On Thursday, July 16, 2015 at 2:59:02 PM UTC-4, Skip Montanaro wrote:
On Thu, Jul 16, 2015 at 1:36 PM, yoursurrogate...@gmail.com
yoursurrogate...@gmail.com wrote:
If I understand correctly, lookup would not be a constant, yes?
On the contrary, that's what you desire, nearly constant time
New submission from Marcin Szewczyk:
Using benchmark from the section
https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0492/#async-await raises:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File ./bench.py, line 28, in module
timeit(abinary, 19, 30)
File ./bench.py, line 23, in timeit
list(gen(depth))
Hi Alex,
On 17.07.2015 00:58, Alex wrote:
Do you have Python 2.7 64bit versions available for Solaris (10/11)
x86/SPARC, AIX, and HP-UX IA/RISC? I've had the displeasure of having to
install 64bit Python on Solaris and AIX and it's an experience I would not
recommend even though OpenCSW and
On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 9:43 PM, Antoon Pardon
antoon.par...@rece.vub.ac.be wrote:
On 07/17/2015 01:05 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 8:48 PM, Antoon Pardon
antoon.par...@rece.vub.ac.be wrote:
Just wondering, are traceback records of generators available? They are
if an
On 07/17/2015 01:05 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 8:48 PM, Antoon Pardon
antoon.par...@rece.vub.ac.be wrote:
Just wondering, are traceback records of generators available? They are
if an exception is raised in the generator itself, but what if an exception
is raised in the
On 07/17/2015 01:49 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 9:43 PM, Antoon Pardon
antoon.par...@rece.vub.ac.be wrote:
Sure, but in this case, the generator is still active. The Runtime
would be able to jump to and somehow activates it's stack record
for the next value. So why
They don't offer any free versions for those systems and their licenses are
quite expensive.
On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 2:26 AM, Laura Creighton l...@openend.se wrote:
I think Activestate makes a Python 2.y for Solaris.
http://www.activestate.com/activepython
I've never used it.
Laura
In a
Ezio Melotti added the comment:
writing tests for the CLI are a pain too
It shouldn't be particularly difficult to do it using
script_helper.assert_python_{ok|failure}(), even though you could also check
the argument /parsing/ separately without having to launch a subprocess.
--
Guido van Rossum added the comment:
You can list me as the expert for typing.py, since I wrote it. :-) (However,
until mid August I have limited availability since I'm on vacation.)
This looks indeed like a test order dependency. The three failures are all
basic failures where an empty set,
R. David Murray added the comment:
Yes, that's pretty much why things are in the state they are in ;)
Still, opening individual issues for help problems with individual modules is
the way to go, as you did (thank you).
--
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R. David Murray added the comment:
Well, not exactly. While the title was inaccurate, the real problem was the
management of the subprocess, not what mode the terminal was in.
--
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On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 10:54 PM, Antoon Pardon
antoon.par...@rece.vub.ac.be wrote:
On 07/17/2015 01:49 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 9:43 PM, Antoon Pardon
antoon.par...@rece.vub.ac.be wrote:
Sure, but in this case, the generator is still active. The Runtime
would be
Serhiy Storchaka added the comment:
not_working.zip has 85972 extra null bytes at the end. This doesn't look as
common ZIP file, and adding support such files can be considered as new feature
(if it is worth to do at all). How did you get this file Yasar?
--
type: behavior -
In a message of Fri, 17 Jul 2015 09:18:46 +0530, rahul tiwari writes:
I want to import PIL package but every time this is showing error no PIL
module find .
plz suggest me how i can fix this problem.
Get Pillow.
Instructions on how to install it here:
I think Activestate makes a Python 2.y for Solaris.
http://www.activestate.com/activepython
I've never used it.
Laura
In a message of Thu, 16 Jul 2015 18:58:37 -0400, Alex writes:
Do you have Python 2.7 64bit versions available for Solaris (10/11)
x86/SPARC, AIX, and HP-UX IA/RISC? I've had the
On Fri, 17 Jul 2015 01:01 pm, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 12:44 PM, Steven D'Aprano st...@pearwood.info
wrote:
My take from all this is that overall, Python 3 take-up is probably
around 10% of all Python users...
Really? That low? Wow.
Well, that's based on a guess that
New submission from Justin Huang:
From the example in here:
https://docs.python.org/2/extending/embedding.html#pure-embedding
when directly using the example (compiling and trying with external file etc.)
it doesn't work right away. Instead an extra line:
PySys_SetArgv(argc, argv);
Roundup Robot added the comment:
New changeset 41d55ac50dea by Robert Collins in branch '3.4':
Issue #21750: mock_open.read_data can now be read from each instance, as it
https://hg.python.org/cpython/rev/41d55ac50dea
New changeset 0da764c58322 by Robert Collins in branch '3.5':
Issue #21750:
On 07/16/2015 08:58 PM, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
Nice of you to illustrate how being pedantic about something, can
make a response useless with regard to the intended original question.
Just because your intention in giving that code was X, doesn't mean that
others cannot use that code to also
On Fri, 17 Jul 2015 02:15 pm, Rick Johnson wrote:
On Thursday, July 16, 2015 at 9:44:56 PM UTC-5, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
[...] My take from all this is that overall, Python 3
take-up is probably around 10% of all Python users,
All that rambling just to agree with me? My educated guess
is
New submission from swanson:
https://docs.python.org/3/reference/expressions.html
in
6.2.9. Yield expressions
end of 1st paragraph:
Using a yield expression in a function’s body causes that function to be a
generator.
NO!
As the very next sentence explains, a generator is what's returned
Berker Peksag added the comment:
There are already explicit tests for that
Great, then the test is fine :) Thanks for writing the patch.
--
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Robert Collins added the comment:
Ok, so - good to commit to 3.4 and up?
--
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___
___
New submission from Robert Collins:
We had a discussion on the list sparked by the assret checking, and in it I
proposed that the API would be cleaner if the asserts were module functions.
e.g. rather than::
a_mock.assert_called_with(Foo)
assert_called_with(a_mock, Foo)
Michael has
Changes by Robert Collins robe...@robertcollins.net:
--
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swanson added the comment:
Changing the title in case anyone else is looking for this bug.
This is not raw mode. It's just that echo is turned off.
It is sufficient to type (invisibly, of course):
stty echo
to resume normal use of the terminal.
--
nosy: +swanson
title: help crash
On 16/07/2015 17:17, Ian Kelly wrote:
On Thu, Jul 16, 2015 at 3:28 AM, Robin Becker ro...@reportlab.com wrote:
.
I believe the classic answer is Ackermann's function
http://demonstrations.wolfram.com/RecursionInTheAckermannFunction/
which is said to be not primitive
On 07/16/2015 09:34 PM, Terry Reedy wrote:
On 7/16/2015 3:45 AM, Antoon Pardon wrote:
On 07/15/2015 11:19 PM, Terry Reedy wrote:
I believe that this pattern should work with any set of mutually
recursive functions that always call each other in cyclic order. A
more elaborate version does
Robert Collins added the comment:
There are already explicit tests for that, do you want another one?
--
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On 07/17/2015 01:46 AM, Chris Angelico wrote:
Open for bikeshedding: What should the keyword be? We can't use
exec, which would match Unix and shell usage, because it's already
used in a rather different sense in Python. Current candidates:
transfer, goto, recurse, and anything else you
Ronald Oussoren added the comment:
The fork of OpenSSL that Apple ships also looks at the CA list in the Keychain.
IIRC that cannot be disabled.
BTW. Annoyingly this fork uses a private API to access the keychain, which
means we couldn't optionally use this behavior when not using Apple's
Alexei Romanov added the comment:
7z archiver could extract this ZIP archive without any problems:
~/tmp $ 7z x not_working.zip
7-Zip [64] 9.20 Copyright (c) 1999-2010 Igor Pavlov 2010-11-18
p7zip Version 9.20 (locale=en_US.utf8,Utf16=on,HugeFiles=on,4 CPUs)
Processing archive:
Antoine Pitrou added the comment:
Do we know exactly why OS X's OpenSSL accepts it?
--
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On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 9:32 AM, Ned Batchelder n...@nedbatchelder.com wrote:
Maybe people are reading a different implementation than I am. Python's
dict object doesn't use linked lists to deal with hash collisions, it probes
other slots instead.
No, I was working a) from memory, and b) not
On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 5:17 PM, Antoon Pardon
antoon.par...@rece.vub.ac.be wrote:
On 07/17/2015 01:46 AM, Chris Angelico wrote:
Open for bikeshedding: What should the keyword be? We can't use
exec, which would match Unix and shell usage, because it's already
used in a rather different sense
On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 8:48 PM, Antoon Pardon
antoon.par...@rece.vub.ac.be wrote:
Just wondering, are traceback records of generators available? They are
if an exception is raised in the generator itself, but what if an exception
is raised in the loop that is driven by a generator. They don't
- Original Message -
From: Steven D'Aprano st...@pearwood.info
75% or 90% is not a vast majority. Vast majority implies more than
99%.
You could not be more wrong.
More than 99% is a stupendous majority, while within 95 to 99% is a tremendous
majority.
From the official Majority
Robert Collins added the comment:
This might go back further, haven't checked 3.3, but IIRC we're only doing
fixes on 3.4 up anyhow.
--
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versions: +Python 3.4, Python 3.5, Python 3.6
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New submission from Robert Collins:
From https://github.com/testing-cabal/mock/issues/243
from unittest import mock
mmock = mock.MagicMock()
mmock.foobar(baz)
mmock.assert_has_calls([]) # No exception raised.
Why?mmock.assert_has_calls(['x']) # Exception raised as expected.
---
Traceback
On 07/16/2015 06:43 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 12:32 AM, Antoon Pardon
antoon.par...@rece.vub.ac.be wrote:
What is unclear about as it is generally produced on stderr? That you
can do a whole lot of stuff, doesn't mean that this whole lot of stuff is
part of what
Alex Walters added the comment:
Having now worked with the new installer, there is nothing wrong with it, and
provides sufficient scritpability, if that is a word. I only have two (and a
half) thoughts on it:
1. This should be more prominently documented. The addition of the new web
eGenix.com at the EuroPython Conference 2015
July 20-26 2015
Bilbao, Spain
Meet up with eGenix at this year's EuroPython Conference in Bilbao.
On 7/17/2015 3:17 AM, Antoon Pardon wrote:
On 07/17/2015 01:46 AM, Chris Angelico wrote:
Open for bikeshedding: What should the keyword be? We can't use
exec, which would match Unix and shell usage, because it's already
used in a rather different sense in Python. Current candidates:
transfer,
On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 4:47 PM, Steven D'Aprano st...@pearwood.info wrote:
Jessie's default should be 2.7, at least. Wheezy shipped 2.7, too;
it's only Squeeze (now out of support) that didn't ship any 2.7.x
Python. Are you sure you can't at least upgrade to 2.7?
I'm not sure, I'm not
Yasar L. Ahmed added the comment:
@Serhiy These files are inside another Zip-bundle exported from a commercial
control software for chromatography (UNICORN 6+ by GE Healthcare). Some of the
other Zip-Files in the bundle work fine but some (like this one) don't.
I'm writing a script to
Hi, Rob,
On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 12:40 PM, Rob Gaddi
rgaddi@technologyhighland.invalid wrote:
On Thu, 16 Jul 2015 19:15:38 -0700, craig.sirna wrote:
I need help writing a homework program.
I'll write it, but I can't figure out how to incorporate what I have
read in the book to work in
On Thursday, July 16, 2015 at 12:31:04 PM UTC-7, Aron Barsam wrote:
how do you play python because i have gone on the website but i haven't
managed to code?
http://i.imgur.com/x2KwTbw.jpg
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On Friday, July 17, 2015 at 12:17:55 AM UTC-7, Antoon Pardon wrote:
On 07/17/2015 01:46 AM, Chris Angelico wrote:
Open for bikeshedding: What should the keyword be? We can't use
exec, which would match Unix and shell usage, because it's already
used in a rather different sense in Python.
On Thu, 16 Jul 2015 19:15:38 -0700, craig.sirna wrote:
I need help writing a homework program.
I'll write it, but I can't figure out how to incorporate what I have
read in the book to work in code.
The assignment wants us to take a users first, middle and last name in a
single input (
On 07/17/2015 12:17 AM, Antoon Pardon wrote:
On 07/17/2015 01:46 AM, Chris Angelico wrote:
Open for bikeshedding: What should the keyword be? We can't use
exec, which would match Unix and shell usage, because it's already
used in a rather different sense in Python. Current candidates:
transfer,
Resizing a tkinter window which contains a frame which contains a button
widget, will not change the current size of the window, frame or button as
recorded in their height and width attributes (at least not if they are
resizable). What is the correct way to detect their current size?
--
On 17/07/2015 17:40, Rob Gaddi wrote:
On Thu, 16 Jul 2015 19:15:38 -0700, craig.sirna wrote:
I need help writing a homework program.
I'll write it, but I can't figure out how to incorporate what I have
read in the book to work in code.
The assignment wants us to take a users first, middle
Serhiy Storchaka added the comment:
I think it would be better to change error message to mention the type only.
Yet one argument is that the repr of affected object can be very large, while
the type name usually is short enough. repr() even can raise an exception (e.g.
MemoryError).
On Friday, July 17, 2015 at 1:53:19 PM UTC-5, nickge...@gmail.com wrote:
Resizing a tkinter window which contains a frame which contains a button
widget, will not change the current size of the window, frame or button as
recorded in their height and width attributes (at least not if they are
Changes by Terry J. Reedy tjre...@udel.edu:
--
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On 7/17/2015 11:22 AM, Steve Burrus wrote:
I Need immediate Help w. Getting the Eclipse Python Add-On. I looked all around
the Eclipse website to try to get this but didn't see the add-on for this. Can
someone please help me to find it? Thanx.
Googling 'python ecplise' certainly yields a lot
On Friday, July 17, 2015 at 1:38:52 AM UTC-5, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
75% or 90% is not a vast majority. Vast majority implies more than 99%.
But regardless of the precise meaning of vast, if you want to dismiss one
in four people (25%) or one in ten (10%) as inconsequential, then you've
got
Terry J. Reedy added the comment:
A typical TypeError message use the following pattern:
TypeError: 'int' object is not callable
as it is the class, not the value, that is the problem.
If the same is always true for the JSON TypeError, at the point of failure,
then the dumps message could
Terry J. Reedy added the comment:
timeit(binary, 5, 3)
timeit(abinary, 5, 3)
gives me the same error running on Win 7 from Idle
--
nosy: +terry.reedy
stage: - needs patch
type: enhancement - behavior
___
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I Need immediate Help w. Getting the Eclipse Python Add-On. I looked all around
the Eclipse website to try to get this but didn't see the add-on for this. Can
someone please help me to find it? Thanx.
--
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Serhiy Storchaka added the comment:
Would it help to remove the offending bytes and then feed the bytes-object to
ZipFile?
Yes, it will.
import zipfile, struct, io
with open('not_working.zip', 'rb') as f:
data = f.read()
i = data.rindex(b'PK\5\6') + 22
i += struct.unpack('H', data[i-2:
On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 2:22 PM, Steve Burrus steveburru...@gmail.com wrote:
I Need immediate Help w. Getting the Eclipse Python Add-On. I looked all
around the Eclipse website to try to get this but didn't see the add-on for
this. Can someone please help me to find it? Thanx.
I think you're
Changes by Ezio Melotti ezio.melo...@gmail.com:
--
nosy: +ezio.melotti
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___
___
Robert Collins added the comment:
The fix for this uncovered more testing / scenarios that folk use mock_open for
that were not accounted for. I'm reverting it from mock, and am going to
roll-forward for Python: I should have a fix in a day or two and we can fix it
more completely then.
On 7/16/2015 3:45 PM, Marko Rauhamaa wrote:
Nobody seemed to notice that I just posted a fairly typical tail call
function:
Because non-recursive tail calls are completely normal. Example:
return len(self.children)
Even tail operations like
return a + b
are tail calls if rewritten as
Steve Dower added the comment:
1. This should be more prominently documented.
Very true. I'll get a link to the updated docs page in there.
2. passing /? should list the available kay-value arguments.
Should be doable. I've mostly been holding off until I stop changing the
arguments. At
On 7/17/2015 2:53 PM, nickgeova...@gmail.com wrote:
Resizing a tkinter window which contains a frame which contains a
button widget, will not change the current size of the window, frame
or button as recorded in their height and width attributes (at least
not if they are resizable).
Post the
New submission from Eric O. LEBIGOT:
On OS X, the Homebrew and MacPorts versions of Python 3.4.3 raise an exception
when writing a 4 GB bytearray:
open('/dev/null', 'wb').write(bytearray(2**31-1))
2147483647
open('/dev/null', 'wb').write(bytearray(2**31))
Traceback (most recent call last):
Chris Angelico ros...@gmail.com writes:
# derived from Paul Rubin's example
def quicksort(array, start, end):
midp = partition(array, start, end)
Heh, forgot to include the base case, as someone pointed out. Oh well,
it's pseudocode, or something.
transfer quicksort(array,
Chris Angelico ros...@gmail.com writes:
My point was that I have yet to see anything that demands TCO and
can't be algorithmically improved.
I don't think anyone claimed you can't simulate TCO with updateable
variables and a while loop. TCO just sometimes lets you write some
things in a
Brian Cain added the comment:
Whoops, that's not right. Corrected.
--
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Brian Cain added the comment:
New patch.
--
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Martin Panter added the comment:
You can remove the “.. XXX” line; I understand it is just like a TODO comment,
and with this fixed it would no longer be relevant. I suggest putting the links
next to the sentence that ends “. . . the encoding name must be recognized by
Python.”
The links
Ned Deily added the comment:
And the tradeoff for supplying private copies of newer OpenSSL libs with the
Pythons installed by python.org OS X installers is that we would then need to
solve the CA management problem for all users of those Pythons. So far there
hasn't been a good solution to
Donald Stufft added the comment:
For what it's worth, the El Capitan Beta's apparently don't ship with OpenSSL
headers anymore though they do still ship with the dylibs.
--
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Martin Panter added the comment:
PEP 263 doesn’t say exactly what encodings are supported. It mentions Shift JIS
is supported, but UTF-16 is not. Only UTF-8 is allowed if the file starts with
a UTF-8 BOM. I guess many of the Python-specific text encodings from the second
section may be
Martin Panter added the comment:
The original Python-ideas thread: https://www.marc.info/?t=14355895454
If you want shorter field names, how about just r and w (as they are currently
documented)?
os.write(our_pipe.w, bdata)
os.read(our_pipe.r, 1024)
“Input” and “output” would also work
Alex Walters added the comment:
on 2.5, I figured the answer would be along those lines.
for 2, Linking to the documentation at least would be helpful (or otherwise
indicating that there are arguments that are not listed and are in the docs) if
the arguments cant be listed reasonably easily.
New submission from takayuki:
I executed CGIHTTPServer and requested the following URI,
http://localhost:8000/cgi-bin/test.py?k=aa%2F%2Fbb;
to pass aa//bb as argument k,
but test.py received aa/bb.
I looked in CGIHTTPServer.py and found _url_collapse_path function
discards continuous slash
Eric O. LEBIGOT added the comment:
PS: I should have written 2 GB bytearray (so this looks like a signed 32 bit
integer issue).
--
title: open().write() fails on 4 GB+ data (OS X) - open().write() fails on 2
GB+ data (OS X)
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On 17.07.15 02:46, Chris Angelico wrote:
Out of the lengthy thread on tail call optimization has come one broad
theory that might be of interest, so I'm spinning it off into its own
thread.
The concept is like the Unix exec[vlpe] family of functions: replace
the current stack frame with a new
Changes by Christian Barcenas christ...@cbarcenas.com:
--
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___
On 7/17/2015 9:31 PM, nickgeova...@gmail.com wrote:
On Friday, July 17, 2015 at 5:55:19 PM UTC-5, Terry Reedy wrote:
On 7/17/2015 2:53 PM, nickgeova...@gmail.com wrote:
Resizing a tkinter window which contains a frame which contains a
button widget, will not change the current size of the
Changes by Serhiy Storchaka storch...@gmail.com:
--
components: +Extension Modules, IO -Interpreter Core
nosy: +haypo, ned.deily, ronaldoussoren
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Ned Deily added the comment:
For what it's worth, the El Capitan Beta's apparently don't ship with
OpenSSL headers anymore though they do still ship with the dylibs.
Hmm, I had tested installing existing python.org binary releases with the first
DPs of 10.11 and I *thought* I had tested
On 7/17/15 12:17 PM, nickgeova...@gmail.com wrote:
On Friday, July 17, 2015 at 1:53:19 PM UTC-5, nickge...@gmail.com wrote:
Resizing a tkinter window which contains a frame which contains a button
widget, will not change the current size of the window, frame or button as
recorded in their
Changes by Berker Peksag berker.pek...@gmail.com:
--
nosy: +berker.peksag
versions: +Python 3.6
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On Friday, July 17, 2015 at 2:52:56 PM UTC-5, Russell Owen wrote:
I'm not seeing it. If I try the following script I see
that resizing the widget does update frame.winfo_width()
and winfo_height. (I also see that the requested width and
height are ignored; you can omit those).
I wonder if
On 17/07/2015 21:38, Laura Creighton wrote:
I think kivy is doing a very nice job of python-on-the-mobile.
Have you looked? Please do not rant at me, just tell me what you
think.
Laura
At least rr occasionally comes out with something useful, usually WRT
tkinter. He's in the bottom
Dear Python-List
As part of my A2 Computing coursework, I need to program a solution using
Python 3.4. I also need to document the minimum requirements to run Python
3.4 on a Windows machine, including minimum RAM, minimum processing power,
minimum hard disk space and monitor resolution.
New submission from Brian Cain:
_ssl.c has a convert() macro which misuses the do { ... } while(0) pattern
by accidentally omitting the do.
This was discovered when building with clang, it reports while loop has empty
body. Effectively, convert puts the body into gratuitous scope braces and
On 17Jul2015 20:43, Chris Angelico ros...@gmail.com wrote:
On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 5:17 PM, Antoon Pardon
antoon.par...@rece.vub.ac.be wrote:
On 07/17/2015 01:46 AM, Chris Angelico wrote:
Open for bikeshedding: What should the keyword be? We can't use
exec, which would match Unix and shell
Roundup Robot added the comment:
New changeset 06600287f11f by Steve Dower in branch '3.5':
Issue #24642: Adds installer notes and links to What's New for 3.5
https://hg.python.org/cpython/rev/06600287f11f
New changeset d6c91b8242d2 by Steve Dower in branch 'default':
Issue #24642: Adds
swanson added the comment:
Okay, interesting - I hadn't checked the glossary. I don't ultimately care
what it's called as long as the documentation is clear and consistent. But for
anyone just looking at the names of the classes and the class hierarchy, they'd
come away saying, A generator
On 7/17/2015 7:43 AM, Antoon Pardon wrote:
On 07/17/2015 01:05 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
def gen():
yield stuff
yield more stuff
for stuff in gen():
bomb with exception
The error didn't happen in the generator, so I wouldn't expect to see
it in the traceback.
Yes something
Trac 1.1.6 Released
===
Trac 1.1.6, the final release on the 1.1.x
development line leading up to 1.2, provides
more than a half-dozen minor fixes and
enhancements.
Note that the 1.1.x releases are stable and
tested snapshots of the trunk. They can be seen
as sub-milestones on
In my day job, we have a large code base of mostly identical projects, each
with their own customizations. The customizations can be a real pain
sometimes. Especially when debugging binary data. The interesting part of
the binary dumps are most often the stuff that are tweaked from project to
On Thu, 16 Jul 2015 19:15:38 -0700, craig.sirna wrote:
The assignment wants us to take a users first, middle and last name in a
single input ( name=('enter your full name: )).
Then we must display the full name rearranged in Last, First Middle
order.
To generate a list of words from a
On Friday, July 17, 2015 at 5:55:19 PM UTC-5, Terry Reedy wrote:
On 7/17/2015 2:53 PM, nickgeova...@gmail.com wrote:
Resizing a tkinter window which contains a frame which contains a
button widget, will not change the current size of the window, frame
or button as recorded in their height
On Sat, Jul 18, 2015 at 7:37 AM, Luke Harrison lukeharriso...@gmail.com wrote:
As part of my A2 Computing coursework, I need to program a solution using
Python 3.4. I also need to document the minimum requirements to run Python
3.4 on a Windows machine, including minimum RAM, minimum
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