel
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o the recipient can chose to see which ones he cares to
look at in detail.
It also allows the web address to be sent to several people
without wasting bandwith.
Axel
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r legitimate correspondents and also expensive.
I don't know how much spam other people receive but on one account I
hardly receive any as I reserve it for friends and business. On another
I had about 40 spam messages which took all of ten seconds to delete.
Hardly a serious matter.
Axel
>
>
>
>
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e LESS
> easy to pull off under the scheme I proposed that requires digital
> signatures.
How? I keep my address book on my Palm as I send mail from different
computers? I suspect many other people do as well.
Axel
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d would use another system?
There was a time in the early-mid 1990s that Microsoft was making noises
about setting up a 'commercial Internet' through which they hoped
to control all online trading (with a percentage of each transaction
going to themselves of course). I forget the e
oyed or paid by the shareholders, they are employed
by the company itself which is a separate legal entity.
It is a different matter for the board of directors of a company.
Axel
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relevent to America, let me
> know.
Why would you say that - Mike Meyer made a point to which you have
obviously no answer. Or do you deny that his comments on this matter
of property are true?
Axel
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not saying "because you are a communist, your argument is wrong". I
> am saying, "because your argument is based upon communist or totalitarian
> premises about the relationship between the government and the economy, it
> does not apply to the United States, and we were talking about the United
> States."
Then you are sadly deluded if you think that the US government does not
make decisions on the economy.
Axel
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nomy is not one of
> them.
I see that you cannot make a reasoned argument against the fact that
property in the form of houses is taxed in America.
Also may I remind you that these newsgroups are international.
Axel
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uses is taxed in America.
> And what has his inability to do that to your satisfaction got to do
> with the price of eggs?
Not that I care much since eggs bring on a rather strong reaction
within me, but his arguments were totally false.
Axel
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as added to Office in the last decade? Clippy
Er... Open Office, Apple Works.
Axel
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t; up to rocket sciences. If expanded slightly and edited, it can supplant
> sections 9.0 to 9.4 of the Python tutorial. Languages Tutorials should
> follow this style.
It is crap, not a tutorial, but just an aide-memoire for someone who
presumably knows the stuff anyway.
And keep it where
posed to be opposed of Multics and hints on the offensive and
> tasteless term eunuchs.
Now that connexion is a product of a truely warped mind.
Axel
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der...
> I thought usenet specified fixed font. If you use something else don't
> complain.
> The Troll don't look pretty in fixed font either:-)
I don't think trolls are supposed to look pretty, but rather ugly.
Axel
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macs, ed or whatever
to compose your message; whether you ran a spell checker over it;
or how you read messages and respond to them - perhaps you telnet'd
to the news server and made your transactions manually.
Axel
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een' utility invaluable as
I can have my email, news, and an editor open in different screens
and then when I need to move to a different machine, I can simply
detach and reattach screen without disturbing anything that
might be running.
Axel
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), and it does not have the stark simplicity
which screen has... I only need to have a compiled version of screen
on the machine on which I do most of my work and be able to ssh/telnet
to that machine without involving any additional software installations
on other machines.
Axel
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hink of a Dutch expression 'mieren neuker' with regards to
Balmer's posts?
Axel
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Usenet. And the version of vi which I used
at the time was not very good with dealing with long lines.
But it worked.
Axel
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bo {
my $max = shift;
my %hh=();
for my $i ( 1 .. $max ) {
for my $j ( $i + 1 .. $max ) {
$hh{"$i,$j"} = [$i, $j];
}
}
return \%hh;
}
Axel
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What on earth does this mean?
> The Python doc, though relatively incompetent, but the author have
> tried the best. This is in contrast to documentations in unix related
> things (unix tools, perl, apache, and so on etc), where the writers
> have absolutely no sense of clear writing, and in most cases don't give
> a damn and delight in drivel thinking of it as literary.
I think that this is an excellent description of your own writing.
Axel
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x27;t have time to
> write a more coherent and detailed analysis of the stupidities of the
> re doc.
Don't worry! Very soon, some nice men in white coats will show you
a comfortable room with soft walls in which you can write such
documentation to your hearts content.
Axel
--
http://
Jeremy Bowers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Nobody ever changed their mind as a result of a 20-thread endless
> reply-fest. As usual, the posters aren't about to admit anything, and none
> of the bystanders are reading any more.
Well I am reading... always interested to learn
In comp.lang.perl.misc Xah Lee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> If (1), then it would be a fucking incompetence of inordinate order. If
Have you ever thought that your cross-postings are "incompetence
of inordinate order"?
Of course not since you are a troll.
Axel
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htt
t the error?
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there is an error in the script and (3)
what I have to do to pause/stop the script?
Thanks, Axel
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s a
> latch on sentence.
> “never greedy”? What is greedy anyway?
> “Greedy”, when used in the context of computing, describes a
When used in terms of Usenet, I think it can be applied in the sense
of 'a troll who is greedy for attention'.
Hence the saying 'do not fee
s nutil his donley comes over the hill.
Axel
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dex - it's an alphabetical list of names and topics.
Follow-ups set.
Axel
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groups as long as the charset is properly declared.
> Xah's posting was properly encoded and will display fine in every decent
> newsreader.
It is not just the question of the newsreader, it is also a question of whether
the character set/font being used is capable of displaying the characters
concerned.
Axel
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File
"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.2/lib/python3.2/base64.py",
line 56, in b64encode
raise TypeError("expected bytes, not %s" % s.__class__.__name__)
TypeError: expected bytes, not list
---
What am I doing wrong?
Axel
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On 08.04.11 13:43, Axel Rau wrote:
> line 167, in sub
> return _compile(pattern, flags).sub(repl, string, count)
> TypeError: sequence item 1: expected bytes, str found
I just filed issue 11837.
Axel
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d the behaviour to me
seems to be completely as expected. No surprises here, or do I miss
something?
Best regards
Axel
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ing does not
work well without extending. For this part I use PyCXX from
http://sourceforge.net/projects/cxx/.
Axel Diener
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e='%s')\n\t\tsuper(%s,
self).__init(name=name)\n"%dict(myclass, myclass.lower(), myclass())
... codeop and eval stuff ...
a=A()
print a
that gives: , but I want MyModule.A ;-)
Can someone give me a hint how to create classes in a module with eval
and codeop so that they
super(TmpClass, self).__init__(name=name, **props)
instead of
class_base.__init__(self, name=name, **props)
I get:
TypeError: super(type, obj): obj must be an instance or subtype of
type
for print table, print br ist processed OK.
Thanks for help and your perfekt examples,
AXEL.
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'Br'] = _Tag
class_dic['Hr'] = _Tag
class_dic['Html'] = _ContainerTag
class_dic['Table'] = _ContainerTag
class_dic['Td'] = _ContainerTag
class_dic['Tr'] = _ContainerTag
for name, base in class_dic.items():
_tag_class_factory(name,
rom any to
RTF. Please give me a hint where the tons of packages are.
Thanks,
AXEL.
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The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD",
"SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and &q
7;m afraid this will not
be a performant solution ;-(
I realy was spending hour's on that, the only thing I found was a
spezifikation for reach text, maybe a good point to start a project ...
Lg
AXEL.
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Hello!
> I've been able to successfully get konqueror to generate a pdf from a
> html file via dcop. It's something along the lines of:
For that stuff, I'm using htmloc (http://www.htmldoc.org/).
Lg,
AXEL.
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The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQU
Hello!
> You might take a look at PyRTF in PyPI. It's still in beta,
I think PyRTF would be the right choice, thanks. Yust had a short look
at it.
Lg,
AXEL.
--
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "
I like Python ;-)
The System behind generating the HTML-Code is written in Python.
Thanks,
AXEL.
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ram_mother)
child = Child(1, 2)
Thanks, AXEL.
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init__(**ham)
child = Child(param_mother=1, param_father=1)
Father's init will not be called.
Thanks,
AXEL.
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http://www.informatik-forum.at/showpost.php?p=206342&postcount=10
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izer. It may
> be counterintuitive, but it works.
OK, thanks, with the super(...).__init__() in Father/Mother it workes
and makes sense.
So, the last thing a *realy* don't like ist the
__init__(self, param, **ignore_the_rest) thing.
Anyone had troubles with that, or should I cust tak
's, under linux, linux support for generating rtf is none,
and so is python's.
My workaround was:
http://www.research.att.com/sw/download/
This includes an html2rtf converter, which I access from python via
popen and temporary files. Not high-level, not very sexy ... ;-(
Lg,
AXEL.
--
Hello!
> I looked at this a while ago, which might be a starter.
> http://pyrtf.sourceforge.net/
Don't remember why I didn't spent much time on that. Sombody has
experience with pyrtf on an production project (is it stable ;-))
Lg,
AXEL.
--
"Aber naja, ich bin eher der Fo
Hello!
> WingIDE (commercial, slower than PythonWin but has many features)
You can use and reactivate a trial licence for WingIDE for a realy long
term, give it a try, i bought a licence last week and realy love it!
Lg,
AXEL.
--
"Aber naja, ich bin eher der Forentyp." Wolfibolf
class AB(A, B):
def __init__(self, a=None, b=None):
super(AB, self).__init__(a=a, b=b, _do_eat=True)
ab = AB()
Thanks,
AXEL.
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http://www.informatik-forum.at/showpost.php?p=206342&postcount=10
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thing I'm dislike is the super thing with multiple
inheritance, maby I shoud see pythons multiple inheritance as a nice to
have and not to use thing ;-)
Thanks,
AXEL.
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self.__update_reverse()
def getKey(self, v): return self.__reverse[v]
Lg,
AXEL
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Hello!
> thousands more entries. So we're talking about maybe a million+ total
> nested key:values. I don't know if that counts as large or not. I can't
> even guess how much k memory that is.
Mhh, maybe you should use a SQL-Database ;-)
Lg,
AXEL.
--
"Aber na
Hello!
> from decorate import decorate # see today thread on decorators for this
Gives me an ImportError: No module named decorate. I've got to donwload
that? (python 2.4)
Thanks,
AXEL.
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"Aber naja, ich bin eher der Forentyp." Wolfibolfi's outing in
http://
Hallo!
> Look at the comment in the code! I have posted the "decorate" module in
Uuups, sorry, I'll RTFM myselfe *g*
Lg,
AXEL.
--
"Aber naja, ich bin eher der Forentyp." Wolfibolfi's outing in
http://www.informatik-forum.at/showpost.php?p=206342&postcount=
Hello!
Why not:
> class A:
> def a_lengthy_method(self, params):
> # do some work depending only on data in self and params
>
> class B(A): pass
?
Lg,
AXEL.
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int a.getP(), a2.getP()
print a.p, a2.p
So, property is instance-level super() tool ;-)
Lg,
AXEL.
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late but still - thanks a lot :) . works like a charm.
cheers,
Axel.
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ethod will only
return the IEntry interface pointer. Now I would like to cast that one
to the one I need :) . Is there an easy way to do it, or do I have to
use the QueryInterface-method to get what I want?
Greetings & thanks in advance,
Axel.
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be short circuited.
Me neither, but that could be related to the meaning of n (which I did
not get) in the OP's question. Maybe he can clarify.
Best regards
Axel
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