On May 6, 6:08 pm, Roy Smith wrote:
> BTW, in C, I used to write:
>
> return (foo)
>
> for years until somebody pointed out to me that
>
> return foo
>
> works. I just assumed that if I had to write:
>
> if (foo)
> while (foo)
> for (foo; bar; baz)
>
> then
>
> return (foo)
>
> made sense too.
On May 8, 6:11 am, Benjamin Kaplan wrote:
> On May 7, 2013 5:42 PM, "Neil Hodgson" wrote:
> > jmfauth:
>
> >> 2) More critical, Py 3.3, just becomes non unicode compliant,
> >> (eg European languages or "ascii" typographers !)
> >> ...
>
> > This is not demonstrating non-compliance. It is com
On May 9, 7:35 am, Mark Janssen wrote:
> On Fri, Apr 12, 2013 at 11:28 PM, Mark Janssen
>
> wrote:
> >> Mark, this proposal is out of place on a Python list, because it proposes
> >> an
> >> object methodology radically different from any that is implemented in
> >> Python now, or is even remote
On May 9, 10:39 am, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On Wed, 08 May 2013 19:35:58 -0700, Mark Janssen wrote:
> > Long story short: the lambda
> > calculus folks have to split from the Turing machine folks.
> > These models of computation should not use the same language. Their
> > computation models are
On May 10, 8:32 pm, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Sat, May 11, 2013 at 1:24 AM, Ned Batchelder
> wrote:
> > On 5/10/2013 11:06 AM, jmfauth wrote:
>
> >> On 8 mai, 15:19, Roy Smith wrote:
>
> >>> Apropos to any of the myriad unicode threads that have been going on
> >>> recently:
>
> >>>http://xkcd
On May 12, 3:16 am, alex23 wrote:
> On 12 May, 06:10, Mark Janssen wrote:
>
> > Wow. You must be from another planet. Find Socrates if you wish to
> > know these things. He's from there also.
>
> Now now, there's no need for a turf war, there's plenty of room on
> this list for crazies.
I'm r
On May 12, 9:22 am, rusi wrote:
> On May 12, 3:16 am, alex23 wrote:
>
> > On 12 May, 06:10, Mark Janssen wrote:
>
> > > Wow. You must be from another planet. Find Socrates if you wish to
> > > know these things. He's from there also.
>
> > N
On May 12, 7:17 pm, Citizen Kant wrote:
> Maybe It'd be good if I explain myself a bit more. What I'm trying here is
> to grasp Python from the game's abstraction point of view, as if it were,
> for example, chess. That's why I need a real_player to point me to: (so to
> speak, I wish I could expr
On May 13, 7:41 am, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> Python is not well-modelled as a Finite State Machine. Python is
> equivalent in computing power to a Turing Machine, while Finite State
> Machines are much weaker, so there are things that Python can do that a
> FSM cannot.
Consider the following.
Py
On May 13, 9:24 pm, Chris Angelico wrote:
>
> Your final conclusion is of course correct; nothing we build can be
> truly infinite. But we can certainly give some very good
> approximations, if we're prepared to pay for them. The reality is,
> though, that we usually do not want to pay for approxi
On May 14, 2:24 pm, Jean-Michel Pichavant
wrote:
> - Original Message -
> > On Mon, 13 May 2013 13:00:36 +0200, Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
>
> > > - Original Message -
> > >> That's the title of this little beast
> > >>http://www.acooke.org/cute/Pythonssad0.htmlif anybody's
> > >
On May 14, 8:08 am, Dan Sommers wrote:
> On Tue, 14 May 2013 04:12:53 +1000, Chris Angelico wrote:
> > On Tue, May 14, 2013 at 4:02 AM, Skip Montanaro wrote:
> >>> 8. A programming language is low level when its programs require
> >>> attention to the irrelevant.
> >> I think "irrelevant" in this
On May 16, 6:17 am, Tim Daneliuk wrote:
> On 05/15/2013 08:01 PM, Ned Batchelder wrote:
>
> > On 5/11/2013 4:03 PM, Citizen Kant wrote:
> >> Don't get me wrong. I can see the big picture and the amazing things that
> >> programmers write on Python, it's just that my question points to the
> >> l
On May 16, 5:28 pm, Citizen Kant wrote:
>
> I'm just an honest and polite guy asking you guys a couple of simple out of
> the box questions that are important for me. Everyone here has the freedom
> to keep on with their own assumptions and beliefs. If someone's interested
> on thinking outside th
On May 16, 7:37 pm, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Fri, May 17, 2013 at 12:23 AM, Neil Cerutti wrote:
> > On 2013-05-16, F?bio Santos wrote:
> >> And in Java we have factories, builders and builderfactories.
> >> What's so relevant about them? Java is high level, no?
>
> > When I tried to pin down w
On May 17, 1:06 am, Citizen Kant wrote:
> rusi said:
>
> > And let me suggest that you follow your own advise -- Can you say what
> > you have to say in 1/10th the number of words? Ok if not 1/10th then
> > 1/5th? 1-third?
>
> Thanks for the suggestion. I apologize f
On May 24, 5:58 pm, Malte Forkel wrote:
> Finding out why a regular expression does not match a given string can
> very tedious. I would like to write a utility that identifies the
> sub-expression causing the non-match. My idea is to use a parser to
> create a tree representing the complete regul
On May 25, 10:15 am, lokeshkopp...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Friday, May 24, 2013 1:34:51 PM UTC+5:30, lokesh...@gmail.com wrote:
> > i need to write a code which can sort the list in order of 'n' without use
> > builtin functions
>
> > can anyone help me how to do?
>
> Note:
> the list only contains
On May 25, 3:52 pm, Rakshith Nayak wrote:
> Always wondered how sound is generated from text. Googling couldn't help.
> Devs having knowledge about this could provide, the information, Links, URLs
> or anything that could help.
>
>
look for speech synthesis
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speech
On May 27, 5:40 am, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On Sun, 26 May 2013 16:22:26 -0400, Roy Smith wrote:
> > In article ,
> > Terry Jan Reedy wrote:
>
> >> On 5/26/2013 7:11 AM, Ahmed Abdulshafy wrote:
>
> >> > if not allow_zero and abs(x) < sys.float_info.epsilon:
> >> > print("
On May 27, 9:32 am, Avnesh Shakya wrote:
> hi,
> how to compare two json file line by line using python? Actually I am
> doing it in this way..
>
> import simplejson as json
> def compare():
> newJsonFile= open('newData.json')
> lastJsonFile= open('version1.json')
> newLines = newJ
On May 28, 6:45 am, Carlos Nepomuceno
wrote:
> curl -Ohttp://peak.telecommunity.com/dist/ez_setup.py
> python ez_setup.py
Curl comes built into windows??
Does not seem so...
http://serverfault.com/questions/483754/is-there-a-built-in-command-line-tool-under-windows-like-wget-curl
Also given that
On May 28, 8:06 am, Carlos Nepomuceno
wrote:
>
>
> > Date: Mon, 27 May 2013 19:57:47 -0700
> > Subject: Re: How to: Setuptools
> > From: rustompm...@gmail.com
> > To: python-l...@python.org
>
> > On May 28, 6:45 am, Carlos Nepomuceno
> > wrote:
> >> curl -
On May 28, 9:09 am, Carlos Nepomuceno
wrote:
>
>
> > Date: Mon, 27 May 2013 20:54:53 -0700
> > Subject: Re: How to: Setuptools
> > From: rustompm...@gmail.com
> [...]
>
> > Oooff! Talk of using sledgehammers to crack nuts...
>
> > All that is needed is to v
On May 28, 10:55 am, Νίκος Γκρ33κ wrote:
> Ôç Ôñßôç, 28 ÌáÀïõ 2013 1:18:06 ð.ì. UTC+3, ï ÷ñÞóôçò Chris Angelico Ýãñáøå:
>
> > You're effectively asking people to put in a few minutes' work,
> > sometimes quite a few minutes, to help you. Is it too much to hope
> > that you'll spend one more minute
On May 28, 6:32 am, ray wrote:
> I would like to use easy_install, but can't figure out how to install it.
>
> I have 64-bit Python 2.7.5 on Windows 7.
>
> Following the instructions onhttps://pypi.python.org/pypi/setuptools, it says:
> Download ez_setup.py and run it; it will download the appropr
On May 28, 6:05 pm, ray wrote:
> On May 28, 7:26 am, Mark Lawrence wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > On 28/05/2013 13:03, rusi wrote:
>
> > > On May 28, 6:32 am, ray wrote:
> > >> I would like to use easy_install, but can't figure out
On May 28, 6:40 pm, Mark Lawrence wrote:
> On 28/05/2013 14:05, ray wrote:
>
>
>
> > The installation fails. The report stated it could not find the file.
> > Per:
> > Looking down into the content of ez_setup.py, I find:
> > 'setuptools-0.6c10-py2.6.egg':
> > but there is no entry
> > 'setuptool
On May 29, 4:30 am, Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
> On Tue, 28 May 2013 15:10:03 + (UTC), Grant Edwards
> declaimed the following in
> gmane.comp.python.general:
>
> > On 2013-05-25, Rakshith Nayak wrote:
>
> > > Always wondered how sound is generated from text. Googling couldn't
> > > help. Devs
On May 29, 5:11 pm, Fábio Santos wrote:
> On 29 May 2013 12:25, "Avnesh Shakya" wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > hi,
> > I am trying to display my output with different colour on terminal,
> but it's
> > coming with that colour code.
> > Please help me how is it possible?
>
> > my code is -
> > fr
On May 29, 7:27 pm, Ahmed Abdulshafy wrote:
> On Tuesday, May 28, 2013 3:48:17 PM UTC+2, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> > On Mon, 27 May 2013 13:11:28 -0700, Ahmed Abdulshafy wrote:
>
> > > That may be true for integers, but for floats, testing for equality is
>
> > > not always precise
>
> > Incorrect.
On May 29, 6:41 pm, Jabba Laci wrote:
> > The real answer here is that JSON is probably not the best choice for
> > large files that get hand-edited. For data that you intend to hand-edit
> > a lot, YAML might be a better choice.
>
> >> Currently the value of the second key silently overwrites th
On May 29, 5:43 pm, Joshua Landau wrote:
> On 29 May 2013 13:25, Dave Angel wrote:
>
> > On 05/29/2013 07:48 AM, Joshua Landau wrote:
>
> >> Hello all, again. Instead of revising like I'm meant to be, I've been
> >> delving into a bit of Python and I've come up with this code:
>
> > To start with
On May 30, 6:14 am, Ma Xiaojun wrote:
> What interest me is a one liner:
> print '\n'.join(['\t'.join(['%d*%d=%d' % (j,i,i*j) for i in
> range(1,10)]) for j in range(1,10)])
Ha,Ha! The join method is one of the (for me) ugly features of python.
You can sweep it under the carpet with a one-line jo
On May 30, 5:58 pm, Chris Angelico wrote:
> The alternative would be an infinite number of iterations, which is far far
> worse.
There was one heavyweight among programming teachers -- E.W. Dijkstra
-- who had some rather extreme views on this.
He taught that when writing a loop of the form
i
On Thu, May 30, 2013 at 9:34 AM, Ma Xiaojun
wrote:
>
> On Thu, May 30, 2013 at 10:49 AM, rusi wrote:
> > Ha,Ha! The join method is one of the (for me) ugly features of python.
> > You can sweep it under the carpet with a one-line join function and
> > then wri
On May 30, 10:28 pm, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Fri, May 31, 2013 at 3:12 AM, rusi wrote:
> > You associate the primal (f)act of thinking about programming with
> > *doing* the generating.
> > By contrast the functional programmer thinks about what *is* the
> > resul
On May 30, 11:36 pm, Ian Kelly wrote:
> On Wed, May 29, 2013 at 8:49 PM, rusi wrote:
> > On May 30, 6:14 am, Ma Xiaojun wrote:
> >> What interest me is a one liner:
> >> print '\n'.join(['\t'.join(['%d*%d=%d' % (j,i,i*j) for i in
> &
p://blog.languager.org/2012/10/functional-programming-lost-booty.html
> On Thu, 30 May 2013 10:12:22 -0700, rusi wrote:
> > On Thu, May 30, 2013 at 9:34 AM, Ma Xiaojun
> > wrote:
> >> Wait a minute! Isn't the most nature way of doing/thinking "generating
> >> 9x9 m
On May 31, 2:08 pm, Alister wrote:
> On Thu, 30 May 2013 20:38:40 +0100, MRAB wrote:
> > And additional argument (pun not intended) for putting sep second is
> > that you can give it a default value:
>
> > def join(iterable, sep=""): return sep.join(iterable)
>
> I think that is the winning ar
On May 31, 7:42 pm, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Sat, Jun 1, 2013 at 12:02 AM, Alister wrote:
> > /etc is used to store configuration files for the operating system & if
> > you inadvertently corrupt the wrong one then you could kill the system.
>
> Expanding on this:
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wi
On May 30, 2:48 pm, bhk...@gmail.com wrote:
> Code :
> -
> def mergeSort(alist):
> print("Splitting ",alist)
> if len(alist)>1:
> mid = len(alist)//2
> lefthalf = alist[:mid]
> righthalf = alist[mid:]
>
> mergeSort(lefthalf)
> mergeSort(righthalf)
On Jun 2, 2:19 am, Denis McMahon wrote:
> On Fri, 31 May 2013 02:12:58 -0700, BIBHU DAS wrote:
> > Any Idea how to create a file in /etc as non-root user?Can i use umask
> > or chmod...confused
>
> If you don't have root access, you probably shouldn't be trying to write
> in /etc. If you need
On Jun 3, 2:12 pm, Νικόλαος Κούρας wrote:
> You are right Steven, i just renames the file 'Euxi tou Ihsou.mp3' => 'Eõ÷Þ
> ôïõ Éçóïý.mp3' and…
Is that how you renamed your file?
In any case thats what I see!!
[Dont whether to say: Its greek to me or its not greek to me!!]
--
http://mail.python.
On Jun 4, 3:37 am, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> (Note: this post is sent using UTF-8. If anyone reading this sees
> mojibake, please make sure your email or news client is set to use UTF-8.)
>
> On Mon, 03 Jun 2013 05:54:30 -0700, rusi wrote:
> > On Jun 3, 2:12 pm, Νικόλαος
On Jun 4, 5:23 pm, jmfauth wrote:
> On 2 juin, 20:09, Rick Johnson wrote:
>
>
>
> > I never purposely inject ANY superfluous cycles in my code except in
> > the case of testing or development. To me it's about professionalism.
> > Let's consider a thought exercise shall we?
>
>
>
> The f
On Jun 4, 11:09 pm, kakararunachalserv...@gmail.com wrote:
> Thank you so much! Why didn't i thought about that. So, can i program within
> just by the print
> statement? Or do i have to do something else. I'm sorry, i just learning
> python. Thanks again!
If you are just learning python, you al
On Jun 5, 8:10 pm, Carlos Nepomuceno
wrote:
> > From: nos...@nospam.com
> > Subject: Source code to identify user through browser?
> > Date: Wed, 5 Jun 2013 15:08:54 +0200
> > To: python-l...@python.org
>
> > Hello
>
> > I was wondering if some Python module were available to identify a
> > user t
On Jun 5, 8:31 pm, Mark Lawrence wrote:
> On 05/06/2013 16:18, rusi wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > On Jun 5, 8:10 pm, Carlos Nepomuceno
> > wrote:
> >>> From: nos...@nospam.com
> >>> Subject: Source code to identify user through br
On Jun 5, 11:34 pm, Νικόλαος Κούρας wrote:
> Here is the mails you sent to my customers for the other members to see.
In the normal run of things, I would say Chris has done a horrible
thing.
In this case however, let us remember:
Many people -- hardly exclusively Chris -- tried to educate you
On Jun 6, 6:45 am, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Thu, Jun 6, 2013 at 11:37 AM, Steven D'Aprano
>
> wrote:
> > What prevents bugs is the skill of the people writing the code, not the
> > compiler.
>
> +1 QOTW.
In many Indian languages there is a saying: A poor dancer blames the
crooked floor. [Yeah…
On Jun 6, 8:26 pm, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Fri, Jun 7, 2013 at 12:09 AM, rusi wrote:
> > When we switched from to python (via Scheme and a haskell-
> > predecessor), I dont remember ever getting a segmentation fault.
>
> Oh, it's easy to segfault Python.
>
> im
On Jun 6, 9:08 pm, Robert Kern wrote:
> On 2013-06-06 16:41, Chris Angelico wrote:
>
> > Anyway, regardless of your language, there's always some criteria that
> > can't be coded. Suppose the valid input for a function were "integers
> > whose square roots are integers but whose cube roots are not
that goes on under Haskell.
To make it very clear: In any science, when there are few people they
probably understand the science. When the numbers explode, cargo-cult
science happens. This does not change the fact that a few do still
understand. Haskell is not exception. See below
>
>
On Jun 7, 12:03 am, Lele Gaifax wrote:
> You should *read* and *understand* the error message!
When you *shout* at the deaf, the non-deaf get deaf .
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Jun 7, 8:14 am, Mark Janssen wrote:
> >> I am aware of what it means, but Python doesn't really have it (although
> >> it may evolve to it with annotations).
>
> > No polymorphism huh?
>
> > py> len([1, 2, 3]) # len works on lists
> > 3
> > py> len((1, 2)) # and on tuples
> > 2
> > py> len({}
On Jun 7, 8:24 am, rusi wrote:
> On Jun 7, 8:14 am, Mark Janssen wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > >> I am aware of what it means, but Python doesn't really have it (although
> > >> it may evolve to it with annotations).
>
> > >
On Jun 11, 5:53 am, Mark Janssen wrote:
> > There's a subtle difference between a keyword and a built-in. Good
> > Python style generally avoids masking built-ins but allows it:
>
> Right, thank you for reminding me. My C-mind put them in the same category.
> --
> MarkJ
> Tacoma, Washington
Don
On Jun 11, 5:14 am, Terry Jan Reedy wrote:
> Many long-time posters have advised "Don't rebind built-in names*.
>
> * Unless you really mean to mask it, or more likely wrap it, such as
> wrapping print to modify some aspect of its operation than one cannot do
> with its keyword parameters. The poi
On Jun 11, 8:02 am, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On Mon, 10 Jun 2013 19:36:44 -0700, rusi wrote:
> > Pascal introduced the idea of block structure -- introduce a name at one
> > level, override it at a lower level. [Ok ALgol introduced, Pascal
> > popularized].
> > T
On Jun 11, 12:09 pm, Peter Otten <__pete...@web.de> wrote:
> Terry Jan Reedy wrote:
> > Many long-time posters have advised "Don't rebind built-in names*.
>
> I'm in that camp, but I think this old post by Guido van Rossum is worth
> reading to put the matter into perspective:
Not sure what you ar
On Jun 10, 10:51 pm, Walter Hurry wrote:
> On building Python 2.7.5 I got the following message:
>
> Python build finished, but the necessary bits to build these modules
> were not found:
> dl imageop linuxaudiodev
> spwd sunaudiodev
> To find the necessar
On Jun 11, 6:48 pm, Fábio Santos wrote:
>
> What I like so much about it is the .. if .. else .. Within the parenthesis
> and the append() call outside these parenthesis.
You can do this -- which does not mix up functional and imperative
styles badly and is as much a 2-liner as Roy's original.
n
On Jun 11, 9:28 pm, jacopo wrote:
> I am developing my code in the path:
> /py/myscripts
> /py/mylib
> In order to "import mylib", I need to add /py/mylib to PYTHONPATH.
>
> Now I want to save a snapshot of the current code in the production
> directory, I will copy all in:
> /prod/myscripts
> /p
On Jun 11, 10:05 pm, Fábio Santos wrote:
> On 11 Jun 2013 17:47, "rusi" wrote:
>
> > [Of course I would prefer a 3-liner where the body of the for is
> > indented :-) ]
>
> Is this an aside comprehension?
Eh?
Its a for-loop. Same as:
for s in songs:
(new_
On Jun 11, 10:37 pm, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Wed, Jun 12, 2013 at 3:23 AM, rusi wrote:
> > On Jun 11, 10:05 pm, Fábio Santos wrote:
> >> On 11 Jun 2013 17:47, "rusi" wrote:
>
> >> > [Of course I would prefer a 3-liner where the body of the for
On Jun 12, 4:10 pm, jacopo wrote:
> this idea seemed perfect but it turned out that you have to execute the
> module as a package
> (python -m py.myscripts.any_script) otherwise I get an error on the relative
> import.
> Unfortunately I am working in a team and I do not have control on how the
On Jun 12, 6:29 pm, jacopo wrote:
> > 1. How you run -- 'launch' -- the code -- from py and from prod
>
> when I have to test I use "python any_script.py" but in production there is
> a c++ program that is able to wrap and run python code (the technical details
> are a bit beyond my knowledge)
On Jun 12, 7:42 pm, Mark Lawrence wrote:
> On 12/06/2013 13:42, Νικόλαος Κούρας wrote:
>
>
>
> > Something you want me to try?
>
> I'd suggest suicide but that would no doubt start another stream of
> questions along the lines of "How do I do it?".
There's a saying in some Indian languages (unfor
On Jun 13, 11:00 am, cutems93 wrote:
> Thank you everyone for such helpful responses! Actually, I have one more
> question. Does anybody have experience with closed source version control
> software? If so, why did you buy it instead of downloading open source
> software? Does closed source vcs
On Jun 13, 4:26 pm, MRAB wrote:
> On 13/06/2013 07:00, cutems93 wrote:> Thank you everyone for such helpful
> responses! Actually, I have one
> > more question. Does anybody have experience with closed source
> > version control software? If so, why did you buy it instead of
> > downloading open
On Jun 13, 7:30 am, Ben Finney wrote:
>
> You should be wary of GitHub, a very popular Git hosting site. It uses
> what amount to proprietary protocols, which encourage using GitHub's
> specific interface instead of native Git for your operations and hide a
> lot of the needless complexity; but th
On Jun 12, 8:20 pm, Zero Piraeus wrote:
> :
>
> On 12 June 2013 10:55, Neil Cerutti wrote:
>
>
>
> > He's definitely trolling. I can't think of any other reason to
> > make it so hard to kill-file himself.
>
> He's not a troll, he's a help vampire:
>
> http://slash7.com/2006/12/22/vampires/
>
>
On Jun 13, 12:46 am, John Ladasky wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> My son is 17 years old. He just took a one-year course in web page design at
> his high school. HTML is worth knowing, I suppose, and I think he has also
> done a little Javascript. He has expressed an interest in eventually wanting
>
On Jun 13, 6:07 pm, Roy Smith wrote:
> In article
> <545a441b-0c2d-4b1e-82ae-024b011a4...@e1g2000pbo.googlegroups.com>,
>
> rusi wrote:
> > Python is at least two things, a language and a culture.
>
> This is true of all languages. Hang out on the PHP, Ruby,
On Jun 13, 7:28 pm, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Fri, Jun 14, 2013 at 12:23 AM, Íéêüëáïò Êïýñáò
> wrote:
> > Please suggest something of why this happnes.
>
> You remind me of George.
>
> http://www.chroniclesofgeorge.com/
>
> ChrisA
HA!
You are evil -- Chris!
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/l
On Jun 13, 9:50 pm, Tomasz Rola wrote:
> I've reposted on another list and got this reply. At first I was sceptic
> a bit, but for the sake of completeness, here goes. Processing language
> seems to be interesting in its own right. Examples are Java-flavoured,
> images are ok.
>
> Regards,
> Tomas
On Jun 14, 5:44 am, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On Thu, 13 Jun 2013 06:37:34 -0700, rusi wrote:
> > Python-the-language has strengths that are undermined by the biases in
> > the culture of Python.
>
> This implies that there are strengths in Python-the-language whic
On Jun 14, 12:28 am, buford.lum...@gmail.com wrote:
> Hi, I'm new to Python. Would someone be able to write me and/or to show me
> how to write a simple program that:
>
> 1-follows a hyperlink from MS Excel to the internet (one of many links like
> this,http://www.zipdatamaps.com/76180, for e.g.)
On Jun 14, 3:20 pm, Fábio Santos wrote:
> > Come on now, this is _so_ obviously trolling, it's not even remotely
>
> funny anymore. Why doesn't killfiling work with the mailing list version of
> the python list? :-(
>
> I have skimmed the archives for this month, and I estimate that a third of
> t
On Jun 14, 4:51 pm, rusi wrote:
> On Jun 14, 3:20 pm, Fábio Santos wrote:
>
> > > Come on now, this is _so_ obviously trolling, it's not even remotely
>
> > funny anymore. Why doesn't killfiling work with the mailing list version of
> > the python list? :
On Jun 13, 6:24 am, writeson wrote:
> Anyway, my real question is how to go about debugging memory leak problems in
> Python, particularly for a long running
> server process written with Twisted. I'm not sure how to use heapy or guppy,
> and objgraph doesn't tell me enough to
> locate the probl
On Jun 14, 1:15 am, Giorgos Tzampanakis
wrote:
> Am I the only one who thinks this is terrible advice?
I would expect a typical desktop app to run for a couple of hours --
maybe a couple of days.
Living with a small (enough) leak there may be ok.
[In particular I believe that most commercial apps
On Jun 14, 6:48 pm, Zero Piraeus wrote:
> :
>
> On 14 June 2013 09:07, Nick the Gr33k wrote:
>
>
>
> > Thanks for explaining this but i cannot follow its logic at all.
> > My mind is stuck trying to interpret it as an English sentence:
>
> > if ('Parker' and 'May' and '2001')
>
> > if ('Parker' o
On Jun 14, 8:37 pm, Nick the Gr33k wrote:
>
> PLEASE SUGGEST SOMETHING!
A lollipop maybe?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Jun 14, 9:09 pm, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On Fri, 14 Jun 2013 11:14:16 +0100, Robert Kern wrote:
> > On 2013-06-14 10:50, Nick the Gr33k wrote:
> [snip question]
> >> This is all iw ant to know.
>
> > This is all you need to read:
>
> > http://docs.python.org/2/reference/expressions.html#boo
On Jun 14, 11:03 pm, Antoon Pardon
wrote:
> Op 14-06-13 18:09, Steven D'Aprano schreef:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > On Fri, 14 Jun 2013 11:14:16 +0100, Robert Kern wrote:
>
> >> On 2013-06-14 10:50, Nick the Gr33k wrote:
> > [snip question]
> >>> This is all iw ant to know.
>
> >> This is all you need t
On Jun 15, 5:16 am, Ben Finney wrote:
> rusi writes:
> > On Jun 14, 1:15 am, Giorgos Tzampanakis
> > wrote:
> > > Am I the only one who thinks this is terrible advice?
>
> > I would expect a typical desktop app to run for a couple of hours --
> > maybe a
On Jun 15, 3:55 pm, Mark Lawrence wrote:
> On 15/06/2013 11:24, Denis McMahon wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > On Sat, 15 Jun 2013 10:05:01 +, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
>
> >> On Sat, 15 Jun 2013 02:42:55 -0700, subhabangalore wrote:
>
> >>> Dear Group,
>
> >>> I am trying to search the following pat
On Jun 15, 4:23 pm, Ben Finney wrote:
> rusi writes:
> > On Jun 15, 5:16 am, Ben Finney wrote:
> > > Is a web browser a “typical desktop app”? A filesystem browser? An
> > > instant messenger? A file transfer application? A podcatcher? All of
> > > those typi
On Jun 15, 10:30 pm, Nick the Gr33k wrote:
>
> You are spamming my thread.
With you as our spamming-guru, Onward! Sky is the limit!
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Jun 15, 10:29 pm, Nick the Gr33k wrote:
> On 15/6/2013 8:11 μμ, Chris “Kwpolska” Warrick wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > On Fri, Jun 14, 2013 at 5:25 AM, alex23 wrote:
> >> On Jun 14, 2:24 am, Νικόλαος Κούρας wrote:
> >>> iam researchign a solution to this as we speak.
>
> >> Spamming endless "Z
On Jun 15, 10:52 pm, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On Sat, 15 Jun 2013 10:36:00 -0700, rusi wrote:
> > With you as our spamming-guru, Onward! Sky is the limit!
>
> If you're going to continue making unproductive, off-topic, inflammatory
> posts that prolong these alrea
On Jun 16, 4:14 am, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Sun, Jun 16, 2013 at 12:16 AM, Roy Smith wrote:
> > The advantage of DVCS is that everybody has a full copy of the repo.
> > The disadvantage of the DVCS is that every MUST have a full copy of the
> > repo. When a repo gets big, you may not want to
On Jun 16, 7:09 pm, Jason Swails wrote:
> On Sat, Jun 15, 2013 at 11:55 PM, rusi wrote:
> > On Jun 16, 4:14 am, Chris Angelico wrote:
> > > On Sun, Jun 16, 2013 at 12:16 AM, Roy Smith wrote:
> > > > The advantage of DVCS is that everybody has a full copy of the
On Jun 16, 12:54 am, ru...@yahoo.com wrote:
>
> ... killfile him and shut the fuck up.
Ok. Advice taken. Thanks.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Jun 17, 11:38 am, Ganesh Pandi wrote:
> Hi
> What are all the python api, u used in your python programming, we
> used more api but may we forgot those, so i just want to list down the api we
> familiar aboutplease add your replies...
Maybe you are referring to th
On Jun 18, 7:23 pm, zoom wrote:
> Hi, I have a strange problem here. Perhaps someone would care to help me.
>
> In the file test.py I have the following code:
>
> from scipy import matrix, tile, mean, shape
> import unittest
>
> class TestSequenceFunctions(unittest.TestCase):
>
> def setUp(se
On Jun 18, 8:31 pm, zoom wrote:
>
> yes, that's the hing.
>
> thanks a lot
>
> FYI this happens because
> >>> shape(mean(m,1))
> (4, 1)
> >>> shape(mean(array(m),1))
> (4,)
>
> thanks again
And thank you for the 'Thank you' !!
Given the noob-questions the list is currently dealing with, your
q
On Jun 18, 3:24 pm, Aditya Avinash wrote:
> Hi. This is the last place where I want to ask a question. I have searched
> for lots of tutorials and documentation on the web but, didn't find a
> decent one to develop extensions for Python 3 using a custom compiler
> (mingw32, nvcc). Please help me.
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