On May 29, 10:05 am, Joshua Landau joshua.landau...@gmail.com wrote:
On 29 May 2013 14:02, Dave Angel da...@davea.name wrote:
On 05/29/2013 08:45 AM, Oscar Benjamin wrote:
Joshua: Avoid doing anything complex inside an exception handler.
Unfortunately, Ranger (the file manager in
On May 23, 2:42 pm, Dave Angel da...@davea.name wrote:
On 05/23/2013 11:26 AM, Carlos Nepomuceno wrote:
Date: Thu, 23 May 2013 06:44:05 -0700
Subject: Re: PEP 378: Format Specifier for Thousands Separator
From: prueba...@latinmail.com
To:
On May 22, 6:31 pm, Carlos Nepomuceno carlosnepomuc...@outlook.com
wrote:
Date: Wed, 22 May 2013 13:26:23 -0700
Subject: Re: PEP 378: Format Specifier for Thousands Separator
From: prueba...@latinmail.com
To: python-l...@python.org
[...]
Maybe
On May 22, 6:35 am, Skip Montanaro s...@pobox.com wrote:
Is this tutorial outdated or this still an issue?
[1]
http://docs.python.org/2/tutorial/inputoutput.html#old-string-formatting
That tutorial is out of date. %-formatting isn't being removed.
OTOH, PEP 3101 also mentions
On May 22, 2:30 pm, Ned Batchelder n...@nedbatchelder.com wrote:
On 5/22/2013 10:58 AM, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Wed, 22 May 2013 05:45:12 -0500, Skip Montanaro wrote:
I didn't mean to create a tempest in a teapot. I was away from
comp.lang.python, python-bugs, and python-dev for a few
On Apr 21, 9:19 pm, Steven D'Aprano steve
+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info wrote:
On Mon, 22 Apr 2013 10:56:11 +1000, Chris Angelico wrote:
You're running this under Windows. The convention on Windows is for
end-of-line to be signalled with \r\n, but the convention inside Python
is to use
On Apr 9, 3:38 pm, Chris Withers ch...@simplistix.co.uk wrote:
Hi All,
I'm pleased to announce the release of xlrd 0.9.2:
http://pypi.python.org/pypi/xlrd/0.9.2
This release includes the following changes:
- Fix some packaging issues that meant docs and examples were missing
from the
On Feb 26, 11:19 am, notbob not...@nothome.com wrote:
On 2013-02-26, Steven D'Aprano steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info wrote:
The Python documentation is bad, and you should feel bad.
Ahh! A point at which I can interject.
As a rank green python noob, I definitely hava an opinion on
On Feb 4, 10:10 am, Chris Angelico ros...@gmail.com wrote:
This isn't particularly related to the post I'm quoting, it's more a
point of curiosity.
On Mon, Feb 4, 2013 at 10:53 AM, João Bernardo jbv...@gmail.com wrote:
Re: [Python-ideas] constant/enum type in stdlib
I have my own
On Sep 28, 2:42 pm, Franck Ditter fra...@ditter.org wrote:
Hi !
Here is Python 3.3
Is it better in any way to use print(x,x,x,file='out')
or out.write(x) ? Any reason to prefer any of them ?
There should be a printlines, like readlines ?
Thanks,
franck
There is
out.writelines(lst)
--
On Apr 16, 3:00 pm, Chinesekidz chinesek...@googlemail.com wrote:
Hello!
I would like to know how to write the program to count the total
number of strings (in the list) used in Python..
for example:
list:['1','2','3','4']
for l in range(4):
num=input(list:+list[l]+(between 1 and
On Apr 17, 2:11 pm, timlash timl...@gmail.com wrote:
Searched the web and this forum without satisfaction. Using Python 2.7 and
pyODBC on Windows XP I can get the code below to run and generate two cursors
from two different databases without problems. Ideally, I'd then like to
join these
On Apr 17, 2:11 pm, timlash timl...@gmail.com wrote:
Searched the web and this forum without satisfaction. Using Python 2.7 and
pyODBC on Windows XP I can get the code below to run and generate two cursors
from two different databases without problems. Ideally, I'd then like to
join these
On Apr 3, 11:02 am, Alain Ketterlin al...@dpt-info.u-strasbg.fr
wrote:
python w.g.sned...@gmail.com writes:
tag23gr is a list of lists each with two items.
g23tag is an empty dictionary when I run the for loop below.
When is is complete each key is a graphic name who's values are a list
On Apr 3, 12:26 pm, Alain Ketterlin al...@dpt-info.u-strasbg.fr
wrote:
nn prueba...@latinmail.com writes:
for item in tag23gr:
... value, key = tuple(item)
... if(g23tag.get(key)):
... g23tag[key].append(value)
... else
On Mar 31, 11:38 am, Cameron Laird claird...@gmail.com wrote:
I pine for the fjords.
And it's time to bring Python-URL! to a close. Python-URL!, which
Jean-Claude Wippler and I appear to have launched in 1998, has reached
the end of its utility. We still have many loyal and enthusiastic
On Feb 22, 1:13 pm, Alec Taylor alec.tayl...@gmail.com wrote:
Simple mathematical problem, + and - only:
1800.00-1041.00-555.74+530.74-794.95
-60.9500045
That's wrong.
Proofhttp://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=1800.00-1041.00-555.74%2B530.74-...
-60.95 aka (-(1219/20))
Is
On Sep 27, 1:21 pm, sakthi sakth...@gmail.com wrote:
In the following code, l=[1,2,3,4,5]
i=0
for a in l:
... p=2*a
... t=p+i
... i=t
... t
45
Python gives an answer as 45. But i am getting 30 when i execute
manually. Is there any different multiplication pattern in
On Sep 11, 1:00 am, Steven D'Aprano steve
+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info wrote:
守株待兔 wrote:
how can i convert Dec 11 into 2011-12?
if my_str == Dec 11:
return 1999 # 2011 - 12
Does that help?
But seriously... 2011-12 is not a proper date, so the simplest way is
probably something
On Aug 16, 8:23 am, Alain Ketterlin al...@dpt-info.u-strasbg.fr
wrote:
Roy Smith r...@panix.com writes:
what is the best way to check if a given list (lets call it l1) is
totally contained in a second list (l2)?
[...]
import re
def sublist(l1, l2):
s1 = ''.join(map(str, l1))
On Jul 4, 11:35 am, Robin Becker ro...@reportlab.com wrote:
On 03/07/2011 23:21, Chris Angelico wrote:
.
var(0x14205359) x # Don't forget to provide an address where the
object will be located
x=42
did you forget to specify the memory bank and computer (and
On Jun 13, 11:06 am, Zachary Dziura zcdzi...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi all.
I'm writing a Python script that will be used to compare two database
tables. Currently, those two tables are dumped into .csv files,
whereby my code goes through both files and makes comparisons. Thus
far, I only have
On May 12, 9:11 am, JamesEM james.hous...@deutsche-boerse.com wrote:
Hello,
I have a python class that contains a dictionary.
I would like to use python properties to access the elements of the
dictionary.
This could be achieved as follows:
class MyClass(object):
def __init__(self):
On May 6, 8:10 am, Web Dreamer webdrea...@nospam.fr wrote:
Chris Rebert a écrit ce vendredi 6 mai 2011 11:23 dans
mailman.1230.1304673808.9059.python-l...@python.org :
I'm not them, but:
Note: The formatting operations described here [involving %] are
obsolete and may go away in future
On May 4, 2:17 pm, Raymond Hettinger pyt...@rcn.com wrote:
Here's a 22-line beauty for a classic and amazing
algorithm:http://bit.ly/bloom_filter
The wiki article on the algorithm is brief and
well-written:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloom_filter
It turns out that people in the 1970's
On Apr 21, 4:32 pm, Jon Clements jon...@googlemail.com wrote:
On Apr 21, 5:40 pm, nn prueba...@latinmail.com wrote:
time head -100 myfile /dev/null
real 0m4.57s
user 0m3.81s
sys 0m0.74s
time ./repnullsalt.py '|' myfile
0 1 Null columns:
11, 20, 21, 22, 23
time head -100 myfile /dev/null
real0m4.57s
user0m3.81s
sys 0m0.74s
time ./repnullsalt.py '|' myfile
0 1 Null columns:
11, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 30, 31, 33, 45, 50, 68
real1m28.94s
user1m28.11s
sys 0m0.72s
import sys
def main():
with
On Apr 5, 3:59 am, Martin De Kauwe mdeka...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
So i want to replace multiple lines in a text file and I have reasoned
the best way to do this is with a dictionary. I have simplified my
example and broadly I get what I want however I am now printing my
replacement string and
On Apr 3, 8:06 am, Mag Gam magaw...@gmail.com wrote:
Thanks for the responses.
Basically, I have a large file with this format,
Date INFO username command srcipaddress filename
I would like to do statistics on:
total number of usernames and who they are
username and commands
username and
On Mar 4, 7:32 am, Frank Millman fr...@chagford.com wrote:
Hi all
I want to create a cookie containing a session id. In python 2.6 I had the
following -
from __future__ import unicode_literals
session_id = b64encode(urandom(20))
response_headers.append(
(b'Set-Cookie',
On Mar 4, 12:49 pm, Ignoramus20691 ignoramus20...@NOSPAM.
20691.invalid wrote:
I bought a Hello World! book for my 9 year old son. The book teached
programming for kids and it does it in Python.
I do not know any Python, but I am very comfortable with C++ and perl.
I wrote a little over 100k
On Feb 11, 9:15 am, DataSmash r...@new.rr.com wrote:
Can someone help me understand why Example #1 Example #2 will run
the functions,
while Example #3 DOES NOT?
Thanks for your time!
R.D.
def One():
print running fuction 1
def Two():
print running fuction 2
def Three():
On Feb 5, 7:12 am, Peter Otten __pete...@web.de wrote:
Slafs wrote:
Hi there!
I'm having trouble to wrap my brain around this kind of problem:
What I have :
1) list of dicts
2) list of keys that i would like to be my grouping arguments of
elements from 1)
3) list of keys
On Jan 18, 12:20 am, Raymond Hettinger pyt...@rcn.com wrote:
On Jan 17, 6:51 pm, nn prueba...@latinmail.com wrote:
...But the api on this baffles me a bit:
d = OrderedDict.fromkeys('abcde')
d.move_to_end('b', last=False)
''.join(d.keys)
'bacde'
I understand that end could
I somehow missed this before. I like most of the additions from
Raymond Hettinger. But the api on this baffles me a bit:
d = OrderedDict.fromkeys('abcde')
d.move_to_end('b', last=False)
''.join(d.keys)
'bacde'
I understand that end could potentially mean either end, but would
move_to_end
On Dec 9, 10:15 pm, rusi rustompm...@gmail.com 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;
On Dec 10, 11:17 am, nn prueba...@latinmail.com wrote:
On Dec 9, 10:15 pm, rusi rustompm...@gmail.com 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__
On Dec 10, 8:48 am, Dirk Nachbar dirk...@gmail.com wrote:
I want to take a copy of a list a
b=a
and then do things with b which don't affect a.
How can I do this?
Dirk
Not knowing the particulars,
you may have to use:
import copy
b=copy.deepcopy(a)
--
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 Dec 7, 10:52 am, gst g.sta...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
I met a situation where I was passing an object created in/with an
upper level module class to a lower level module class' instance in
one of its __init__ argument and saving a ref of the upper object in
that lower level class' new
On Nov 18, 8:45 pm, Phlip phlip2...@gmail.com wrote:
Pythonistas:
If everyone likes this post, then the code is a snippet for
community edification. Otherwise, it's a question: How to do this kind
of thing better?
I want a dict() variant that passes these test cases:
map = Map()
On Nov 8, 11:17 am, Scott Gould zinck...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi folks,
This is a head-scratcher to me. I occasionally get this error:
---
File /var/www/myproj/account/views.py, line 54, in account
if request.account.is_instructor and request.account.contact and
On Oct 28, 12:33 pm, cbr...@cbrownsystems.com
cbr...@cbrownsystems.com wrote:
On Oct 28, 9:23 am, John Posner jjpos...@optimum.net wrote:
On 10/28/2010 12:16 PM, cbr...@cbrownsystems.com wrote:
It's clear but tedious to write:
if 'monday in days_off or tuesday in days_off:
On Oct 25, 4:18 pm, Ethan Furman et...@stoneleaf.us wrote:
kj wrote:
In mailman.232.1288020268.2218.python-l...@python.org Steve Holden
st...@holdenweb.com writes:
On Oct 25, 5:07 am, kj no.em...@please.post wrote:
In The Zen of Python, one of the maxims is flat is better than
nested?
On Oct 14, 2:37 am, python_tsp pramod...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
We have a Python based test framework which is being used in various
projects.
Our current environment is
Python (ver 2.5.1)
wxPython (wxPython2.8-win32-ansi-2.8.6.0-py25)
pywin32-210.win32-py2.5
vcredist_x86.exe
pyserial-2.2
On Oct 7, 7:10 pm, Rogério Brito rbr...@ime.usp.br wrote:
Hi there.
I am used to some languages like C, but I am just a complete newbie with
Python
and, while writing some small snippets, I had encountered some problems, with
which I would sincerely appreciate any help, since I appreciate
Semantic web. I did get a bit confused in reading about the concept of
sets in python and why you would use them instead of a dictionary for
Sets are faster and more convenient to do intersections, unions,
differences. They also use less space than dictionaries. Finally they
also help
On Sep 23, 8:46 pm, Baba raoul...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sep 23, 8:13 pm, nn prueba...@latinmail.com wrote:
On Sep 23, 1:25 pm, Baba raoul...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sep 23, 4:17 pm, nn prueba...@latinmail.com wrote:
On Sep 23, 10:56 am, nn prueba...@latinmail.com wrote:
On Sep 22, 6
On Sep 22, 6:39 pm, Baba raoul...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sep 22, 9:18 pm, Baba raoul...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sep 22, 3:38 pm, nn prueba...@latinmail.com wrote:
On Sep 21, 6:39 pm, Baba raoul...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi
query level: beginner
as part of a learning exercise i have
On Sep 23, 10:56 am, nn prueba...@latinmail.com wrote:
On Sep 22, 6:39 pm, Baba raoul...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sep 22, 9:18 pm, Baba raoul...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sep 22, 3:38 pm, nn prueba...@latinmail.com wrote:
On Sep 21, 6:39 pm, Baba raoul...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi
query
On Sep 23, 1:40 pm, Chris Rebert creb...@ucsd.edu wrote:
On Thu, Sep 23, 2010 at 9:28 AM, David A. Barrett c_bar...@qualcomm.com
wrote:
I've noticed that it's possible to create conflicting instances of the
collections.namedtuple class:
from collections import namedtuple as nt
On Sep 23, 1:25 pm, Baba raoul...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sep 23, 4:17 pm, nn prueba...@latinmail.com wrote:
On Sep 23, 10:56 am, nn prueba...@latinmail.com wrote:
On Sep 22, 6:39 pm, Baba raoul...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sep 22, 9:18 pm, Baba raoul...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sep 22, 3:38
On Sep 21, 6:39 pm, Baba raoul...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi
query level: beginner
as part of a learning exercise i have written code that:
a) asks for a single letter input (assumption: only 1 letter wil be
entered)
b) adds that letter to list1 and then goes through list2 and checks:
1)
On Sep 13, 3:02 pm, David Robinow drobi...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, Sep 13, 2010 at 1:06 PM, Chris Withers ch...@simplistix.co.uk wrote:
I'm wondering what libraries people would use to answer the following
questions relating to business days:
- on a less-naive level; same question but
On Sep 10, 12:27 pm, fuglyducky fuglydu...@gmail.com wrote:
Most of the python books coming out now are Py3K. I just started
programming and have a need to access a MySQL database. I would like
to use Python to do this. Unfortunately, I cannot find anyone that has
created anything that allows
On Sep 6, 10:31 pm, Steven D'Aprano steve-REMOVE-
t...@cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Tue, 07 Sep 2010 11:00:45 +1000, Ben Finney wrote:
If you're going to use the list of float objects, you can convert them
all with a list comprehension.
[...]
numbers_as_float = [float(x) for x in
On Aug 16, 10:08 am, Vikas Mahajan vikas.mahaja...@gmail.com wrote:
On 16 August 2010 19:23, Nitin Pawar nitinpawar...@gmail.com wrote: you
would need to define a class first with its attiributes and then you may
want to initiate the variables by calling the class initilializer
Actually I
On Aug 16, 10:08 am, Vikas Mahajan vikas.mahaja...@gmail.com wrote:
On 16 August 2010 19:23, Nitin Pawar nitinpawar...@gmail.com wrote: you
would need to define a class first with its attiributes and then you may
want to initiate the variables by calling the class initilializer
Actually I
On Aug 9, 9:18 am, genxtech jrmy.l...@gmail.com wrote:
On Aug 8, 7:34 pm, Tim Chase python.l...@tim.thechases.com wrote:
On 08/08/10 17:20, genxtech wrote:
if re.search(search_string, in_string) != None:
While the other responses have addressed some of the big issues,
it's also good
On Aug 5, 2:01 pm, Daniel Urban urban.d...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm building an elevator simulator for a class assignment. I recently ran
into a roadblock and don't know how to fix it. For some reason, in my
checkQueue function below, the call to self.goUp() is never executed. It is
on the
Neil Cerutti wrote:
What's the best way to do the inverse operation of the .join
function?
--
Neil Cerutti
split
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Jun 4, 9:53 am, Spyder42 spyder1...@yahoo.com wrote:
On Fri, 04 Jun 2010 15:32:15 +0200, Christian Heimes
li...@cheimes.de wrote:
So your response is either, you don't know if there is a fix, or 'No
way in h377.' You couldn't figure out by my post that I already knew
that?
Let me
M. Hamed wrote:
I'm trying the following statements that I found here and there on
Google, but none of them works on my Python 2.5, are they too old? or
newer?
abc.reverse()
import numpy
reverse does not work on strings but does work on lists:
x=list(abc)
x.reverse()
x
['c', 'b', 'a']
Martin v. Loewis wrote:
nn wrote:
Stefan Behnel wrote:
nn, 23.03.2010 19:46:
Actually what I want is to write a particular byte to standard output,
and I want this to work regardless of where that output gets sent to.
I am aware that I could do
open('nnout','w',encoding='latin1
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Tue, 23 Mar 2010 11:46:33 -0700, nn wrote:
Actually what I want is to write a particular byte to standard output,
and I want this to work regardless of where that output gets sent to.
What do you mean work?
Do you mean display a particular glyph or something
Antoine Pitrou wrote:
Le Tue, 23 Mar 2010 10:33:33 -0700, nn a écrit :
I know that unicode is the way to go in Python 3.1, but it is getting in
my way right now in my Unix scripts. How do I write a chr(253) to a
file?
#nntst2.py
import sys,codecs
mychar=chr(253)
print
I know that unicode is the way to go in Python 3.1, but it is getting
in my way right now in my Unix scripts. How do I write a chr(253) to a
file?
#nntst2.py
import sys,codecs
mychar=chr(253)
print(sys.stdout.encoding)
print(mychar)
./nntst2.py
ISO8859-1
ý
./nntst2.py nnout2
Traceback (most
Rami Chowdhury wrote:
On Tuesday 23 March 2010 10:33:33 nn wrote:
I know that unicode is the way to go in Python 3.1, but it is getting
in my way right now in my Unix scripts. How do I write a chr(253) to a
file?
#nntst2.py
import sys,codecs
mychar=chr(253)
print
Gary Herron wrote:
nn wrote:
I know that unicode is the way to go in Python 3.1, but it is getting
in my way right now in my Unix scripts. How do I write a chr(253) to a
file?
Python3 make a distinction between bytes and string(i.e., unicode)
types, and you are still thinking
Stefan Behnel wrote:
nn, 23.03.2010 19:46:
Actually what I want is to write a particular byte to standard output,
and I want this to work regardless of where that output gets sent to.
I am aware that I could do
open('nnout','w',encoding='latin1').write(mychar) but I am porting
kj wrote:
I have a list of items L, and a test function is_invalid that checks
the validity of each item. To check that there are no invalid
items in L, I could check the value of any(map(is_invalid, L)).
But this approach is suboptimal in the sense that, no matter what
L is, is_invalid
Michael Torrie wrote:
david jensen wrote:
of course, changing nn's to:
def getOutcomes(myList=[2,5,8,3,5]):
low_id = int(myList[0]myList[1])
amountToShare = 2*myList[low_id]
remainder = myList[not low_id]-myList[low_id]
tail=list(myList[2:])
outcomes =
david jensen wrote:
... and of course i screwed up my outcomes... that should read
outcomes=[[4,3,8,3,5],[3,4,8,3,5],[2,5,8,3,5],[1,6,8,3,5],[0,7,8,3,5]]
For starters:
def getOutcomes(myList=[2,5,8,3,5]):
low_id = int(myList[0]myList[1])
amountToShare = 2*myList[low_id]
remainder =
Peter Otten wrote:
Michael Rudolf wrote:
Am 09.03.2010 13:02, schrieb Peter Otten:
[sum(a for a,b in zip(x,y) if b==c)/y.count(c)for c in y]
[1.5, 1.5, 8.0, 4.0, 4.0, 4.0]
Peter
... pwned.
Should be the fastest and shortest way to do it.
It may be short, but it is not
mk wrote:
Sneaky Wombat wrote:
[ 'VLAN4065',
'Interface',
'Gi9/6',
'Po2',
'Po3',
'Po306',
'VLAN4068',
'Interface',
'Gi9/6',
'VLAN4069',
'Interface',
'Gi9/6',]
Hey, I just invented a cute ;-) two-liner using list comprehensions:
# alist = list above
tmp,
lbolla wrote:
On Mar 4, 3:57 pm, Sneaky Wombat joe.hr...@gmail.com wrote:
[ {'vlan_or_intf': 'VLAN2021'},
{'vlan_or_intf': 'Interface'},
{'vlan_or_intf': 'Po1'},
{'vlan_or_intf': 'Po306'},
{'vlan_or_intf': 'VLAN2022'},
{'vlan_or_intf': 'Interface'},
{'vlan_or_intf':
On Mar 4, 2:30 pm, MRAB pyt...@mrabarnett.plus.com wrote:
Pete Emerson wrote:
I've written my first python program, and would love suggestions for
improvement.
I'm a perl programmer and used a perl version of this program to guide
me. So in that sense, the python is perlesque
This
prasad_chand wrote:
Hi,
I use python to do simple math problems as a hobby.
I have made a program that finds the number of divisors(factors) of a
given number. I am hoping to improve my language skills, specifically
I would like to re-write the function prime_factors more gracefully.
On Feb 25, 12:20 pm, Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-
cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Thu, 25 Feb 2010 09:00:07 -0800, Jeremy wrote:
On Feb 25, 9:41 am, Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-
cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Thu, 25 Feb 2010 07:48:44 -0800, Jeremy wrote:
I have a regular
Wes James wrote:
I have been trying to create a list form a string. The string will be
a list (this is the contents will look like a list). i.e. [] or
['a','b']
The [] is simple since I can just check if value == [] then return []
But with ['a','b'] I have tried and get:
a=['a','b']
Johann Spies wrote:
On Thu, Jan 28, 2010 at 07:07:04AM -0800, evilweasel wrote:
Hi folks,
I am a newbie to python, and I would be grateful if someone could
point out the mistake in my program. Basically, I have a huge text
file similar to the format below:
AGACTCGAGTGCGCGGA
On Jan 28, 10:50 am, evilweasel karthikramaswam...@gmail.com wrote:
I will make my question a little more clearer. I have close to 60,000
lines of the data similar to the one I posted. There are various
numbers next to the sequence (this is basically the number of times
the sequence has been
Arnaud Delobelle wrote:
nn prueba...@latinmail.com writes:
On Jan 28, 10:50 am, evilweasel karthikramaswam...@gmail.com wrote:
I will make my question a little more clearer. I have close to 60,000
lines of the data similar to the one I posted. There are various
numbers next
On Jan 25, 6:36 pm, Waddle, Jim jim.wad...@boeing.com wrote:
Chris,
Thanks for responding to my email.
I apologize for the remark about python only being developed for windows. I
got the impression when I was looking at the ActivePython web site and saw
that the version of python that they
On Jan 19, 8:03 am, Gnarlodious gnarlodi...@gmail.com wrote:
On Jan 18, 4:21 pm, John Bokma j...@castleamber.com wrote:
Gnarlodious gnarlodi...@gmail.com writes:
I am running a script in a browser that finds the file in subfolder
Data:
Content=Plist('Data/Content.plist')
However,
On Jan 18, 11:37 am, Grant Edwards inva...@invalid.invalid wrote:
On 2010-01-18, Jive Dadson notonthe...@noisp.com wrote:
I just found another module that broke when I went to 2.6. Gnuplot.
Apparently one of its routines has a parameter named with. That used
to be okay, and now it's not.
On Dec 3, 10:41 am, Filip Gruszczyński grusz...@gmail.com wrote:
I have just written a very small snippet of code and started thinking,
which version would be more pythonic. Basically, I am adding a list of
string to combo box in qt. So, the most obvious way is:
for choice in self.__choices:
On Dec 2, 6:56 pm, Terry Reedy tjre...@udel.edu wrote:
J wrote:
On Wed, Dec 2, 2009 at 09:27, nn prueba...@latinmail.com wrote:
Is there a way to read the file, one item at a time, delimited by
commas WITHOUT having to read all 16,000 items from that one line,
then split them out
On Dec 2, 9:14 am, J dreadpiratej...@gmail.com wrote:
Something that came up in class...
when you are pulling data from a file using f.next(), the file is read
one line at a time.
What was explained to us is that Python iterates the file based on a
carriage return as the delimiter.
But
On Nov 16, 11:54 am, Steve Ferg steve.ferg.bitbuc...@gmail.com
wrote:
This is a question for the language mavens that I know hang out here.
It is not Python related, except that recent comparisons of Python to
Google's new Go language brought it to mind.
NOTE that this is *not* a suggestion
On Oct 20, 2:23 pm, J dreadpiratej...@gmail.com wrote:
Can someone explain why this code results in two different outputs?
for os in comp.CIM_OperatingSystem ():
print os.Name.split(|)[0] + Service Pack, os.ServicePackMajorVersion
osVer = os.Name.split(|)[0] + Service Pack,
On Oct 5, 12:46 pm, Joseph Reagle rea...@mit.edu wrote:
I would think the commented code would be faster (fewer loops), but it is
not (because of function calls).
#Average user_time = 5.9975 over 4 iterations
inSRC = set([bio.name for bio in bios.values()])
inEB = set([bio.name
On Sep 28, 7:37 pm, Scott scott.freem...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sep 28, 2:00 pm, Dave Angel da...@ieee.org wrote:
Scott wrote:
Thank you fine folks for getting back with your answers!
So down the road I do dictname[line42].append(new stuff). (or [var]
if I'm looping through the dict)
On Sep 24, 10:26 pm, s...@pobox.com wrote:
If you are a csv module user, I have a question for you: Do you use the
csv.Sniffer class?
o Yes, frequently
o Yes, on occasion
o I tried it a few times but don't use it now
o No, I don't need it
o No, never heard of it
o
On Sep 22, 4:00 pm, snfctech tschm...@sacfoodcoop.com wrote:
Does anyone have experience building a data warehouse in python? Any
thoughts on custom vs using an out-of-the-box product like Talend or
Informatica?
I have an integrated system Dashboard project that I was going to
build using
On Sep 8, 9:55 am, Mart. mdeka...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sep 8, 2:16 pm, Andreas Tawn andreas.t...@ubisoft.com wrote:
Hi,
I need to extract a string after a matching a regular expression. For
example I have the string...
s = FTPHOST: e4ftl01u.ecs.nasa.gov
and once I match
On Sep 8, 10:27 am, pdpi pdpinhe...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sep 8, 3:21 pm, nn prueba...@latinmail.com wrote:
On Sep 8, 9:55 am, Mart. mdeka...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sep 8, 2:16 pm, Andreas Tawn andreas.t...@ubisoft.com wrote:
Hi,
I need to extract a string after a matching
On Sep 8, 10:25 am, Mart. mdeka...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sep 8, 3:21 pm, nn prueba...@latinmail.com wrote:
On Sep 8, 9:55 am, Mart. mdeka...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sep 8, 2:16 pm, Andreas Tawn andreas.t...@ubisoft.com wrote:
Hi,
I need to extract a string after a matching
On Sep 8, 11:19 am, Dave Angel da...@ieee.org wrote:
Mart. wrote:
snip
I have been doing this to turn the email into a string
email =ys.argv[1]
f =open(email, 'r')
s =str(f.readlines())
so FTPHOST isn't the first element, it is just part of a larger
string. When I turn the email
On Sep 8, 12:16 pm, nn prueba...@latinmail.com wrote:
On Sep 8, 11:19 am, Dave Angel da...@ieee.org wrote:
Mart. wrote:
snip
I have been doing this to turn the email into a string
email =ys.argv[1]
f =open(email, 'r')
s =str(f.readlines())
so FTPHOST isn't the first
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