Thanks guys for the responses,
inspect.classify_class_attrs(klass)
does the magic
Regards
On Wed, Jan 19, 2011 at 3:58 PM, Peter Otten <__pete...@web.de> wrote:
> Jojo Mwebaze wrote:
>
> > Is it possible to tell, from which class an method was inherited from.
> > take an example below
> >
actually i just want to plot a simple x and y graph. any suggestion?
how about using excel to plot? any sample code that i can follow to:
1) launch excel
2) read x-y from a text file
3) plot graph
thanks
x,y is simple in many modules(beyond is more computational. What
version of python, platform
actually i just want to plot a simple x and y graph. any suggestion?
how about using excel to plot? any sample code that i can follow to:
1) launch excel
2) read x-y from a text file
3) plot graph
thanks
> Date: Thu, 20 Jan 2011 01:20:53 +1100
> From: st...@pearwood.info
> To: tutor@python.or
On 1/19/2011 4:53 PM, tutor-requ...@python.org wrote:
Send Tutor mailing list submissions to
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On 1/19/2011 4:09 PM, Jacob Bender wrote:
Dear tutors,
I'm writing a program that can play Othello. Everything has been
going fine, but there is a frequently occurring problem with printing
the board with the squares filled in. Here's the code for the board:
Emile gave you the answer.
A
I did understand the difference (it was me who did trying to write the program)
however until James Reynolds provided me with the solution I could not think of
a better way to do this.
Thanks for the help.
--- On Wed, 19/1/11, tutor-requ...@python.org wrote:
--
Dave,
Sorry I did not include the traceback but now James Reynolds (thank you very
much) has provided a solution I don't need the info any more.
Thank you both for your help and time.
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/home/david/Documents/learnJava2010/v6c.py", line 46, in
app=Ap
If you want to test if one outcome is equal to another, you probably want to
know if
The name of the outcome is the same
The odds of the outcome is the same
So, you'd implement it like so
class Outcome:
def __eq__(self, other):
if self.name == other.name and self.odds == other.odds:
Hello everyone,
Since I got a simple answer on the Python Win32 web site I decided to post
it here for those who would want that information, especially those who can not
see.
The first 2 lines are all that is needed along with the battery level
instances using that object,
( BatteryP
Hello Python Collective,
Well, I'm sure this topic came up before on this forum, and I was
confident that I mastered it having had to set it up correctly on my Mac
systems and linux systems in the path. Here are my findings. I am
trying to run this code:
#!/usr/bin/env python3.1
from tkint
On 1/19/2011 1:09 PM Jacob Bender said...
def display_board(self):
print self.board_table % self.board[:]
Self.board is a list, but the formatting substitution needs to be passed
a tuple. Try:
print self.board_table % tuple(self.board)
Emile
___
Dear tutors,
I'm writing a program that can play Othello. Everything has been
going fine, but there is a frequently occurring problem with printing
the board with the squares filled in. Here's the code for the board:
class board(object):
def create_board(self): #Create a virtual board
"Steven D'Aprano" wrote
I'm sorry, but I don't believe you :/ If it "just works" in Lisp,
why
> does Lisp allow you to override the default linearization?
At 2:00am last night I wrote a long explanatory reposte then
discovered my wife's Netbook wouldn'ty let me post it! Now
I can't be bothe
"Oleg Oltar" wrote
I am trying to decode a string I took from file:
file = open ("./Downloads/lamp-post.csv", 'r')
I assume you know what its supposed to represent?
What the columns etc are intended to be?
Otherwise it will be a challenge!
There is a section here that looks like the mon
"David Holland" wrote
This works :-
def create_widgets(self):
self.submit_bttn=Button(self, text="Submit",
command=self.reveal)
But when I changed it to use a number I get an error message.
def create_widgets(self,x):
x= self.submit_bttn=Button(self, text="Submit",
command=sel
tee chwee liong wrote:
hi all,
i installed matplotlib, numpy and scipy. i tried to run attached script to learn how it plot a grph but got error as below:
If you're having problems with numpy and scipy, you will probably get
more help from a specialist numpy mailing list.
--
Steven
__
Oleg Oltar wrote:
Hi,
I am trying to decode a string I took from file:
[...]
How do I convert this to something human readable?
In general, you can't unless you know the encoding. A file filled with
arbitrary bytes could be anything.
However, you can sometimes guess the encoding, either b
Oleg Oltar wrote:
> I am trying to decode a string I took from file:
>
> file = open ("./Downloads/lamp-post.csv", 'r')
> data = file.readlines()
> data[0]
>
>
'\xff\xfeK\x00e\x00y\x00w\x00o\x00r\x00d\x00\t\x00C\x00o\x00m\x00p\x00e\x00t\x00i\x00t\x00i\x00o\x00n\x00\t\x00G\x00l\x00o\x00b\x00a\x0
Hi,
I am trying to decode a string I took from file:
file = open ("./Downloads/lamp-post.csv", 'r')
data = file.readlines()
data[0]
'\xff\xfeK\x00e\x00y\x00w\x00o\x00r\x00d\x00\t\x00C\x00o\x00m\x00p\x00e\x00t\x00i\x00t\x00i\x00o\x00n\x00\t\x00G\x00l\x00o\x00b\x00a\x00l\x00
\x00M\x00o\x00n\x00t\x
Jojo Mwebaze wrote:
> Is it possible to tell, from which class an method was inherited from.
> take an example below
>
> class A:
>def foo():
> pass
> class B(A):
>def boo(A):
> pass
> class C(B):
>def coo()
> pass
> class D(C):
>def doo()
> pass
>
dir (
On 01/19/2011 03:55 AM, Jojo Mwebaze wrote:
> Is it possible to tell, from which class an method was inherited from.
> take an example below
>
> |class A:
>
>def foo():
> pass
> class B(A):
>
>def boo(A):
> pass
>
> class C(B):
>def coo()
>
> pass
> class D(C):
>
>
hi all,
i installed matplotlib, numpy and scipy. i tried to run attached script to
learn how it plot a grph but got error as below:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:\Python25\myscript\plot\plot1.py", line 3, in
from scipy import *
File "C:\Python25\Lib\site-packages\scipy\
Is it possible to tell, from which class an method was inherited from. take
an example below
class A:
def foo():
pass
class B(A):
def boo(A):
pass
class C(B):
def coo()
pass
class D(C):
def doo()
pass
>>> dir (D)
['__doc__', '__module__', 'boo', 'coo', 'doo', 'foo
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