[Peter Hansen]
...
I suppose I shouldn't blame setdefault() itself for being poorly named,
No, you should blame Guido for that wink.
but it's confusing to me each time I see it in the above, because the
name doesn't emphasize that the value is being returned, and yet that
fact is arguably
On Tue, 12 Jul 2005 08:28:45 -0700, Devan L wrote:
How is this different from a nested function?
Well, this is a newsgroup posting written by you. Nested functions in
Python are callable objects that exist as attributes of other callable
objects, so the two are very different.
Alternatively,
thanks for the comments + help.
i think i got it working, although it's not pretty:
##
import os
import re
theRegEx = '.*abs:.*\.*.'
p = re.compile(theRegEx, re.IGNORECASE)
fileToSearch = 'compreg.dat'
print File to perform search-and-replace on: +
I would like to know how I could automatically fill a
(search) form on a web page and download the resulting
html page. More precisely I would like to make a
program that would automatically fill the Buscador
lista 40 (in spanish, sorry) form in the following
webpage:
I would like to know how I could automatically fill a
(search) form on a web page and download the resulting
html page.
http://wwwsearch.sourceforge.net/ClientForm/
Daniel
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http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Tue, 12 Jul 2005 08:25:50 -0700, rorley wrote:
OK, so my problem is I have a text file with all of these instances,
for example 5000 facts about animals. I need to go through the file
and put all of the facts (lines) that contain the word lion into a file
called lion.txt. If I come
Well, the string that gets passed is more or less a function
definition, which is then called with exec. I don't see why you'd need
to write a string out with the function definition and then call it.
You could just write the function.
As for the nested functions, I had been presuming that it was
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
hex() of an int appears to return lowercase hex digits, and hex() of a
long uppercase.
hex(75)
'0x4b'
hex(75*256**4)
'0x4BL'
By accident or design? Apart from the aesthetic value that lowercase hex
digits are ugly, should we care?
No, just use GMPY.
Thanks A LOT for your help!
__
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Peter Decker wrote:
On 7/12/05, Dark Cowherd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Most lists when i hit reply it puts the list address back in the To
address and some lists allow you to configure this.
But in this list reply sends the mail back as a private mail and there
seems to be no option to
In translating natural language to SQL, be sure you're not introducing
opportunities for SQL injection attacks. Code like
sql = 'SELECT %s FROM %s' % (this, that)
is considered dangerous, because a well-crafted value for that can be
used to, e.g., delete rows from your tables, run system
As Steven said this looks too much like home work
But what the heck I am also learning python. So I wrote a small
program. A very small program. I am fairly new to Python, I am stunned
each time to see how small programs like this can be.
Since I am also learning can somebody comment if anything
Not quite homework but a special project. Thanks for the advice. I'll
let you know if I run into anymore stumbling blocks. Reece
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Bengt,
Thanks for your informative reply, further comments interleaved.
Bengt Richter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Mon, 11 Jul 2005 02:37:21 +1000, Jeff Melvaine
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I note that I can write expressions like 1 100 and the result is
Thanks for the hints, I think I've figured it out. I've only been
using Python for 2 days so I really needed the direction. If you were
curious, this is not homework but an attempt to use the ConceptNet data
(its an MIT AI project) to make a website in a Wiki-like format that
would allow the
No, the replies from Grant's and Sybren's do answer my question. I
posted twice because my browser locked itself up, and I ended up typing
twice :(
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Hi,
I just got the pywin32 hello world COM server to install and I did manage
to use it from VB 6.0.
However, there are some glitches I do not comprehend:
1) at one point I got a python runtime error telling me the testcomserver
was not found - I got rid of that problem by deleteting the
Sorry: Cache, not Cash
Philippe C. Martin wrote:
Hi,
I just got the pywin32 hello world COM server to install and I did
manage to use it from VB 6.0.
However, there are some glitches I do not comprehend:
1) at one point I got a python runtime error telling me the
testcomserver was
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
hex() of an int appears to return lowercase hex digits, and hex() of a
long uppercase.
hex(75)
'0x4b'
hex(75*256**4)
'0x4BL'
By accident or design? Apart from the aesthetic value that lowercase hex
digits are ugly, should we care?
It would also be nice
Hello everyone
I have to write a verilog parser in python for a class project. I was
wondering if all you folks could advise me on choosing the right python
parser module. I am not comfortable with lex/yacc and as a result find
myself strugging with any module which use lex/yacc
Steven Bethard wrote:
py def ge(items):
... return (item for item in items if item)
...
Bengt Richter wrote:
dis.dis(ge)
2 0 LOAD_CONST 1 (code object generator
expression at 02EE4FA0, file stdin, line 2)
3 MAKE_FUNCTION0
On Wed, 13 Jul 2005 03:24:48 +1000, Jeff Melvaine [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Bengt,
Thanks for your informative reply, further comments interleaved.
Can't reply fully now, but just had the thought that maybe some ideas
from 8-queens solvers might be useful or interesting. There is an old thread
On Wed, Jul 13, 2005 at 03:24:48AM +1000, Jeff Melvaine wrote:
Bengt,
Thanks for your informative reply, further comments interleaved.
Bengt Richter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Mon, 11 Jul 2005 02:37:21 +1000, Jeff Melvaine
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 12 Jul 2005 11:52:41 -0400, Tim Peters [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[Peter Hansen]
...
I suppose I shouldn't blame setdefault() itself for being poorly named,
No, you should blame Guido for that wink.
but it's confusing to me each time I see it in the above, because the
name doesn't
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
And what should happen for vectors of size != 3 ? I don't think that a
general purpose vector class should allow it; a Vector3D subclass would
be more natural for this.
That's the 'magic' good idea I'm looking for. I think a unified Vector
class for all size
Recently I tried to slice every element of a list of strings. First I tried:
f = open(export.xls, r)
lines = f.readlines()
for line in lines:
line = line[1:-5]
line = line.split('\\t\')
This went without returning any errors, but nothing was sliced or
split. Next I tried:
for i in
How's this for an answer, it even uses yahoo in the example!
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/391929
Greg
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Alex Dempsey wrote:
Recently I tried to slice every element of a list of strings. First I tried:
f = open(export.xls, r)
lines = f.readlines()
for line in lines:
line = line[1:-5]
line = line.split('\\t\')
This, in fact, did do the operation you expected, but after creating the
new
edgrsprj [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
edgrsprj [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
PROPOSED EARTHQUAKE FORECASTING
COMPUTER PROGRAM DEVELOPMENT EFFORT
it jumps strait to the display routine and uses the entered command to
begin
Should be
Dark Cowherd wrote:
But one advise that he gives which I think is of great value and is
good practice is
Always catch any possible exception that might be thrown by a library
I'm using on the same line as it is thrown and deal with it
immediately.
That's fine advice, except for when it's
Hi guys,
Thank you all for your input! It was good to see so much convergence in the
approach! Again, I think that it speaks loudly for the concise way of doing
thins in Python... Anyway, I have typed in all of the solutions and have
gained a great understanding of how to do this in future.
tuxlover wrote:
I have to write a verilog parser in python for a class project. I was
wondering if all you folks could advise me on choosing the right python
parser module. I am not comfortable with lex/yacc and as a result find
myself strugging with any module which use lex/yacc
Hi,
I think I need an iterator over a string of characters pulling them out
one by one, like a usual iterator over a str does. At the same time the
thing should allow seeking and telling like a file-like object:
f = frankenstring(0123456789)
for c in f:
... print c
... if c == 2:
...
Peter Otten wrote:
Repton wrote:
I often find myself storing data in a list of tuples, and I want to ask
questions like what is the index of the first tuple whose 3rd element
is x,
iter(n for n, elem in enumerate(lst) if elem[3] == x).next()
or give me the first tuple whose 2nd element
Alex Dempsey wrote:
Recently I tried to slice every element of a list of strings. First I tried:
f = open(export.xls, r)
lines = f.readlines()
for line in lines:
line = line[1:-5]
line = line.split('\\t\')
This went without returning any errors, but nothing was sliced or
tuxlover enlightened us with:
No, the replies from Grant's and Sybren's do answer my question.
It would be a lot more polite to actually thank the people helping
you.
Sybren
--
The problem with the world is stupidity. Not saying there should be a
capital punishment for stupidity, but why don't
Devan L wrote:
Well, the string that gets passed is more or less a function
definition, which is then called with exec. I don't see why you'd need
to write a string out with the function definition and then call it.
You could just write the function.
As for the nested functions, I had been
Hi,
I am looking for documentation on the plot module. Does anyone know where I
can find this information? Thanks.
Shankar
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Christopher Subich wrote:
try:
f=file('file_here')
except IOError: #File doesn't exist
error_handle
error_flag = 1
if not error_flag:
do_setup_code
do_stuff_with(f)
which nests on weird, arbitrary error flags, and doesn't seem like good
programming to me.
Neither
Alex Dempsey wrote:
for line in lines:
line = line[1:-5]
line = line.split('\\t\')
This went without returning any errors, but nothing was sliced or split.
Next I tried:
for i in range(len(lines)):
lines[i] = lines[i][1:-5]
lines[i] = lines[i].split('\\t\')
This of
import math
class Vector:
def __init__(self, coordinates):
self.coordinates = coordinates
self.magnitude = sum([c**2 for c in coordinates])**0.5
self.direction = getangle(Vector([1]+[0 for i in
range(len(coordinates)-1)]))
def dotproduct(self, vector):
| I've been doing a lot of reading about static methods in Python,
and possibly getting over-confused by the minutia of the CPython
implementation, as well as by the misnomer. Conceptually, a 'static
method'
is a function attribute of a class that is to be used as a function and not
as a method
tuxlover wrote:
Hello everyone
I have to write a verilog parser in python for a class project. I was
wondering if all you folks could advise me on choosing the right python
parser module. I am not comfortable with lex/yacc and as a result find
myself strugging with any module which use
You missed Steven's point which is to quote the message to which you are
replying. Not everyone is reading this list in a conveniently threaded
form, so you need to provide some context for them to be able to follow
along.
Ah, sorry, I didn't quite get what he was referring to.
--
Thomas Lotze wrote:
Hi,
I think I need an iterator over a string of characters pulling them out
one by one, like a usual iterator over a str does. At the same time the
thing should allow seeking and telling like a file-like object:
Okay, first off, this is never going to be *fast* compared
On Wed, 13 Jul 2005 03:47:07 +0800, Ric Da Force [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi guys,
Thank you all for your input! It was good to see so much convergence in the
approach! Again, I think that it speaks loudly for the concise way of doing
thins in Python... Anyway, I have typed in all of the
Well... Thanks for that! The work is almost completed now! ;o)
Yannick
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Steven D'Aprano [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
hex() of an int appears to return lowercase hex digits, and hex() of a
long uppercase.
Already bug-reported and fixed for 2.5 (to use lowercase, I believe).
Christopher Subich [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
try:
f = file('file_here')
do_setup_code
do_stuff_with(f)
except IOError: # File doesn't exist
error_handle
It's also a good idea to keep try blocks as small as possible, so you
know exactly where the error happened. Imagine if
Ric Da Force wrote:
Hi guys,
Thank you all for your input! It was good to see so much convergence in the
approach!
Just for divergence, you can also do this with regular expressions:
import re
re.sub((.*),(.*), r\1 and\2, C1, C2, C3)
'C1, C2 and C3'
Alan.
--
On Tue, 12 Jul 2005 22:08:55 +0200, Thomas Lotze [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I think I need an iterator over a string of characters pulling them out
one by one, like a usual iterator over a str does. At the same time the
thing should allow seeking and telling like a file-like object:
f =
jay graves wrote:
see StringIO or cStringIO in the standard library.
Just as with files, iterating over them returns whole lines, which is
unfortunately not what I want.
--
Thomas
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On Tue, 12 Jul 2005 13:30:14 -0700, Robert Kern [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
tuxlover wrote:
Hello everyone
I have to write a verilog parser in python for a class project. I was
wondering if all you folks could advise me on choosing the right python
parser module. I am not comfortable with
Peter Otten wrote:
Repton wrote:
I often find myself storing data in a list of tuples, and I want to ask
questions like what is the index of the first tuple whose 3rd element
is x, or give me the first tuple whose 2nd element is y.
items = [(1, a, 10), (2, b, 20), (3, c, 30)]
class
Thomas Lotze wrote:
Hi,
I think I need an iterator over a string of characters pulling them out
one by one, like a usual iterator over a str does. At the same time the
thing should allow seeking and telling like a file-like object:
f = frankenstring(0123456789)
for c in f:
... print
Hank Oredson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
edgrsprj [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
edgrsprj [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
PROPOSED EARTHQUAKE FORECASTING
COMPUTER PROGRAM DEVELOPMENT EFFORT
What
I'm parsing a text file to extract word definitions. For example the
input text file contains the following content:
di.va.gate \'di_--v*-.ga_-t\ vb
pas.sim \'pas-*m\ adv : here and there : THROUGHOUT
I am trying to obtain words between two literal backslashes (\ .. \). I
am not able to match
I like to use Pythonwin as my desktop calculator. It's bothersome
to have to type in from __future__ import division into the
interactive window every time I open it. I've tried various ways to
attempt to get it to import new division at startup, but no luck. I
can get it to execute a file, but
On Tue, 12 Jul 2005 21:17:07 +1000, Steven D'Aprano [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
hex() of an int appears to return lowercase hex digits, and hex() of a
long uppercase.
hex(75)
'0x4b'
hex(75*256**4)
'0x4BL'
By accident or design? Apart from the aesthetic value that lowercase hex
digits are
Robert Kern wrote:
Not everyone is reading this list in a conveniently threaded
form
Why not? Just about every modern newsgroup reader and e-mail app has a
threaded view option.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Alex Dempsey wrote:
Recently I tried to slice every element of a list of strings. First I tried:
slice? Interesting terminology. Next problem you have, try posting an
example of your input, and your expected output.
E.g.
repr(input_string): 'foo\tbarre\tzot\tX\n'
repr(output_list): ['foo',
Stephen Toledo-Brown wrote:
Tony Meyer wrote:
Everyone complaining about Eclipse in this thread needs to go try
3.1. The interface is much much much more responsive.
The problem with Eclipse, IMO, is Java. I've tried 3.1 on a WinXP
machine
and, like just about any Java program, it's
Has anyone written a browser plug-in for Python, similar to the Java
plug-in that Sun has switched to for applets?
Bill
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Markus Wankus wrote:
My opinion - If you aren't willing to try something new, or have an
aversion to it in the first place, nothing we can say will change your
mind.
Correction...
*There are some people, who* if they aren't willing to try something
new, or have an aversion to it in the
edgrsprj [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hank Oredson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
edgrsprj [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
edgrsprj [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
PROPOSED
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm parsing a text file to extract word definitions. For example the
input text file contains the following content:
di.va.gate \'di_--v*-.ga_-t\ vb
pas.sim \'pas-*m\ adv : here and there : THROUGHOUT
I am trying to obtain words between two literal backslashes (\
[Steven D'Aprano]
hex() of an int appears to return lowercase hex digits, and hex() of a
long uppercase.
[Terry Reedy]
Already bug-reported and fixed for 2.5 (to use lowercase, I believe).
http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=5470atid=105470func=detailaid=1224347
Score another victory
This should give you an idea of how to go about it (needs python 2.3 or
newer):
import re
slashPattern = re.compile(r'\\(.*?)\\')
for i,line in enumerate(file(parseinput)):
print line, i+1,
match = slashPattern.search(line)
if match:
print matched:, match.group(1)
else:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I want to append one (huge) file to another (huge) file. The current
way I'm doing it is to do something like:
infile = open (infilename, 'r')
filestr = infile.read()
outfile = open(outfilename, 'a')
outfile.write(filestr)
I wonder if there is a more
Back in the day there was 'grail', which was a browser in its own right.
There may also have been a plug-in for other browsers, but I don't know
any real details about them.
Python itself has deprecated the 'restricted execution' environment it
had in previous versions, because ways to break out
Joseph Garvin wrote:
Robert Kern wrote:
Not everyone is reading this list in a conveniently threaded form
Why not? Just about every modern newsgroup reader and e-mail app has a
threaded view option.
My newsreader supports threading, but the first message I see in this
thread is from
Joseph Garvin wrote:
Robert Kern wrote:
Not everyone is reading this list in a conveniently threaded
form
Why not? Just about every modern newsgroup reader and e-mail app has a
threaded view option.
Good point. Allow me to modify my statement: not all newsreaders/email
apps thread
Hi,
I'm after a no-op command, so that i can redirect
logging commands in performance critical code.
Something like this:
def log(*args): print args
def null_log(*args): pass
if not DEBUG: log = null_log
is unacceptable because of the overhead of calling
functions in python.
log (about to
On Tue, 12 Jul 2005 17:17:46 -0600, Joseph Garvin wrote:
Robert Kern wrote:
Not everyone is reading this list in a conveniently threaded
form
Why not? Just about every modern newsgroup reader and e-mail app has a
threaded view option.
Technology as a substitute for manners is it?
I
[Michael Hudson]
I doubt anyone else is reading this by now, so I've trimmed quotes
fairly ruthlessly :)
Damn -- there goes my best hope at learning how large a message gmail
can handle before blowing up wink. OK, I'll cut even more.
[Michael]
Can't we use the stuff defined in Appendix F and
I just use Gnuplot for plot module.
Maybe you can visit
http://gnuplot-py.sourceforge.net/
or the mailing list
http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gnuplot-py-users
--- Shankar Iyer ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I am looking for documentation on the plot module.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I will transfer eventually use a database but is there any way for now
you could help me make the text files? Thank you so much. Reece
No. There is utterly no reason why you should create 5000 or 3 text
files. While you are waiting to get a clue about
Scott David Daniels wrote:
Now if you want to do it for a file, you could do:
for c in thefile.read():
The whole point of the exercise is that seeking on a file doesn't
influence iteration over its content. In the loop you suggest, I can
seek() on thefile to my heart's
Yes, thanks, back in the day I used Grail and played with rexec.
I notice that one of the Summer of Code projects was to recreate
rexec, but don't know if it was funded.
Presumably a Firefox plug-in for Python would restrict the execution
environment in some safe way, and provide some kind of UI
When: July 13, 7:30-9:00 PM
Where: Zope Corp offices
(513 Prince Edward Street; Fredericksburg, VA 22408)
Details at http://www.zope.org/Members/poster/fxbgzpug_announce_2
Hope to see you there!
--
Benji York
--
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Does anyone know of a good standalone implementation of multivariable
polynomials in python?
Thanks,
Chris
--
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On Wed, 13 Jul 2005 11:00:14 +1000, Simon Burton wrote:
Hi,
I'm after a no-op command, so that i can redirect
logging commands in performance critical code.
Something like this:
def log(*args): print args
def null_log(*args): pass
if not DEBUG: log = null_log
is unacceptable
Dark Cowherd [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
But one advise that he gives which I think is of great value and is
good practice is
Always catch any possible exception that might be thrown by a library
I'm using on the same line as it is thrown and deal with it
immediately.
Yuch. That sort of
Jive Dadson [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I like to use Pythonwin as my desktop calculator. It's bothersome
to have to type in from __future__ import division into the
interactive window every time I open it. I've tried various ways to
attempt to get it to import new division at startup, but no
(All previous quoting ruthlessly snipped.)
A question for Tim Peters, as I guess he'll have the most experience in
this sort of thing.
With all the cross-platform hassles due to the various C compilers not
implementing the IEEE standard completely or correctly, I wonder how much
work would be
On Wed, 13 Jul 2005 11:38:44 +1000, John Machin wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I will transfer eventually use a database but is there any way for now
you could help me make the text files? Thank you so much. Reece
No. There is utterly no reason why you should create 5000 or 3 text
On Wed, 13 Jul 2005 11:00:14 +1000, Simon Burton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I'm after a no-op command, so that i can redirect
logging commands in performance critical code.
Something like this:
def log(*args): print args
def null_log(*args): pass
if not DEBUG: log = null_log
is
Thomas Lotze wrote:
Neither does it to me. What about
try:
f=file('file_here')
except IOError: #File doesn't exist
error_handle
else:
do_setup_code
do_stuff_with(f)
(Not that I'd want to defend Joel's article, mind you...)
That works. I'm still not used to having
You know, this is the most concise example of feature-creep in a
specification that I've ever seen.
You're right. I'm afraid it's from too much work and too little sleep.
I'll try to be more precise next time.
Thanks to everyone for their help.
Chris
--
On Wed, 13 Jul 2005 03:49:16 +0200, Thomas Lotze [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Scott David Daniels wrote:
Now if you want to do it for a file, you could do:
for c in thefile.read():
The whole point of the exercise is that seeking on a file doesn't
influence iteration over its
On Monday 11 July 2005 08:53 pm, Bengt Richter wrote:
On Tue, 12 Jul 2005 10:12:33 +1000, John Machin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Bengt Richter wrote:
for x in (x for x in seq if x is not None):
Byzantine ...
Perhaps not if you wanted to enumerate the selected elements, as in
for i,
Jorey Bump wrote:
Bruno Desthuilliers [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
it's.
+1 for this becoming the official name of Python 3000. ;)
Monty Python's Flying Circus used to begin with It's... I had read at one
time that It's was one of the original names proposed for the
troupe/show,
Content violation found in email message.
From: python-list@python.org
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
File(s): message.zip
Matching filename: message.zip
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Reinhold Birkenfeld wrote:
Jacob Page wrote:
I'd like to
run my code through actual set and frozenset unit tests. Does any such
code exist? Is it in pure Python? If so, where can it be obtained?
Look at /usr/lib/python2.x/test/ (on unix platforms).
Thanks for pointing that to me. For
On Tue, 12 Jul 2005 23:07:07 -0500, Terry Hancock [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Monday 11 July 2005 08:53 pm, Bengt Richter wrote:
On Tue, 12 Jul 2005 10:12:33 +1000, John Machin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Bengt Richter wrote:
for x in (x for x in seq if x is not None):
Byzantine ...
Bugs item #1235266, was opened at 2005-07-09 18:24
Message generated for change (Comment added) made by birkenfeld
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Bugs item #1229429, was opened at 2005-06-29 03:18
Message generated for change (Comment added) made by mwh
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Bugs item #1229429, was opened at 2005-06-28 21:18
Message generated for change (Comment added) made by rhettinger
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Bugs item #1229429, was opened at 2005-06-29 03:18
Message generated for change (Settings changed) made by mwh
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Bugs item #1232768, was opened at 2005-07-05 16:11
Message generated for change (Comment added) made by pterk
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