On Sat, 14 Mar 2009 07:54:07 +1000, Scott Ballard
wrote:
> I'm a bit of a PyQt newbie but have plenty of Python experience.
>
> Does anyone know if arbitrary Python objects will be supported by
> QDataStream in PyQt 4.5?
No.
> I'm looking for a method of using PyQts model/view programming and
I came across this link while I was
trying to do the same thing. It explained everything and might help you
with passing arguments.
http://blog.qgis.org/node/102
Cheers,
-Scott
klia wrote:
Till Gerken-2 wrote:
On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 2:23 PM, klia wrote:
I h
I'm a bit of a PyQt newbie but have
plenty of Python experience.
Does anyone know if arbitrary Python objects will be supported by
QDataStream in PyQt 4.5?
I'm looking for a method of using PyQts model/view programming and its
drag and drop functionality with Python's base object class which
On 3/13/09, Phil Thompson wrote:
> On Fri, 13 Mar 2009 11:44:57 +0100, Wolfgang Rohdewald
> wrote:
>> On Freitag, 13. März 2009, Till Gerken wrote:
>>
>>> The QString() that I am passing as reference to the C++ class
>>> KCoreConfigSkeleton exists as local variable in my Python class
>>> derived
On 13.03.09 12:18:24, Mario Daniel Carugno wrote:
> 2009/3/13, Andreas Pakulat :
> > > I want that it could be as simple as derivating the 'data' class
> > > from the 'main window' class. I've read that derivating a widget
> > > from another one, makes that widget to appear inside it's parent,
>
OK, Darryl, thanks for that "time saving" response! I was pretty sure
that was the case. Hope the other solution helps you some... will post
again if I find anything relevant as I continue on...!
On Fri, 2009-03-13 at 10:44 -0400, Darryl Wallace wrote:
> Hello Stan
>
> stan wrote:
> > On Fri, 20
On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 2:59 PM, klia wrote:
> Till Gerken-2 wrote:
>> On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 2:23 PM, klia wrote:
>>> I have this function that is suppose to extract Exif(exchangeable image
>>> formate) from photos and direct the output to an .CSV file (comma
>>> seperated
>>> values)
>>>
>>> w
Hello Stan
stan wrote:
On Fri, 2009-03-13 at 09:37 -0400, Darryl Wallace wrote:
Hello,
I've recently developed a data analysis program using PyQt. It's not a
huge program but it's not small either. I've noticed that, in Windows,
the memory usage at startup is ~80MB. I've removed all of
On Fri, 2009-03-13 at 09:37 -0400, Darryl Wallace wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I've recently developed a data analysis program using PyQt. It's not a
> huge program but it's not small either. I've noticed that, in Windows,
> the memory usage at startup is ~80MB. I've removed all of the 'import
> *'s
2009/3/13, Andreas Pakulat :
> > I want that it could be as simple as derivating the 'data' class
> > from the 'main window' class. I've read that derivating a widget
> > from another one, makes that widget to appear inside it's parent,
> > right ?
>
> No thats wrong. Deriving one class from an
Till Gerken-2 wrote:
>
> On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 2:23 PM, klia wrote:
>> I have this function that is suppose to extract Exif(exchangeable image
>> formate) from photos and direct the output to an .CSV file (comma
>> seperated
>> values)
>>
>> well the function syntax is like the following:
>>
On 13.03.09 06:36:04, Mario Daniel Carugno wrote:
> 2009/3/12 Mario Daniel Carugno :
> > 2009/3/12 Andreas Pakulat :
> >>> Thank you Andreas, i'll try it. Just in case, do you have some example
> >>> of that ?
> >>
> >> Its pretty easy (from the top of my head, so might not work right away, but
> >
On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 2:23 PM, klia wrote:
> I have this function that is suppose to extract Exif(exchangeable image
> formate) from photos and direct the output to an .CSV file (comma seperated
> values)
>
> well the function syntax is like the following:
>
> was...@home:~/Desktop/Project2/GUI$
Hello,
I've recently developed a data analysis program using PyQt. It's not a
huge program but it's not small either. I've noticed that, in Windows,
the memory usage at startup is ~80MB. I've removed all of the 'import
*'s that I previously had and do not load the Qt module at any location.
hey guys;
I have this function that is suppose to extract Exif(exchangeable image
formate) from photos and direct the output to an .CSV file (comma seperated
values)
well the function syntax is like the following:
was...@home:~/Desktop/Project2/GUI$ python myexif.py -q waseem1.JPG >
test.csv
i
On Freitag, 13. März 2009, Phil Thompson wrote:
> Which is why eliminating QStrings is an incompatible change and will
> require changes to your code.
Sorry, it seems I misread your roadmap - I thought this would be a
compatible change.
--
Wolfgang
_
On Fri, 13 Mar 2009 11:44:57 +0100, Wolfgang Rohdewald
wrote:
> On Freitag, 13. März 2009, Till Gerken wrote:
>
>> The QString() that I am passing as reference to the C++ class
>> KCoreConfigSkeleton exists as local variable in my Python class
>> derived from KCoreConfigSkeleton. Now any code tha
On Freitag, 13. März 2009, Till Gerken wrote:
> The QString() that I am passing as reference to the C++ class
> KCoreConfigSkeleton exists as local variable in my Python class
> derived from KCoreConfigSkeleton. Now any code that interacts with
> KCoreConfigSkeleton (C++ or Python) may change this
On Fri, 13 Mar 2009 11:15:41 +0100, Till Gerken
wrote:
> Hi,
>
> sorry for keeping replying to myself, but nobody else seems to show
> interest and I am trying to find the root cause of the error:
>
> The QString() that I am passing as reference to the C++ class
> KCoreConfigSkeleton exists as l
Hi,
sorry for keeping replying to myself, but nobody else seems to show
interest and I am trying to find the root cause of the error:
The QString() that I am passing as reference to the C++ class
KCoreConfigSkeleton exists as local variable in my Python class
derived from KCoreConfigSkeleton. Now
2009/3/12 Mario Daniel Carugno :
> 2009/3/12 Andreas Pakulat :
>>> Thank you Andreas, i'll try it. Just in case, do you have some example
>>> of that ?
>>
>> Its pretty easy (from the top of my head, so might not work right away, but
>> you should get the idea)
>>
>> class MyMainWindow(QMainWindow)
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