Hi,
I'm trying to install Python 3.4b3 on Ubuntu. Since compilation seems to be the
only way, I'm trying that.
I downloaded the source, I changed Setup.dist to have this:
SSL=/usr
_ssl _ssl.c \
-DUSE_SSL -I$(SSL)/include -I$(SSL)/include/openssl \
-L$(SSL)/lib -lssl -l
Hi,
I'm curious. If I append an item to a list from the left using `list.insert`,
will Python always move the entire list one item to the right (which can be
super-slow) or will it check first to see whether it can just allocate more
memory to the left of the list and put the item there, saving
Hi everybody,
I need to install Python 3.4 final urgently, because my IDE stopped supporting
Python 3.4 beta2, and I need it urgently to work.
I downloaded it, but the MSI won't install. It didn't work on both of my
computers (Windows 7 64bit).
I managed to have the MSI dump data to log, file
Sorry, couldn't attach the file, here's the log file:
https://gist.github.com/anonymous/9697505
On Saturday, March 22, 2014 12:05:59 AM UTC+2, cool-RR wrote:
> Hi everybody,
>
>
>
> I need to install Python 3.4 final urgently, because my IDE stopped
> supporting
is
doing in the Python MSI. (I'm guessing it's timezone-related, but it's still
far-fetched, because why would an obscure time zone file appear in the MSI log?)
On Saturday, March 22, 2014 12:25:03 AM UTC+2, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Sat, Mar 22, 2014 at 9:05 AM, cool-RR w
Here's the offending MSI, if anyone wants to investigate:
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/1927707/python-3.4.0.amd64.msi
On Saturday, March 22, 2014 12:34:06 AM UTC+2, cool-RR wrote:
> I did download from python.org. I checked the md5, it was incorrect, then I
> downloaded again
On Saturday, March 22, 2014 12:42:56 AM UTC+2, Chris Angelico wrote:
> I think you should follow the internet version of Hanlon's Razor here:
> Damaged transmission before deliberate tampering. :) It's far more
> likely something simply got misdownloaded, and your guess about
> timezones is the mos
On Saturday, March 22, 2014 12:25:03 AM UTC+2, Chris Angelico wrote:
> (First and a halfth question: When you say "won't install", exactly
> what do you mean?
For completeness, I'll answer this question I forgot to answer, in case someone
still wants to investigate: It just showed the first dialo
On Saturday, March 22, 2014 3:39:21 AM UTC+2, Terry Reedy wrote:
> Does your .b2 install work? Can you delete it thru the programs list?
I uninstalled it before this entire adventure.
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi all,
If I want to acquire a `threading.Lock` using the context manager protocol, is
it possible to specify the `blocking` and `timeout` arguments that `acquire`
would usually take?
Thanks,
Ram.
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hello everybody! I have a question.
I have a Django app running on Heroku. I need to run about 100 worker threads
there to do uploads/downloads simultaneously. A Heroku Dyno has only 512MB of
memory, so I'm reluctant to run 100 worker threads. (I've had Dynos crash from
lack of memory when usi
While debugging my code I found that the bug was because I assumed that
something like `divmod(float('inf'), 1)` would be equal to `(float('inf'),
float('nan'))`, while Python returns `(float('nan'), float('nan'))`. Why does
Python make the division result be NaN in this case? `float('inf') / 1`
Terry, that doesn't really answer the question "why", it just pushes it back to
the documentation. Is there a real answer why? Why return NaN when Inf would
make mathematical sense?
On Wednesday, September 17, 2014 4:13:38 AM UTC+3, Terry Reedy wrote:
> On 9/16/2014 5:40
On Wednesday, September 17, 2014 6:10:35 PM UTC+3, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 18, 2014 at 12:55 AM, cool-RR wrote:
> > Terry, that doesn't really answer the question "why", it just pushes it
> > back to the documentation. Is there a real answer why? Why
On Wednesday, September 17, 2014 6:30:04 PM UTC+3, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 18, 2014 at 1:16 AM, cool-RR wrote:
> > I didn't ask for the modulo, I agree it should remain NaN. I'm talking
> > about the floor division.
>
> Invariant: div*y + mod ==
On Thursday, September 18, 2014 6:12:08 AM UTC+3, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> cool-RR wrote:
> > Chris, why is this invariant `div*y + mod == x` so important? Maybe it's
> > more important to return a mathematically reasonable result for the the
> > floor-divisi
My function gets an iterable of an unknown type. I want to check whether it's
ordered. I could check whether it's a `set` or `frozenset`, which would cover
many cases, but I wonder if I can do better. Is there a nicer way to check
whether an iterable is ordered or not?
Thanks,
Ram.
--
https:
Hello,
I wanted to announce that I have just released my little side project,
PythonTurtle.
Here is its website:
http://pythonturtle.com
Its goal is to be the lowest-threshold way to learn (or teach) Python.
You can read more about it and download it on the website.
Ram.
--
http://mail.python.o
On Aug 3, 5:53 pm, André wrote:
> On Aug 3, 10:18 am, cool-RR wrote:
>
> > Hello,
>
> > I wanted to announce that I have just released my little side project,
> > PythonTurtle.
> > Here is its website:http://pythonturtle.com
>
> > Its goal is to be t
On Aug 3, 7:04 pm, "Colin J. Williams" wrote:
> cool-RR wrote:
> > Hello,
>
> > I wanted to announce that I have just released my little side project,
> > PythonTurtle.
> > Here is its website:
> >http://pythonturtle.com
>
> > Its goal is to
On Aug 3, 11:35 pm, r wrote:
> Hello,
> I wanted to announce that I have just released my little side
> project,
> PythonTurtle.
> [snip]
>
> I think it looks great --haven't download the source yet-- but i
> really like the screenshot. This will be more "inviting" to the new,
> inexperianced user
On Aug 4, 7:12 am, John Posner wrote:
> > ... I would also venture to say a key-map
> > of sorts that is available thru the help menu where one could push an
> > "Up" button, or a "rotate" button, and have the proper command
> > inserted in the prompt, and then have the command execute, may also
>
> Hi Ram,
>
> that's indeed a nice starting point for kids to doing turtle graphics,
> although currently it seems to implement only a very small subset of
> Python's turtle module's capabilities, even less than those of the old
> turtle module (that shipped with Python upto 2.5).
>
I agree - an
On Tue, Aug 4, 2009 at 5:45 PM, John Posner wrote:
>
> Certainly John- although I have not embedded the turtle module at all,
>> I just wrote my own.
>>
>
> OK, then why the statements "from turtle import *" in the modules
> turtleprocess.py and turtlewidget.py?
>
> Tx,
> John
>
>
It's from a mo
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