On Jun 12, 10:10 am, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> How could I format the float number like this: (keep 2 digit
> precision)
> 1.002 => 1
> 1.12 => 1.12
> 1.00 => 1
> 1.567 => 1.57
> 2324.012 => 2324.01
>
> I can not find any Formatting Operations is able to meet my
> requirement.
On Apr 21, 11:38 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi,
> Can anyone help me out here. I would like to authenticate myself to
> a website which uses HTTPS and then after authentication, I would like
> to get the contents of the webpage. How can this be done using python.
> I have tried urllib and u
On May 3, 1:37 am, Ray <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I need to use cell's background color.
>
> when I record a macro from excel, it shows:
>
> Rows("7:7").Select
> With Selection.Interior
> .ColorIndex = 8
> .Pattern = xlSolid
>
> how do I run it from python win32com
On May 3, 10:52 pm, Mike <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I was messing around with adding methods to a class instance at
> runtime and saw the usual code one finds online for this. All the
> examples I saw say, of course, to make sure that for your method that
> you have 'self' as the first parameter.
On May 7, 12:01 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hey,
>
> I'm writing a script to generate code. I'm a bit tired of typing
> outfile.write(). Does python have a way to c-like macros? Every
> instance of o(...) in the code will be replaced by outfile.write(...)?
All in Python is pointer to object,
Levi Campbell wrote:
> Is there a way to export a record from a database kept with bsddb to
> MS Word, possibly with some type of formatting data?
import win32com.client
try: import psyco; psyco.full()
except ImportError: pass
app = win32com.client.Dispatch("Word.Application")
app.Visible = Tru
Levi Campbell wrote:
> Is there a way to export a record from a database kept with bsddb to
> MS Word, possibly with some type of formatting data?
import win32com.client
try: import psyco; psyco.full()
except ImportError: pass
app = win32com.client.Dispatch("Word.Application")
app.Visible = Tru
On May 6, 8:55 pm, gene tani <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On May 6, 6:26 am, "Martin P. Hellwig" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Dustan wrote:
> > > On May 6, 8:20 am, Steven D'Aprano
> > > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > >> On Sun, 06 May 2007 04:53:23 -0700, Dustan wrote:
> > >>> SPAM!
> > >>
On May 19, 12:52 am, Mitko Haralanov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> For various reason, what I need to do is be able to send some Python
> code (mostly entire functions in the form of a string) to a remote
> server (written in Python), have that server compile the code and
> insert it in the local na
On May 24, 5:53 pm, Mauler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I need some help with adding bootstrap code to the core of python, the
> idea is to leave a super base core inside a zip file (python25.zip
> works right out of the box) and leave the rest in separate zip
> modules. Making it more friendly wit
On Mar 9, 2:08 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I would like to request your attention for this very specific issue:
>
> I have several classes in Python, and now I want simply re-use it, in
> other language.
>
> The closest to solution I think I came was with this
> site:http://www.py2exe.o
On Mar 11, 1:03 pm, "ce" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> My company is using python currently for our website. We need to
> develop a GUI front-end for our ERP that would be portable (Windows
> and Linux).
>
> My question is which solution would be better for the GUI (and easier
> to implement
On Apr 14, 1:27 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
...
> This would mean:
> foo = "foo"
> => foo[1] == 'f'
>
class Str1(str):
def __getitem__(self,i):
return str.__getitem__(self,i-1)
s1 = Str1("foo")
print s1[1]
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Apr 16, 9:36 pm, Larry Bates <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> DataSmash wrote:
> > Hi,
> > I need to organize thousands of directories full of files.
> > I want to move these directories into other subdirectories.
> > For example, all the directories that start with 01, move to
> > a directory named
On Apr 27, 10:34 pm, Ixiaus <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I was curious (and have spent an enormous amount of time on Google
> trying to answer it for myself) if Python has anything remotely
> similar to PHP's SPL __autoload() for loading classes on the fly??
>
> After digging through docs I feel do
On Oct 1, 2:19 pm, John wrote:
> cx_freeze v4.01
> Python 2.6
> Ubuntu Jaunty
>
> Following the example of 'cx-freeze hello.py', I'm getting the error
> message below. I put all of the error keywords into google and found no
> hits.
>
> Some people in various posts have said to use Python 2.5 but
On Sep 4, 9:29 pm, kj wrote:
> I'm looking for the "best-practice" way to define application-global
> read-only switches, settable from the command line. The best
> example I can think of of such global switch is the built-in variable
> __debug__. This variable is visible everywhere in a program
On Sep 15, 8:25 pm, John Nagle wrote:
> I'm looking for something that can draw simple bar and pie charts
> in Python. I'm trying to find a Python package, not a wrapper for
> some C library, as this has to run on both Windows and Linux
> and version clashes are a problem.
>
> Here's the list fro
I like shelve for saving small amounts of data, user preferences,
recent files etc.
http://docs.python.org/library/shelve.html
For Qt use QtCore.QCoreApplication.setOrganizationName,
QtCore.QCoreApplication.setApplicationName than setValue, value from
QtCore.QSettings.
--
http://mail.python.org/m
On Sep 24, 4:45 am, Xavier Lapointe wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Let's suppose you're on Windows.
>
> If pyuic4 can't be found, you can specified the direct path:
> C:\Python26\pyuic4.bat -o Drive:\your\Path\ui_myGUI.py -x
> Drive:\your\Path\myGUI.ui
> You might need to replace the Python26 with your own v
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