> I've been working on this for ages and am having real
> problems with getting the wiring for a selected game
> to launch when I click OK.
So what problems are you having? Do you get an error trace?
A superficial glance tells me only that
1) You might find using Tix will simplify your code(scroll
On Fri, 9 Sep 2005, Max Russell wrote:
> I've been working on this for ages and am having real problems with
> getting the wiring for a selected game to launch when I click OK.
>
> I haven't added my error handling yet.
[code cut]
Hi Max,
Hmmm... Out of curiosity, what happens if you try doi
Hi:
I've been working on this for ages and am having real
problems with getting the wiring for a selected game
to launch when I click OK.
I haven't added my error handling yet.
Can anyone help?
I've tried using spawn, system etc etc to no avail.
#Mame Launcher
#GUI launcher for MAME games
#F
Rob Andrews wrote:
> I should already know this, and probably once did, but have never had
> a real world use for it until now.
>
> What's a nice, clean way to recursively scan through directories with
> an arbitrary number of subdirectories?
Jason Orendorff's path module is awesome for this kind
Hi Kent,
Once again, thanks a lot. Problem solved now, your suggestions work
like a charm. You were absolutely right about the last group matching.
I modified my matching pattern:
oRe = re.compile( "(\d\d_\d\d\_)(\d\d(\D|$))" )
Instead of
oRe = re.compile( "(\d\d_\d\d\_)(\d\d)" )
I had no ide
Rob Andrews schrieb:
> I should already know this, and probably once did, but have never had
> a real world use for it until now.
>
> What's a nice, clean way to recursively scan through directories with
> an arbitrary number of subdirectories?
os.walk() is you friend! (Don't use os.path.walk() a
On Fri, 9 Sep 2005, Rob Andrews wrote:
> I should already know this, and probably once did, but have never had
> a real world use for it until now.
>
> What's a nice, clean way to recursively scan through directories with
> an arbitrary number of subdirectories?
Hi Rob,
You may want to look at
I should already know this, and probably once did, but have never had
a real world use for it until now.
What's a nice, clean way to recursively scan through directories with
an arbitrary number of subdirectories?
In today's example, we're looking to grab the file name and third line
of the file
>I would like to construct a table for my program but it does not seem
>to be
> coming out evenly. Could someone please let me know what to do so
> that
> everything will work out correctly?
The best way to build a table is to use a format string with every
field width specified explicitly. Thu
Hi Goofball223,
Just a quick thing -
> for i in (0,10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100):
Have you used range() before?
for i in range(10):
print i
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
It's handy for situations like yours. Also, you could use it like this -
zeroToNine = range(10)
print zeroToNine
def x():
... print 'C F'
... for i in(0, 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100):
... fahrenheit = (9.0/5.0) * i + 32
... print (`i` + ' ' + `fahrenheit`)
Simple but look OK,
Johan
On Thu, 2005-09-08 at 19:46 -0700, bob wrote:
At 04:34 PM 9/8/2005, [EMAIL PRO
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