=
PyPy Leysin Winter Sprint (16-22nd January 2011)
=
The next PyPy sprint will be in Leysin, Switzerland, for the
seventh time. This is a fully public
On Wed, 08 Dec 2010 20:16:57 -0800, John Nagle wrote:
Here's an example where this issue produces invalid results in
Python.
NaN = float(nan)
arr = [1.0, 4.0, 3.0, 2.0, 5.0, NaN, 6.0, 3.0, NaN, 0.0, 1.0, 4.0,
3.0, 2.0, 5.0, NaN, 6.0, 3.0, NaN, 0.0]
sorted(arr)
[0.0, 0.0,
On 12/9/2010 2:58 AM, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Wed, 08 Dec 2010 20:16:57 -0800, John Nagle wrote:
Here's an example where this issue produces invalid results in
Python.
NaN = float(nan)
arr = [1.0, 4.0, 3.0, 2.0, 5.0, NaN, 6.0, 3.0, NaN, 0.0, 1.0, 4.0,
3.0, 2.0, 5.0, NaN,
On 12/9/2010 1:10 AM, rusi wrote:
I am unable to get trace to not trace system modules.
Try it with 3.2b1, just released. Multiple bugs were fixed in trace.
Some fixes might also be in recent 2.7.1 and 3.1.3. Not sure.
--
Terry Jan Reedy
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi Philip,
I thought that pypi works like cpan for Perl, but now I understand.
Thank you for clarifications.
--
Octavian
---
From: Philip Semanchuk phi...@semanchuk.com
On Dec 8, 2010, at 5:09 AM, Octavian Rasnita wrote:
Hi Steve,
I may put some stupid questions because I am very
In article mailman.185.1291395907.2649.python-l...@python.org,
craf p...@vtr.net wrote:
Hi.
I use Python 3.1 and Tkinter.ttk 8.5 on Ubuntu 9.10.
CODE:
module:FMain.py
from tkinter import ttk
from FSecondWindow import *
class
Hi,
I've got a python script that calls a function many times with various
arguments and returns a result. What I'm trying to do is run this
function each on different processors and compile the result at the
end based on the function result. The script looks something like
this:
import time
Astan Chee wrote:
Hi,
I've got a python script that calls a function many times with various
arguments and returns a result. What I'm trying to do is run this
function each on different processors and compile the result at the
end based on the function result. The script looks something like
hi,
I have created a python app in eclipse pydev .The app is structured as
below..
mypackage
|__ __init__.py
|__ driver.py
|__ helper.py
|__ utils.py
The driver.py has the main program.I have added if
__name__==__main__ block in the
driver.py and pydev's run
have u tried using setuptools and distutils
they are used for python package distributions
On Thu, Dec 9, 2010 at 5:02 PM, mark jason markjaso...@gmail.com wrote:
hi,
I have created a python app in eclipse pydev .The app is structured as
below..
mypackage
|__ __init__.py
|__
- Mensaje reenviado
De: Eric Brunel eric.bru...@pragmadev.nospam.com
Para: python-list@python.org
Asunto: Re: Using a window style in a Toplevel window
Fecha: Thu, 09 Dec 2010 10:00:39 +0100
Grupos de noticias: comp.lang.python
In article
On Dec 9, 1:39 pm, Terry Reedy tjre...@udel.edu wrote:
On 12/9/2010 1:10 AM, rusi wrote:
I am unable to get trace to not trace system modules.
Try it with 3.2b1, just released. Multiple bugs were fixed in trace.
Some fixes might also be in recent 2.7.1 and 3.1.3. Not sure.
--
Terry Jan
Eric,
Besides style support, what are the advantages of ttk.Frame vs.
Tkinter.Frame?
Thanks,
Malcolm
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
1. Pick a web framework, I'd suggest looking at:
web2py: http://web2py.com - probably the easiest to install (no
configuration needed) and learn. Suitable for both small and big
projects. No worries when upgrading to a newer version as backward
compatibility is an explicit design goal.
--
John Nagle na...@animats.com writes:
NaN = float(nan)
arr = [1.0, 4.0, 3.0, 2.0, 5.0, NaN, 6.0, 3.0, NaN, 0.0, 1.0, 4.0,
3.0, 2.0, 5.0, NaN, 6.0, 3.0, NaN, 0.0]
sorted(arr)
[0.0, 0.0, 1.0, 1.0, 2.0, 2.0, 3.0, 3.0, 3.0, 3.0, 4.0, 5.0, nan, 5.0, 6.0,
nan, 4.0, nan, 6.0, nan]
The sorted
Thanks but I'm having trouble with that module too. Currently what I
have is something like this:
import sys
import os
import multiprocessing
import time
def functionTester(num):
return ((num+2)/(num-2))**2
num_args = [61,62,33,7,12,16,19,35,36,37,38,55,56,57,63]
max_result = 0
start =
mark jason wrote:
hi,
I have created a python app in eclipse pydev .The app is structured as
below..
mypackage
|__ __init__.py
|__ driver.py
|__ helper.py
|__ utils.py
The driver.py has the main program.I have added if
__name__==__main__ block in the
On 01/-10/-28163 02:59 PM, Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
On Wed, 8 Dec 2010 14:44:30 +, Rob Randallrob.randa...@gmail.com
declaimed the following in gmane.comp.python.general:
I am trying to understand how much memory is available to a 64 bit python
process running under Windows XP 64 bit.
Thanks for your response! (And sorry about the syntax error, I forgot
to test my code after cleaning up some debug statements before
posting, the else should have been elif indeed.)
It's very interesing, how Python works internally. According to a
thread on the Python mailing list in 2002, it
On 12/07/2010 04:35 PM, Ale Ghelfi wrote:
(i'm under Ubuntu 10.10 amd64 and python 2.6 and kinterbasdb 3.2 )
I try to connect my database of firebird 2.5 by kinterbasdb.
But python return this error :
You are not using the current kinterbasdb version.
See:
On Dec 8, 9:05 pm, Terry Reedy tjre...@udel.edu wrote:
On 12/8/2010 7:11 PM, Ned Deily wrote:
In articleidosir$45...@dough.gmane.org, Terry
Reedytjre...@udel.edu wrote:
On 12/8/2010 2:42 PM, Dan wrote:
I have a simple type derived from bytes...
class atom(bytes): pass
...
Astan Chee wrote:
Thanks but I'm having trouble with that module too. Currently what I
have is something like this:
import sys
import os
import multiprocessing
import time
def functionTester(num):
return ((num+2)/(num-2))**2
num_args =
On Dec 9, 2:29 am, Edward Peschko horo...@gmail.com wrote:
Any ideas would be great on this, including pitfalls that people see
in implementing it.
http://docs.python.org/library/string.html#template-strings
regards
Steve
Steve,
Thanks for the tip, I did look at templates and
On 12/9/2010 9:19 AM, Dan wrote:
I tested the 4 line change anyway...removing it from 3.2 had no
detrimental effect, adding it to 3.1 had no effect. It must be
something else.
Then there must have been a change in the bytes object, which is deeper
than I want to go. 3.2 has a LOT of little
On 12/9/2010 7:12 AM, rusi wrote:
On Dec 9, 1:39 pm, Terry Reedytjre...@udel.edu wrote:
On 12/9/2010 1:10 AM, rusi wrote:
I am unable to get trace to not trace system modules.
Try it with 3.2b1, just released. Multiple bugs were fixed in trace.
Some fixes might also be in recent 2.7.1 and
Rob Randall rob.randa...@gmail.com wrote:
I am trying to understand how much memory is available to a 64 bit python
process running under Windows XP 64 bit.
When I run tests just creating a series of large dictionaries containing
string keys and float values I do not seem to be able to grow
On Wed, 8 Dec 2010 14:44:30 +
Rob Randall rob.randa...@gmail.com wrote:
I am trying to understand how much memory is available to a 64 bit python
process running under Windows XP 64 bit.
When I run tests just creating a series of large dictionaries containing
string keys and float values
In article mailman.346.1291897180.2649.python-l...@python.org,
pyt...@bdurham.com wrote:
Eric,
Besides style support, what are the advantages of ttk.Frame vs.
Tkinter.Frame?
I'd say none. They are both just containers for other widgets, support
the same layout managers, and so on. For me,
On Thu, Dec 9, 2010 at 5:03 AM, Astan Chee astan.c...@gmail.com wrote:
Thanks but I'm having trouble with that module too. Currently what I
have is something like this:
import sys
import os
import multiprocessing
import time
def functionTester(num):
return ((num+2)/(num-2))**2
But the C++ program using up memory does not slow up.
It has gone to 40GB without much trouble.
Does anyone have a 64 bit python application that uses more the 2GB?
On 9 December 2010 16:54, Antoine Pitrou solip...@pitrou.net wrote:
On Wed, 8 Dec 2010 14:44:30 +
Rob Randall
Basically the process runs at around 1% and it never seems to grow in size
again.
When running the C++ with python app the process slows when a new 'page' is
required but then goes back to 'full' speed. It does this until basically
all the virtual memory is used.
I have had memory exceptions when
On 12/8/2010 11:40 PM, Ian Kelly wrote:
Since a process need not have all its pages in physical memory
simultaneously, there is no reason to suppose that a single process
could not consume the entirety of the available virtual memory (minus
what is used by the operating system) on a 64-bit
On Thursday, December 9, 2010, Rob Randall rob.randa...@gmail.com wrote:
But the C++ program using up memory does not slow up.
It has gone to 40GB without much trouble.
Your C++ program probably doesn't have a garbage collector traversing
the entire allocated memory looking for reference
On 12/9/2010 12:36 AM, Terry Reedy wrote:
On 12/9/2010 2:58 AM, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Wed, 08 Dec 2010 20:16:57 -0800, John Nagle wrote:
I believe that is that exactly one of ,=. are true.
Not for NaNs.
NaN = float('nan')
NaN == NaN
False
NaN NaN
False
NaN NaN
False
That's
On Dec 9, 9:03 pm, Terry Reedy tjre...@udel.edu wrote:
On 12/9/2010 7:12 AM, rusi wrote:
On Dec 9, 1:39 pm, Terry Reedytjre...@udel.edu wrote:
On 12/9/2010 1:10 AM, rusi wrote:
I am unable to get trace to not trace system modules.
Try it with 3.2b1, just released. Multiple bugs were
On Dec 9, 10:37 pm, rusi rustompm...@gmail.com wrote:
On Dec 9, 9:03 pm, Terry Reedy tjre...@udel.edu wrote:
On 12/9/2010 7:12 AM, rusi wrote:
On Dec 9, 1:39 pm, Terry Reedytjre...@udel.edu wrote:
On 12/9/2010 1:10 AM, rusi wrote:
I am unable to get trace to not trace system
* 2010-12-06 00:14 (-0800), Paul Rubin wrote:
You know, I've heard the story from language designers several times
over, that they tried putting resumable exceptions into their
languages and it turned out to be a big mess, so they went to
termination exceptions that fixed the issue. Are there
I will give it a try with the garbage collector disabled.
On 9 December 2010 17:29, Benjamin Kaplan benjamin.kap...@case.edu wrote:
On Thursday, December 9, 2010, Rob Randall rob.randa...@gmail.com wrote:
But the C++ program using up memory does not slow up.
It has gone to 40GB without much
On Thu, 9 Dec 2010 17:18:58 +
Rob Randall rob.randa...@gmail.com wrote:
Basically the process runs at around 1% and it never seems to grow in size
again.
When running the C++ with python app the process slows when a new 'page' is
required but then goes back to 'full' speed. It does this
I am attempting to automate the building of binding for a 3rd party library.
The functions I'm wrapping all return an integer of whether they
failed and output are passed as pointers.
There can be multiple return values.
So the code that I generate has a PyObject* called python__return_val
that I
If you have any need of a portable LAMP stack, I just finished writing
some How-To's for getting Python, VirtualEnv and WSGI frameworks running
with XAMPP:
How-To: Add VirtualEnv and Pylons (WSGI framework) to XAMPP
http://www.apachefriends.org/f/viewtopic.php?f=17t=42981
How-To: Add VirtualEnv
a bit closer here, but I'm not sure if they are
workable (or usable) with 2.5... which is where I need to work.
Ed
One of the solutions from here might work for you:
http://wiki.python.org/moin/Templating
Ok, cool. A couple of followups - I'd be interested in knowing which
of the
Hi All,
When i try to set a locale manually, i get this error.
import locale
locale.setlocale(locale.LC_ALL, 'es_cl.iso88591')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File stdin, line 1, in module
File /usr/local/lib/python2.7/locale.py, line 531, in setlocale
return _setlocale(category,
On 12/8/2010 10:42 PM, Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
On Wed, 8 Dec 2010 14:44:30 +, Rob Randallrob.randa...@gmail.com
declaimed the following in gmane.comp.python.general:
I am trying to understand how much memory is available to a 64 bit python
process running under Windows XP 64 bit.
When I
On Thu, 09 Dec 2010 12:21:45 +, Mark Wooding wrote:
John Nagle na...@animats.com writes:
sort has failed because it assumes that a b and b c implies a
c. But that's not a valid assumption here.
It's not good to break trichotomy.
You're confused. The property
a b and b
On Thu, 09 Dec 2010 09:34:19 -0800, John Nagle wrote:
(The best coverage of this whole topic was the Apple Numerics Manual
for the original Mac. Apple hired the floating point expert from
Berkeley to get this right. Then Apple went from the M68xxx series to
the IBM PowerPC, and 80-bit
I am soliciting feedback regarding the API of my statistics module:
http://code.google.com/p/pycalcstats/
Specifically the following couple of issues:
(1) Multivariate statistics such as covariance have two obvious APIs:
A pass the X and Y values as two separate iterable arguments, e.g.:
On 09/12/2010 20:23, Eric Frederich wrote:
I am attempting to automate the building of binding for a 3rd party library.
The functions I'm wrapping all return an integer of whether they
failed and output are passed as pointers.
There can be multiple return values.
So the code that I generate has
2010/12/9 Anurag Chourasia anurag.choura...@gmail.com:
Hi All,
When i try to set a locale manually, i get this error.
import locale
locale.setlocale(locale.LC_ALL, 'es_cl.iso88591')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File stdin, line 1, in module
File /usr/local/lib/python2.7/locale.py,
Some changes are being proposed to how logging works in default
configurations.
Briefly - when a logging event occurs which needs to be output to some
log, the behaviour of the logging package when no explicit logging
configuration is provided will change, most likely to log those events
to
Vinay Sajip wrote:
Some changes are being proposed to how logging works in default
configurations.
I like the changes proposed.
Question about the handler of last resort: is there only one of them,
or will each library have its own so it can decide what the minimum
severity should be for
On 12/09/2010 05:44 PM, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
(1) Multivariate statistics such as covariance have two obvious APIs:
A pass the X and Y values as two separate iterable arguments, e.g.:
cov([1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6])
B pass the X and Y values as a single iterable of tuples, e.g.:
If you are implementing a COM object using win32com, then Python will
never be unloaded from the host process, which works in your favour.
Just have the COM object use a thread and a queue for this processing.
The 'report' method would just stick the params and filenames in the
queue and
Hi.
Is there a python library/module to handle both the server and client
sides of dns protocol?
I have googled for it but I only found client side ones (at least from
the superficial readings I did).
Thanks.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Dec 10, 12:48 am, Ethan Furman et...@stoneleaf.us wrote:
I like the changes proposed.
Question about the handler of last resort: is there only one of them,
or will each library have its own so it can decide what the minimum
severity should be for itself?
Libraries decide their
On Dec 9, 8:15 pm, Paulo da Silva psdasilva.nos...@netcabonospam.pt
wrote:
Hi.
Is there a python library/module to handle both the server and client
sides of dns protocol?
I have googled for it but I only found client side ones (at least from
the superficial readings I did).
Thanks.
In trying to get from 2.x to 3 Terry suggested I use 2.7 with
deprecation warnings
Heres the (first) set
DeprecationWarning: Overriding __eq__ blocks inheritance of __hash__
in 3.x
DeprecationWarning: callable() not supported in 3.x; use isinstance(x,
collections.Callable)
Is there one
On Dec 4, 1:38 am, Xah Lee xah...@gmail.com wrote:
On Dec 3, 8:20 pm, duckblue cdep...@gmail.com wrote:
why is xah lee posting this information?
sites with more external links pointing to them are given a higher
ranking by search engines such as google. as a result they appear
On Dec 9, 7:32 pm, small Pox smallpox...@gmail.com wrote:
On Dec 4, 1:38 am, Xah Lee xah...@gmail.com wrote:
On Dec 3, 8:20 pm, duckblue cdep...@gmail.com wrote:
why is xah lee posting this information?
sites with more external links pointing to them are given a higher
On Dec 9, 7:32 pm, small Pox smallpox...@gmail.com wrote:
On Dec 4, 1:38 am, Xah Lee xah...@gmail.com wrote:
On Dec 3, 8:20 pm, duckblue cdep...@gmail.com wrote:
why is xah lee posting this information?
sites with more external links pointing to them are given a higher
On 12/9/2010 10:15 PM, rusi wrote:
In trying to get from 2.x to 3 Terry suggested I use 2.7 with
deprecation warnings
Heres the (first) set
DeprecationWarning: Overriding __eq__ blocks inheritance of __hash__
in 3.x
DeprecationWarning: callable() not supported in 3.x; use isinstance(x,
hi
I was trying out some file operations and was trying to open a non
existing file as below
def do_work(filename):
try:
f = open(filename,r);
print 'opened'
except IOError, e:
print 'failed',e.message
finally:
f.close()
print 'closed'
if
Em 10-12-2010 02:59, Jean-Paul Calderone escreveu:
On Dec 9, 8:15 pm, Paulo da Silva psdasilva.nos...@netcabonospam.pt
wrote:
Hi.
Is there a python library/module to handle both the server and client
sides of dns protocol?
I have googled for it but I only found client side ones (at least
On Thu, 09 Dec 2010 22:16:17 -0800, mark jason wrote:
hi
I was trying out some file operations and was trying to open a non
existing file as below
def do_work(filename):
try:
f = open(filename,r);
print 'opened'
except IOError, e:
print
On Thu, 09 Dec 2010 18:48:10 -0600, Tim Chase wrote:
On 12/09/2010 05:44 PM, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
(1) Multivariate statistics such as covariance have two obvious APIs:
A pass the X and Y values as two separate iterable arguments,
e.g.:
cov([1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6])
B
New submission from Hirokazu Yamamoto ocean-c...@m2.ccsnet.ne.jp:
I noticed st_dev is not set yet. Attached patch
fill this value, but sometimes it becomes negative
value because dwVolumeSerialNumber is large enough.
Maybe st_dev should be declared as unsigned int.
# I think this is not new
Anders Chrigström ander...@users.sourceforge.net added the comment:
This is indeed a duplicate of #1571184
--
resolution: - duplicate
status: open - closed
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue1571170
Hirokazu Yamamoto ocean-c...@m2.ccsnet.ne.jp added the comment:
This is updated version. Can you test this?
(I only fixed leak, deferred other fixes to future)
--
Added file:
http://bugs.python.org/file19985/py3k_fix_leak_around_GetFinalPathNameByHandle_v2.patch
Changes by Hirokazu Yamamoto ocean-c...@m2.ccsnet.ne.jp:
Removed file:
http://bugs.python.org/file18979/py3k_fix_leak_around_GetFinalPathNameByHandle.patch
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue9927
Hirokazu Yamamoto ocean-c...@m2.ccsnet.ne.jp added the comment:
1. Decoding the output of wcsftime(). Python expects mbcs (which
I believe is an UTF16-like wide char encoding) while Windows
apparently puts cp932 there in your locale. I don't have expertise
to address this issue.
No, mbcs
New submission from anatoly techtonik techto...@gmail.com:
http://docs.python.org/library/queue.html
--
assignee: d...@python
components: Documentation
messages: 123677
nosy: d...@python, techtonik
priority: normal
severity: normal
status: open
title: Link to source code is broken
Georg Brandl ge...@python.org added the comment:
Fixed in r87143.
--
nosy: +georg.brandl
resolution: - fixed
status: open - closed
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue10658
___
adrian adr...@lisas.de added the comment:
Here is a patch that I had to include in my Linux PowerPC build of 2.7 and 3.2
--- a/Python/ceval.c
+++ b/Python/ceval.c
@@ -31,10 +31,12 @@
typedef unsigned long long uint64;
-#if defined(__ppc__) /* - Don't know if this is the correct symbol;
New submission from anatoly techtonik techto...@gmail.com:
When a new revision is committed to documentation, it will be nice to have hook
scripts that start documentation build process on development server.
Another hook script may also analyze commit message, extract ticket number,
branch
Ray.Allen ysj@gmail.com added the comment:
Here is the updated patch, which fixed:
1. remove get() method of gdbm since issue6045 has already add it.
2. method keys() and items() of dbm object return set instead of list. Since
pep3119 said keys() and items() should return collections.Set
Ray.Allen ysj@gmail.com added the comment:
eli, you should also add New in version 3.3 to the doc of the tow new list
methods.
--
nosy: +ysj.ray
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue10516
Georg Brandl ge...@python.org added the comment:
The development docs are rebuilt twice a day; that should be enough.
As for tracker integration with version control, that is already an issue for
the meta tracker at http://psf.upfronthosting.co.za/roundup/meta/issue20 (which
you should know,
New submission from Hervé Cauwelier he...@itaapy.com:
Hexadecimals can be formatted to lower and uppercase:
'{0:x}'.format(123)
'7b'
'{0:X}'.format(123)
'7B'
I would like the same thing for strings:
'{0.lastname:u} {0.firstname}'.format(user)
'DOE John'
I first thought using S for
R. David Murray rdmur...@bitdance.com added the comment:
The format support is written specifically so that it is extensible. You can
write your own string subclass that extends the formatting mini-language with
whatever features you find useful. There are too many variations on what might
Changes by Éric Araujo mer...@netwok.org:
--
nosy: +eric.araujo
versions: +Python 3.3 -Python 3.2
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue6422
___
Eric Smith e...@trueblade.com added the comment:
I agree with David.
Here's an example of using such a subclass. It extends the format string for
strings to begin with an optional 'u' or 'l':
---
class U(str):
def __format__(self, fmt):
if fmt[0] == 'u':
New submission from Jean-Paul Calderone inva...@example.invalid:
This is somewhat unfortunate behavior:
from xml.etree.ElementTree import QName
QName('foo')
xml.etree.ElementTree.QName instance at 0x10049c830
It becomes even more apparent when encountered in a situation like this:
print
New submission from Christian Oudard christian.oud...@gmail.com:
Found the misspelling seperate in two places in the concurrent.futures
library module.
Patch attached, correcting the spelling to separate.
--
files: seperate.patch
keywords: patch
messages: 123688
nosy: Christian.Oudard
Georg Brandl ge...@python.org added the comment:
Fixed in r87146.
--
nosy: +georg.brandl
resolution: - fixed
status: open - closed
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue10662
___
Georg Brandl ge...@python.org added the comment:
Added in r87147.
--
nosy: +georg.brandl
resolution: - fixed
status: open - closed
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue10661
___
Eric Smith e...@trueblade.com added the comment:
This should be either:
'QName %r' % (self.text,)
or:
'QName {!r}'.format(self.text)
If self.text is a tuple (which granted is its own error), then the version
checked in will raise an exception.
--
nosy: +eric.smith
resolution: fixed -
Georg Brandl ge...@python.org added the comment:
Granted. Since the rest of the file uses old-style format, I've kept to it,
r87148.
--
status: open - closed
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue10661
Alexander Belopolsky belopol...@users.sourceforge.net added the comment:
With Georg's approval, I am reopening this issue until a decision is made on
whether {str,bytes,bytearray}.{transform,untransform} methods should go into
3.2.
I am adding Guido to nosy because the decision may turn on
R. David Murray rdmur...@bitdance.com added the comment:
OK, here is what I hope is a comprehensive set of CLI tests, and fixes for the
bugs revealed thereby. Except for the new test added by Georg after the
original patch here was committed, all of the tests either pass using the old
New submission from Antoine Pitrou pit...@free.fr:
The configure.in sets a default OPT of -O if none was set by the user, but I
think that's wrong. The user could simply pass optimization flags as part of
CFLAGS instead, and then the contents of OPT could conflict with that of CFLAGS
(which
R. David Murray rdmur...@bitdance.com added the comment:
for what it is worth, I am +1 on having completion and history file work by
default. The sqlite3 command line does this, for example. I think it is what
unix user expect nowadays, and I think it is reasonable.
Looking at my home
Éric Araujo mer...@netwok.org added the comment:
Okay, that’s one question answered. Still to solve: How to bind the right key?
(“But perhaps tab isn’t the right key to bind. I think inputrc could set it to
something different, perhaps shell rc files too. Is there an API to get this
setting,
Antoine Pitrou pit...@free.fr added the comment:
I think TAB is the key expected by most people, so let's make it the default.
As for the location, site.py is an adequate one IMO.
--
components: +Library (Lib) -Interpreter Core
versions: +Python 3.2
New submission from Fred L. Drake, Jr. fdr...@acm.org:
The xml.sax.expatreader module pre-dates prefix reporting from Expat, and
should be modified to support the feature_namespace_prefixes feature instead of
complaining that Expat doesn't support prefixes.
--
assignee: fdrake
New submission from Alexander Belopolsky belopol...@users.sourceforge.net:
unicodedata module documentation has not been updated to reflect transition to
6.0. Attached patch fixes the version and unicode.org links and starts making
the documentation rely less on the unicode.org pages for
Changes by Alexander Belopolsky belopol...@users.sourceforge.net:
--
components: +Unicode
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue10665
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New submission from Ned Deily n...@acm.org:
32-bit-only OS X installers build and link to a copy of the GNU readline
library for use by the readline module in the standard library. But, the newer
64-bit/32-bit installer variants for 2.7 and 3.2 link to the OS X supplied BSD
editline
Ned Deily n...@acm.org added the comment:
Keep in bind that there the Python readline module may be linked to either GNU
readline or the BSD editline (libedit) library and they have different command
strings. Note the warning here:
http://docs.python.org/dev/py3k/library/readline.html
Ned Deily n...@acm.org added the comment:
Keep in mind that the Python readline module may be linked to either GNU
readline or the BSD editline (libedit) library and they have different command
strings. Note the warning here:
http://docs.python.org/dev/py3k/library/readline.html
Here's a
Changes by Ned Deily n...@acm.org:
--
Removed message: http://bugs.python.org/msg123702
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue5845
___
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