I ran the tests. All 4988 passed. The information it output is:

PyTables version:  2.4.0
HDF5 version:      1.8.9
NumPy version:     1.6.2
Numexpr version:   2.0.1 (not using Intel's VML/MKL)
Zlib version:      1.2.5 (in Python interpreter)
LZO version:       2.06 (Aug 12 2011)
BZIP2 version:     1.0.6 (6-Sept-2010)
Blosc version:     1.1.3 (2010-11-16)
Cython version:    0.16
Python version:    2.7.3 (default, Jul  6 2012, 00:17:51)
[GCC 4.2.1 Compatible Apple Clang 3.1 (tags/Apple/clang-318.0.58)]
Platform:          darwin-x86_64
Byte-ordering:     little
Detected cores:    4

-Derek

On Mon, Sep 24, 2012 at 9:09 PM, Anthony Scopatz <scop...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi Derek,
>
> Can you please run the following command and report back what you see?
>
> python -c "import tables; tables.test()"
>
> Be Well
> Anthony
>
> On Mon, Sep 24, 2012 at 10:56 PM, Derek Shockey <derek.shoc...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>>
>> Hello,
>>
>> I'm hoping someone can help me. When I specify start and stop values
>> for calls to where() and readWhere(), it is returning blatantly
>> incorrect results:
>>
>> >>> table.readWhere("id == 'ceec536a-394e-4dd7-a182-eea557f3bb93'",
>> >>> start=3257, stop=table.nrows)[0]['id']
>> '7f589d3e-a0e1-4882-b69b-0223a7de3801'
>>
>> >>> table.where("id == 'ceec536a-394e-4dd7-a182-eea557f3bb93'",
>> >>> start=3257, stop=table.nrows).next()['id']
>> '7f589d3e-a0e1-4882-b69b-0223a7de3801'
>>
>> This happens with a sequential block of about 150 rows of data, and
>> each time it seems to be 8 rows off (i.e. the row it returns is 8 rows
>> ahead of the row it should be returning). If I remove the start and
>> stop args, it behaves correctly. This seems to be a bug, unless I am
>> misunderstanding something. I'm using Python 2.7.3, PyTables 2.4.0,
>> and hdf5 1.8.9 on OS X 10.8.2.
>>
>> Any ideas?
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Derek
>>
>>
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Exclusive live event will cover all the ways today's security and 
threat landscape has changed and how IT managers can respond. Discussions 
will include endpoint security, mobile security and the latest in malware 
threats. http://www.accelacomm.com/jaw/sfrnl04242012/114/50122263/
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