I do have the initiation command defined. Just that I am not allowed to make the username, pwd public.
I am absolutely sure I am running the same code. Now opened the same file with Python 3.5 shell and I get following error: from _ssl import RAND_status, RAND_egd, RAND_add ImportError: cannot import name 'RAND_egd' I am new to coding and this code has been borrowed from an online source but I can see same code working on mac+Rstudio+python combo. Salute your patience. Sincerely, On Fri, Feb 5, 2016 at 2:01 PM, Martin A. Brown <mar...@linux-ip.net> wrote: > > Hi there, > > >Thanks for the detailed reply. I edited, saved and opened the file > >again. Still I am getting exactly the same error. > > > >Putting bigger chunk of code and the error again: > > [snipped; thanks for the larger chunk] > > >Error: > >except socket.error as e: > > ^ > >SyntaxError: invalid syntax > > I ran your code. I see this: > > $ python3 shaunak.bangale.py > Connecting... > Connection succeeded > Traceback (most recent call last): > File "shaunak.bangale.py", line 23, in <module> > ssl_sock.write(bytes(initiation_command, 'UTF-8')) > NameError: name 'initiation_command' is not defined > > Strictly speaking, I don't think you are having a Python problem. > > * Are you absolutely certain you are (or your IDE is) executing > the same code you are writing? > > * How would you be able to tell? Close your IDE. Run the code on > the command-line. > > * How much time have you taken to work out what the interpreter is > telling you? > > Good luck, > > -Martin > > -- > Martin A. Brown > http://linux-ip.net/ > > -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list