On Mon, Aug 19, 2013 at 12:57 PM, Steven D'Aprano <st...@pearwood.info>wrote:
> On Sun, 18 Aug 2013 22:36:01 +0530, Ganesh Pal wrote: > > > Please find the comments >>> inline > > Please don't do that! > > "Arrows" > are used for quoting in emails. If you prefix your *new* > comments using >>> it looks like they were quoted *three messages back*. > > You should be able to configure your email or news client to prefix > quoted text with a >, and then you just type your own comments with no > prefix, like I'm doing here. Even Gmail can do that. > > You seem to have copied-and-pasted my response into a new email, and then > added your comments. Am I right? The normal way to reply to an email is > to use Reply or Reply All. > > sure , hence forth will take of the same > > > You shouldn't normally care about where temporary files are stored, since > they're temporary and will disappear as soon as you are done with them. > But yes, tempfile has the ability to control where the files are stored. > Both tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile and tempfile.TemporaryFile take an > optional directory argument. > > To read the documentation, run these two commands at the interactive > prompt: > > > import tempfile > help(tempfile) > > > or read it on the web: > > http://docs.python.org/2/library/tempfile.html > http://docs.python.org/3/library/tempfile.html > > > > > If " yes " then can this also be an alternative and does this > > have any drawback ? > > Alternative to what? If you mean, alternative to *not* storing it in the > user's directory, then yes, it is :-) > > Drawbacks -- yes. I hate it when applications dump temporary files in my > home directory. > > > Thanks for the links and information on temporary files
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