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 > > > -- > To unsubscribe, reply using "remove me" as the subject. >