I find this surprisingly humorous

<office_space_reference>

Its always some mundane detail!

This isn't a mundane detail Michael!

</office_space_reference>

--
Thadeus





On Mon, Apr 12, 2010 at 3:59 PM, DenesL <denes1...@yahoo.ca> wrote:
> Very simple, in db.py:
>
> db=SQLDB(...)
> db.define_table('person',
>  Field('name')
> )
>
> s=[]
> for f in db.person.fields:
>  s.append(db.person[f].type)
> #
>
> will fail.
> It is a stupid loop, but it illustrates the problem.
>
> If you comment out the for then it is ok.
> If you add an empty line or remove the comment it is ok.
>
>
> On Apr 12, 4:10 pm, Yarko Tymciurak <resultsinsoftw...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>> On Apr 12, 3:00 pm, DenesL <denes1...@yahoo.ca> wrote:
>>
>> > Running on Windows here.
>>
>> > @Yarko,  yes, there seems to be an additional ingredient to this.
>> > A prerequisite seems to be the existence of a for statement somewhere.
>> > (!?!?).
>>
>> Denes - I'm assuming you've found a bug (perhaps a subtle one);  Let's
>> see if get to some minimal situation where this occurs so others can
>> reproduce...
>>
>> I am perfectly willing to run this on Windows-7 in a virtual
>> machine...
>>
>> - Yarko
>
>
> --
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