logmerger 0.8.0
===
New features:
- Added --inline command line option to view merged logs in a single inline
column instead of side-by-side columns (side-by-side is the default)
- Added jump feature to move by number of lines or by a time period in
microseconds, milliseconds,
logmerger 0.7.0
===
Screenshot:
https://github.com/ptmcg/logmerger/blob/main/static/log1_log2_merged_tui_lr.jpg?raw=true
Use logmerger to view multiple log files, merged side-by-side with a common
timeline using timestamps from the input files.
- merge ASCII log files
- detects
Thanks everyone for the great feedback on the 3.1.0 release! Caught some
glaring regressions that slipped through my test suite. Just published version
3.1.1: https://github.com/pyparsing/pyparsing/releases/tag/3.1.1
- Fixed regression in Word(min), reported by Ricardo Coccioli, good catch!
After several alpha and beta releases, I've finally pushed out version 3.1.0 of
pyparsing. Here are the highlights:
NOTE: In the future release 3.2.0, use of many of the pre-PEP8 methods (such as
`ParserElement.parseString`) will start to raise `DeprecationWarnings`. 3.2.0
should get released
I just pushed release 3.1.0b2 of pyparsing. 3.1.0 with some fixes to bugs that
came up in the past few weeks - testing works!
If your project uses pyparsing, please please *please* download this beta
release (using "pip install -U pyparsing==3.1.0b2") and open any compatibility
issues you
I just pushed release 3.1.0b1 of pyparsing. 3.1.0 will include support for
python 3.12, and will be the last release to support 3.6 and 3.7.
If your project uses pyparsing, *please* download this beta release (using "pip
install -U pyparsing==3.1.0b1") and open any compatibility issues you
Paul McGuire added the comment:
Patch file attached.
--
keywords: +patch
Added file: http://bugs.python.org/file44182/ptm_27822.patch
___
Python tracker <rep...@bugs.python.org>
<http://bugs.python.org/i
Paul McGuire added the comment:
Ok, I will submit as a separate issue.
--
___
Python tracker <rep...@bugs.python.org>
<http://bugs.python.org/issue27746>
___
__
Paul McGuire added the comment:
(issue applies to both 3.5.2 and 3.6)
--
versions: +Python 3.5
___
Python tracker <rep...@bugs.python.org>
<http://bugs.python.org/i
Paul McGuire added the comment:
I was about to report this same issue - I get the error message even though I
explicitly call transport.close():
C:\Python35\lib\asyncio\selector_events.py:582: ResourceWarning: unclosed
transport <_SelectorDatagramTransport closing fd=232>
It look
Paul McGuire added the comment:
To clarify how I'm using a socket without a bound address, I am specifying the
destination address in the call to transport.sendto(), so there is no address
on the socket itself, hence getsockname() fails
New submission from Paul McGuire:
In writing a simple UDP client using asyncio, I tripped over a call to
getsockname() in the _SelectorTransport class in asyncio/selector_events.py.
def __init__(self, loop, sock, protocol, extra=None, server=None):
super().__init__(extra, loop
Here is a first shot at a pyparsing parser for these lines:
from pyparsing import *
SET,POLICY,ID,FROM,TO,NAT,SRC,DST,IP,PORT,SCHEDULE,LOG,PERMIT,ALLOW,DENY =
map(CaselessKeyword,
SET,POLICY,ID,FROM,TO,NAT,SRC,DST,IP,PORT,SCHEDULE,LOG,PERMIT,ALLOW,DENY.split(','))
integer = Word(nums)
On Friday, August 14, 2015 at 6:13:37 AM UTC-5, sam.h...@gmail.com wrote:
On Wednesday, April 22, 2009 at 8:36:21 AM UTC+1, David Cournapeau wrote:
On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 4:20 PM, 83nini 83n...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi guys,
I'm new to python, i downloaded version 2.5, opened windows
littletable is a little module I knocked together a few years ago, found it
sort of useful, so uploaded to SF and PyPI. The download traffic at SF is very
light, as I expected, but PyPI shows 3000 downloads in the past month! Who
*are* all these people?
In my own continuing self-education,
I'm happy to announce a new release of pyparsing, version 2.0.2.
This release contains some small enhancements and some bugfixes.
Change summary:
---
- Extended expr(name) shortcut (same as expr.setResultsName(name))
to accept expr() as a shortcut for expr.copy().
- Added
in pyparsing!
-- Paul McGuire
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-announce-list
Support the Python Software Foundation:
http://www.python.org/psf/donations/
in pyparsing!
-- Paul McGuire
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Pyparsing 2.0.1 fixes this incompatibility, and should work with all versions
of Python 2.6 and later.
-- Paul
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
With the release of version 2.0.0/1.5.7, pyparsing has now officially switched
to Python 3.x support as its default installation environment. Python 2.x users
can install the latest 1.5.7 release. (If you're using easy_install, do
easy_install pyparsing==1.5.7.)
I'm taking this opportunity to
After about 10 months, there is a new release of pyparsing, version
1.5.6. This release contains some small enhancements, some bugfixes,
and some new examples.
Most notably, this release includes the first public release of the
Verilog parser. I have tired of restricting this parser for
Announcing the 0.3 release of littletable (the module formerly known
as dulce). The version includes (thanks to much help from Colin
McPhail, thanks Colin!):
- support for namedtuples as table objects
- Python 3 compatibility
- Table.pivot() to summarize record counts by 1 or 2 table attributes
dulce is a syntactic sweet wrapper for managing collections of
Python objects like relational tables. No schema definition is used;
instead table columns are introspected from the attributes of objects
inserted into the table, and inferred from index and query
parameters. dulce's Tables can be:
On Sep 7, 7:05 am, Baba raoul...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi
I am working on an exercise which requires me to write a funtion that
will check if a given word can be found in a given dictionary (the
hand).
def is_valid_word(word, hand, word_list):
Returns True if word is in the word_list
On Aug 28, 11:23 pm, Paul McGuire pt...@austin.rr.com wrote:
On Aug 28, 11:14 am, agnibhu dee...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi all,
I'm a newbie in python. I'm trying to create a library for parsing
certain keywords.
For example say I've key words like abc: bcd: cde: like that... So
On Aug 28, 11:14 am, agnibhu dee...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi all,
I'm a newbie in python. I'm trying to create a library for parsing
certain keywords.
For example say I've key words like abc: bcd: cde: like that... So the
user may use like
abc: How are you bcd: I'm fine cde: ok
So I've to
On Jul 16, 12:01 pm, Peng Yu pengyu...@gmail.com wrote:
I mean to get the man page for '[' like in the following code.
x=[1,2,3]
But help('[') doesn't seem to give the above usage.
###
Mutable Sequence Types
**
List objects support additional operations that
On Jul 13, 6:49 pm, News123 news1...@free.fr wrote:
I wondered about a potentially nicer way of removing a prefix of a
string if it exists.
Here is an iterator solution:
from itertools import izip
def trim_prefix(prefix, s):
i1,i2 = iter(prefix),iter(s)
if all(c1==c2 for c1,c2 in
On Jul 6, 3:30 am, David Cournapeau courn...@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, Jul 6, 2010 at 4:30 AM, D'Arcy J.M. Cain da...@druid.net wrote:
One thing that would be very useful is how to maintain something that
works on 2.x and 3.x, but not limiting yourself to 2.6. Giving up
versions below 2.6 is
Does anyone have any clue what that might be?
Why the problem is on GAE (even when run locally), when command line
run works just fine (even with recursion limit decreased)?
Can't explain why you see different behavior on GAE vs. local, but it
is unusual for a small translator to flirt with
On Jun 30, 6:39 pm, Jay jayk...@yahoo.com wrote:
I would like to create a python script that plays the Windows game
minesweeper.
The python code logic and running minesweeper are not problems.
However, seeing the 1-8 in the minesweeper map and clicking on
squares is. I have no idea how to
I'm happy to announce that a new release of pyparsing is now
available,
version 1.5.3. It has been almost a year and a half since 1.5.2 was
released, but pyparsing has remained pretty stable.
I believe I have cleaned up the botch-job I made in version 1.5.2 of
trying to support both Python 2.x
I'm happy to announce that a new release of pyparsing is now
available,
version 1.5.3. It has been almost a year and a half since 1.5.2 was
released, but pyparsing has remained pretty stable.
I believe I have cleaned up the botch-job I made in version 1.5.2 of
trying to support both Python 2.x
I was teetering on the brink of releasing Pyparsing 1.5.3 (with some
nice new examples and goodies), when I saw that I had recently
introduced a bug in the Python 3 compatible version. Here is the
stacktrace as reported on SF:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File testcase.py, line 11, in
On May 25, 8:58 pm, Benjamin Peterson benja...@python.org wrote:
Paul McGuire ptmcg at austin.rr.com writes:
In this section of code, instring is a string, loc is an int, and wt
is a string. Any clues why instring[loc] would be evaluating as int?
(I am unfortunately dependent
While sifting through some code looking for old x and y or z code
that might better be coded using y if x else z, I came across this
puzzler:
x = boolean expression and True or False
What is and True or False adding to this picture? The boolean
expression part is already evaluating to a
On Apr 17, 2:23 pm, John Nagle na...@animats.com wrote:
Is there a usable street address parser available? There are some
bad ones out there, but nothing good that I've found other than commercial
products with large databases. I don't need 100% accuracy, but I'd like
to be able to
On Apr 11, 5:43 pm, andrew cooke and...@acooke.org wrote:
Is the third case here surprising to anyone else? It doesn't make
sense to me...
Python 2.6.2 (r262:71600, Oct 24 2009, 03:15:21)
[GCC 4.4.1 [gcc-4_4-branch revision 150839]] on linux2
Type help, copyright, credits or license for
On Apr 9, 10:03 am, david jensen dmj@gmail.com wrote:
Hi all,
I'm trying to find a good way of doing the following:
Each n-tuple in combinations( range( 2 ** m ), n ) has a corresponding
value n-tuple (call them scores for clarity later). I'm currently
storing them in a dictionary, by
On Apr 10, 8:38 pm, Paul Rubin no.em...@nospam.invalid wrote:
The impression that I have (from a distance) is that Pyparsing is a good
interface abstraction with a kludgy and slow implementation. That the
implementation uses regexps just goes to show how kludgy it is. One
hopes that someday
On Apr 8, 3:21 pm, M. Hamed mhels...@hotmail.com wrote:
I have trouble with some Python concept. The fact that you can not
assign to a non-existent index in an array. For example:
a = [0,1]
a[2] = Generates an error
I can use a.append(2) but that always appends to the end. Sometimes
On Apr 6, 11:05 am, AlienBaby matt.j.war...@gmail.com wrote:
The requirement for a commercial license comes down to being
restricted to not using any open source code. If it's an open source
license it can't be used in our context.
You may be misunderstanding this issue, I think you are
On Apr 6, 7:02 pm, James Stroud nospamjstroudmap...@mbi.ucla.edu
wrote:
Hello All,
I want to use an s-expression based configuration file format for a
python program I'm writing. Does anyone have a favorite parser?
The pyparsing wiki includes this parser on its Examples page:
On Apr 4, 3:42 am, catalinf...@gmail.com catalinf...@gmail.com
wrote:
Hi everyone .
My questions is why vars().has_key('b') is False ?'
I expecting to see True because is a variable ...
Thanks
Yes, 'b' is a var, but only within the scope of something(). See how
this is different:
def
On Apr 1, 5:34 pm, kj no.em...@please.post wrote:
When coding C I have often found static local variables useful for
doing once-only run-time initializations. For example:
Here is a decorator to make a function self-aware, giving it a this
variable that points to itself, which you could then
On Mar 31, 5:49 am, Nathan Harmston iwanttobeabad...@googlemail.com
wrote:
Hi everyone,
I have a slightly complicated/medium sized regular expression and I
want to generate all possible words that it can match (to compare
performance of regex against an acora based matcher).
The pyparsing
This is a pretty tight loop:
for i in xrange(100):
f1.seek(0)
But there is still a lot going on, some of which you can lift out of
the loop. The easiest I can think of is the lookup of the 'seek'
attribute on the f1 object. Try this:
f1_seek = f1.seek
for i in xrange(100):
On Mar 7, 4:32 am, Joan Miller pelok...@gmail.com wrote:
I would to convert the first string to upper case. But this regular
expression is not matching the first string between quotes.
Is using pyparsing overkill? Probably. But your time is valuable,
and pyparsing let's you knock this out in
On Feb 17, 7:38 pm, Steven D'Aprano
ste...@remove.this.cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Wed, 17 Feb 2010 17:13:23 -0800, Jonathan Gardner wrote:
And once you realize that every program is really a compiler, then you
have truly mastered the Zen of Programming in Any Programming Language
That
On Feb 16, 5:48 pm, Imaginationworks xiaju...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
I am trying to read object information from a text file (approx.
30,000 lines) with the following format, each line corresponds to a
line in the text file. Currently, the whole file was read into a
string list using
On Feb 12, 6:41 pm, Gabriel Genellina gagsl-...@yahoo.com.ar
wrote:
En Fri, 12 Feb 2010 10:41:40 -0300, Eknath Venkataramani
eknath.i...@gmail.com escribió:
I am trying to write a parser in pyparsing.
Help Me.http://paste.pocoo.org/show/177078/is the code and this is
input
On Feb 10, 2:24 am, Dennis Lee Bieber wlfr...@ix.netcom.com wrote:
On Tue, 9 Feb 2010 21:45:38 + (UTC), Grant Edwards
inva...@invalid.invalid declaimed the following in
gmane.comp.python.general:
Doesn't work. datetime.datetime.now has granularity of
15-16ms.
Intervals much less
On Feb 9, 10:10 am, Grant Edwards inva...@invalid.invalid wrote:
Is there another way to measure small periods of elapsed time
(say in the 1-10ms range)?
On Feb 9, 10:10 am, Grant Edwards inva...@invalid.invalid wrote:
Is there another way to measure small periods of elapsed time
(say in the
On Feb 6, 1:36 pm, hzh...@gmail.com hzh...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
I am a fresh man with python. I know there is regular expressions in
Python. What I need is that given a particular regular expression,
output all the matches. For example, given “[1|2|3]{2}” as the regular
expression, the
I never represented that this parser would handle any and all Excel
formulas! But I should hope the basic structure of a pyparsing
solution might help the OP add some of the other features you cited,
if necessary. It's actually pretty common to take an incremental
approach in making such a
On Jan 5, 1:49 pm, Tim Chase python.l...@tim.thechases.com wrote:
vsoler wrote:
Hence, I need toparseExcel formulas. Can I do it by means only of re
(regular expressions)?
I know that for simple formulas such as =3*A7+5 it is indeed
possible. What about complex for formulas that include
On Dec 21, 5:38 am, Oltmans rolf.oltm...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello,. everyone.
I've a string that looks something like
lksjdfls div id ='amazon_345343' kdjff lsdfs /div sdjfls div id
= amazon_35343433sdfsd/divdiv id='amazon_8898'welcome/div
From above string I need the digits
On Dec 6, 7:43 am, Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-
cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Sun, 06 Dec 2009 06:34:17 -0600, Tim Chase wrote:
I've occasionally wanted something like this, and have found that it can
be done by manually assigning to __doc__ (either at the module-level or
classes)
On Oct 8, 11:42 am, MRAB pyt...@mrabarnett.plus.com wrote:
inhahe wrote:
Can someone tell me why this doesn't work?
colorre = re.compile ('('
'^'
'|'
'(?:'
On Oct 6, 6:06 pm, Kitlbast vlad.shevche...@gmail.com wrote:
grouped acc: 61
grouped acc: 64
grouped acc: 61
am I doing something wrong?
sort first, then groupby.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Oct 2, 12:10 am, 504cr...@gmail.com 504cr...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm kind of new to regular expressions, and I've spent hours trying to
finesse a regular expression to build a substitution.
What I'd like to do is extract data elements from HTML and structure
them so that they can more readily
On Sep 16, 11:33 pm, Steven D'Aprano
ste...@remove.this.cybersource.com.au wrote:
I have two threads, one running min() and the other running max() over
the same list. I'm getting some mysterious results which I'm having
trouble debugging. Are min() and max() thread-safe, or am I doing
On Sep 15, 11:32 pm, Stefan Behnel stefan...@behnel.de wrote:
Also untested:
from lxml import html
doc = html.parse(page_url)
doc.make_links_absolute(page_url)
urls = [ img.src for img in doc.xpath('//img') ]
Then use e.g. urllib2 to save the images.
On Sep 12, 1:10 am, Chris Seberino cseber...@gmail.com wrote:
Where regexs listed for Python language's tokenizer/lexer?
If I'm not mistaken, the grammar is not sufficient to specify the
language
you also need to specify the regexs that define the tokens
right?..where is that?
I think
On Sep 6, 11:23 pm, Ben Finney ben+pyt...@benfinney.id.au wrote:
George Burdell gburde...@gmail.com writes:
I want to find every occurrence of money, and for each
occurrence, I want to scan back to the first occurrence
of hello. How can this be done?
By recognising the task: not
On Sep 7, 9:47 am, kj no.em...@please.post wrote:
Is there some standardized way (e.g. some official module of such
limit constants) to get the smallest positive float that Python
will regard as distinct from 0.0?
TIA!
kj
You could find it for yourself:
for i in range(400):
...if
On Sep 2, 4:55 pm, bvdp b...@mellowood.ca wrote:
I'm trying to NOT create a parser to do this and I'm sure that
it's easy if I could only see the light!
Well, this is a nice puzzler, better than a sudoku. Maybe a quick
parser with pyparsing will give you some guidance on how to do this
On Aug 30, 2:33 am, Derek Martin c...@pizzashack.org wrote:
THAT is why Python's behavior with regard to numerical objects is
not intuitive, and frankly bizzare to me, and I dare say to others who
find it so.
Yes, that's right. BIZZARE.
Can't we all just get along?
I think the question
On Aug 30, 5:42 am, Paul McGuire pt...@austin.rr.com wrote:
Python binds values to names. Always. In Python, = is not and never
could be a class operator. In Python, any expression of LHS = RHS,
LHS is always a name, and in this statement it is being bound to some
object found by evaluating
On Aug 29, 7:45 am, zaur szp...@gmail.com wrote:
Python 2.6.2 (r262:71600, Apr 16 2009, 09:17:39)
[GCC 4.0.1 (Apple Computer, Inc. build 5250)] on darwin
Type copyright, credits or license() for more information. a=1
x=[a]
id(a)==id(x[0])
True
a+=1
a
2
x[0]
1
I thought that +=
On Aug 27, 1:15 pm, Bakes ba...@ymail.com wrote:
If I were using the code:
(?Pdata[0-9]+)
to get an integer between 0 and 9, how would I allow it to register
negative integers as well?
With that + sign in there, you will actually get an integer from 0 to
9...
-- Paul
--
On Jul 22, 5:43 pm, Filip pink...@gmail.com wrote:
My library, rather than parsing the whole input into a tree, processes
it like a char stream with regular expressions.
Filip -
In general, parsing HTML with re's is fraught with easily-overlooked
deviations from the norm. But since you have
On Jul 16, 8:01 pm, Ben Finney ben+pyt...@benfinney.id.au wrote:
Howdy all,
The following is a common idiom::
class FooGonk(object):
def frobnicate(self):
Frobnicate this gonk.
basic_implementation(self.wobble)
class BarGonk(FooGonk):
On Jul 12, 5:24 pm, Davood Vahdati davoodvahdati2...@gmail.com
wrote:
Dear Sirs And Madams :
it is an Acm programming competition Questions in year 2004-2005 .
could you please solve problems is question ? I Wan't C++ Source Code
program About this questions OR Problems . thank you for your
On Jul 9, 1:09 pm, DuaneKaufman duane.kauf...@gmail.com wrote:
The application I wish to interact with is not my own, but an ERP
system GUI front-end.
I have used pywinauto to drive a Flash game running inside of an
Internet Explorer browser - that's pretty GUI!
-- Paul
--
On Jul 6, 7:21 pm, m...@pixar.com wrote:
I'm looking for something like Tcl's [clock scan] command which parses
human-readable time strings such as:
% clock scan 5 minutes ago
1246925569
% clock scan tomorrow 12:00
1246993200
% clock scan today + 1 fortnight
On Jul 5, 3:12 am, Hendrik van Rooyen m...@microcorp.co.za wrote:
Use a dispatch dict, and have each state return the next state.
Then you can use strings representing state names, and
everybody will be able to understand the code.
toy example, not tested, nor completed:
protocol =
On Jun 9, 11:13 pm, 504cr...@gmail.com 504cr...@gmail.com wrote:
By what method would a string be inserted at each instance of a RegEx
match?
Some might say that using a parsing library for this problem is
overkill, but let me just put this out there as another data point for
you. Pyparsing
On Jun 9, 11:23 pm, Esmail ebo...@hotmail.com wrote:
Here is part of the specification of an algorithm I'm implementing that
shows the reason for my original query:
vid = w * vid + c1 * rand( ) * ( pid – xid ) + c2 * Rand( ) * (pgd –xid ) (1a)
xid = xid + vid (1b)
where c1 and c2 are two
On Jun 9, 4:33 pm, Esmail ebo...@hotmail.com wrote:
Hi,
random.random() will generate a random value in the range [0, 1).
Is there an easy way to generate random values in the range [0, 1]?
I.e., including 1?
Are you trying to generate a number in the range [0,n] by multiplying
a random
On Jun 8, 7:18 pm, Ala shaib...@ymail.com wrote:
Hello everyone.
I plan on starting to write a network simulator on python for testing a
modified version of TCP.
I am wondering if a python network simulator exists? Also, if anyone
tried using simpy for doing a simulation.
Thank you
There
On May 24, 1:16 pm, Matthew Wilson m...@tplus1.com wrote:
I'm working on a really simple workflow for my bug tracker. I want
filed bugs to start in an UNSTARTED status. From there, they can go to
STARTED.
I just wrote an article for the April issue of Python Magazine on how
to add embedded
On May 8, 11:14 pm, Ned Deily n...@acm.org wrote:
In article 7xprejoswg@ruckus.brouhaha.com,
Paul Rubin http://phr...@nospam.invalid wrote:
Ross ross.j...@gmail.com writes:
I have a really long list that I would like segmented into smaller
lists. Let's say I had a list a =
On Apr 30, 11:55 am, Kurt Mueller m...@problemlos.ch wrote:
Hi,
on a Linux system and python 2.5.1 I have the
following behaviour which I do not understand:
case 1 python -c 'a=ä; print a ; print a.center(6,-) ; b=unicode(a,
utf8); print b.center(6,-)'
ä
--ä--
--ä---
Weird. What
On Apr 24, 5:00 am, GC-Martijn gcmart...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello,
I'm trying to do a if statement with a function inside it.
I want to use that variable inside that if loop , without defining it.
def Test():
return 'Vla'
I searching something like this:
if (t = Test()) == 'Vla':
Well, it has been about 6 months since the release of pyparsing 1.5.1,
and there have been no new functional enhancements to pyparsing. I
take
this as a further sign that pyparsing is reaching a development/
maturity
plateau.
With the help of the pyparsing community, there are some
compatibility
Well, it has been about 6 months since the release of pyparsing 1.5.1,
and there have been no new functional enhancements to pyparsing. I
take
this as a further sign that pyparsing is reaching a development/
maturity
plateau.
With the help of the pyparsing community, there are some
compatibility
On Apr 16, 10:57 am, prueba...@latinmail.com wrote:
Another interesting task for those that are looking for some
interesting problem:
I inherited some rule system that checks for programmers program
outputs that to be ported: given some simple rules and the values it
has to determine if the
On Apr 17, 10:43 am, John Machin sjmac...@lexicon.net wrote:
I don't see how it can handle the chained relop in the last two
testcases e. g. '0.00 LE A LE 4.00' -- unless relops are chained by
default in your parser.
John -
First of all, to respect precedence of operations, higher level
On Apr 17, 1:26 pm, Aaron Brady castiro...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi, not to offend; I don't know your background.
Courtesy on Usenet!!! I'm going to go buy a lottery ticket!
Not to worry, I'm a big boy. People have even called my baby ugly,
and I manage to keep my blood pressure under control.
On Apr 17, 1:39 pm, _wolf wolfgang.l...@gmail.com wrote:
can it be that a simple diy-class outperforms a python built-in by a
factor of 180? is there something i have done the wrong way?
omissions, oversights? do other people get similar figures?
cheers
I wouldn't say you are outperforming
On Apr 17, 2:40 pm, prueba...@latinmail.com wrote:
On Apr 17, 11:26 am, Paul McGuire pt...@austin.rr.com wrote:
On Apr 16, 10:57 am, prueba...@latinmail.com wrote:
Another interesting task for those that are looking for some
interesting problem:
I inherited some rule system
On Apr 17, 4:49 pm, Jesse Aldridge jessealdri...@gmail.com wrote:
import re
s1 = I am an american
s2 = I am american an
for s in [s1, s2]:
print re.findall( (am|an) , s)
# Results:
# ['am']
# ['am', 'an']
---
I want the results to be the same for each string. What am I
On Apr 17, 5:28 pm, Paul McGuire pt...@austin.rr.com wrote:
-- Paul
Your find pattern includes (and consumes) a leading AND trailing space
around each word. In the first string I am an american, there is a
leading and trailing space around am, but the trailing space for
am is the leading
On Apr 14, 4:09 am, Steven D'Aprano
ste...@remove.this.cybersource.com.au wrote:
I have a subclass of int where I want all the standard arithmetic
operators to return my subclass, but with no other differences:
class MyInt(int):
def __add__(self, other):
return
On Apr 11, 2:41 am, Aaron Brady castiro...@gmail.com wrote:
Why do I get the feeling that the authors of 'pyparsing' are out of
breath?
What kind of breathlessness do you mean? I'm still breathing, last
time I checked.
The-rumors-of-my-demise-have-been-greatly-exaggerated'ly yours,
-- Paul
On Apr 9, 10:56 am, Joel Hedlund joel.hedl...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi all!
I'm writing a program that presents a lot of numbers to the user, and I
want to let the user apply moderately simple arithmentics to these
numbers.
Joel -
Take a look at the examples page on the pyparsing wiki (http://
On Apr 3, 9:26 pm, Paul Rubin http://phr...@nospam.invalid wrote:
bwgoudey bwgou...@gmail.com writes:
elif re.match(^DATASET:\s*(.+) , line):
m=re.match(^DATASET:\s*(.+) , line)
print m.group(1))
Sometimes I like to make a special class that saves the result:
class
On Apr 3, 11:48 pm, Tim Wintle tim.win...@teamrubber.com wrote:
del mylist[:]
* or *
mylist[:] = []
* or *
mylist = []
which, although semantically similar are different as far as the
interpreter are concerned (since two of them create a new list):
Only the last item creates a new list
On Apr 1, 3:57 am, Nico Grubert nicogrub...@gmail.com wrote:
Dear Python developers
I have the following (sorted) list.
['/notebook',
'/notebook/mac',
'/notebook/mac/macbook',
'/notebook/mac/macbookpro',
'/notebook/pc',
'/notebook/pc/lenovo',
'/notebook/pc/hp',
1 - 100 of 1263 matches
Mail list logo