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Tomorrow (Apr 25, 2006) at 8:53am, John Connors spoke these wise words:
- ->G'day,
- ->
- ->I'm having trouble understanding the difference between,
- ->
- ->import sys
- ->and
- ->from sys import *
- ->
- ->It seems to me they both do the same thing
Remember duck typing. An object just needs to look like a file in order
to be used like one.
Guido's time machine has already forseen your problem. Take a look at
the StringIO module. It allows you to use a string where you would
normally pass a file object.
Hope that helps,
Hugo
> ##
>
Hi,
I need to automate connection to a IP like this. The IP (or domain name)
is taken from command line or from user (whichever is easier for me to
code). It should emulate,
telnet 127.0.0.1 25
mail from:
250 ok
rcpt to: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
250 ok
quit
Can Python do this for me? How do I star
Mike Hansen wrote:
> I'll post the questions and answers to the list first. If I don't get
> any corrections or clarifications in a day or so after posting, I'll
> add it to the tutor suggestion page.
excellent!
> Ed mentioned that you are using restructured text. Should I put
> the entry in res
I guess I'm confused. You mentioned that it still throws and error
while trying to save the workbook. hmmm Do you get this error when
trying to close Excel in the macro? Many times, Excel pops up a dialog
box when closing it if there's still a workbook open even if it has
been saved. That's
On Apr 22, 2006, at 3:15 AM, Fredrik Lundh wrote:
> Ed wrote:
>
>> I don't think the FAQ is open to public editing yet. I'm not sure
>> when it will be, but Fredrik might be able to give a timescale.
>
> There are a few known conversion issues to deal with (the FAQ uses
> a lot more "looks like
I am trying to create a dictionary using data produced by a
load balancing admin tool and aggregate the results.
When I invoke the tool from within the shell (‘sudo
~/ZLBbalctl --action="" the following output is produced:
Load Balancer 1 usage, over the last 30 seconds
Port
> I'm having trouble understanding the difference between,
>
> import sys
This brings the *name* "sys" into your module.
It does not give you access to any of the names inside sys itself
(such as exit for example). To access those you need to prefix them with
sys, as in
sys.exit()
> from sys im
G'day,
I'm having trouble understanding the difference between,
import sys
and
from sys import *
It seems to me they both do the same thing.
John
_
New year, new job there's more than 100,00 jobs at SEEK
http://a.ninemsn.com.a
> Yup, I'm familiar with those. In all of the examples, I have seen, the
> critical region happens in one specific area eg a part of a function with a
> lock and release around it. My question is there a way to lock a specific
> variable so that even though other functions are attempting to access
I wrote a small wxPython based app to test code snippets.
(google for "python lightning compiler" if you want to see the full code).
In the basic mode, I redirect the standard input and output and
execute the code taken from the editor window so that the result
appears in the output window.
Here
Bob Gailer wrote:
Andre Engels wrote:
Is it possible to define a class in such a way, that if twice an
object is made with the same initialization parameters, the same
object is returned in both cases?
Use a "factory" function, and store a dictionary of instances as a
Andre Engels wrote:
> Is it possible to define a class in such a way, that if twice an
> object is made with the same initialization parameters, the same
> object is returned in both cases?
>
Use a "factory" function, and store a dictionary of instances as a class
property:
class myObj(object)
> where outputVersion is a manual set variable in the program
> (so I have to purge all the imageFile each time I adjust the
> program. maybe this is going to work, less progressive approach
^^^
Hi George,
Just to make sure: by "progressiv
> # The way I would like to do it, so we have two different instances of
> the same variable, and only # one function can access it at a time. If a
> function comes to that variable and finds a lock on it, # it will wait
> until the lock is released. And the variable happens to be a queue
Hi T
On Mon, 24 Apr 2006, Andre Engels wrote:
> Is it possible to define a class in such a way, that if twice an object
> is made with the same initialization parameters, the same object is
> returned in both cases?
Yes. The idea is to have the "constructor" really be a function that
delegates o
On Mon, 24 Apr 2006, Etrade Griffiths wrote:
> just feeling my way into Python with a small app that reads data from
> file, creates objects using that data, stores the objects in a list,
> loops over the list doing comparison tests to filter out various
> objects. Here is a code snippet:
>
Hello, Meenakshi,
> -Original Message-
> Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 19:44:57 -0700 (PDT)
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: [Tutor] looking to hire a tutor
> To: tutor@python.org
> Message-ID:
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Content-Type: text/plain;charset=iso-8859-1
>
>
> Hi,
> I apo
-- Forwarded message --
Date: Mon, 24 Apr 2006 07:32:04 -0400
From: Tino Dai <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Danny Yoo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: [Tutor] Locking a specific variable
Hey there Danny,
I'm not quite sure I get it, but ok. *grin* I'll assume that fileQueue is
> an in
-- Forwarded message --
Date: Mon, 24 Apr 2006 14:28:34 +0700
From: Keo Sophon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Danny Yoo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: [Tutor] How use relative path of Linux environment in Python
On Monday 24 April 2006 14:24, you wrote:
> On Mon, 24 Apr 2006, Keo Soph
Ed
the problem is that my original code did not have the closing brackets for
the method calls get_a and get_b whereas the code snippet I posted
did. That's probably why your version works and mine failed. Thanks for
your help!
Alun
At 17:19 24/04/2006, Ed Singleton wrote:
>On 24/04/06, Etr
On 24/04/06, Etrade Griffiths <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi
>
> just feeling my way into Python with a small app that reads data from
> file, creates objects using that data, stores the objects in a list, loops
> over the list doing comparison tests to filter out various objects. Here is
> a
On Sun, Apr 23, 2006 at 10:49:00PM -0700, Danny Yoo wrote:
>
>
>On Sun, 23 Apr 2006, George Georgalis wrote:
>
>>Hi! I've been struggling to find a way up seed hash.update() with
>>the sha1 (or similar) of the file that is the program running.
>>
>>this is not a security task but rather a means to
Is it possible to define a class in such a way, that if twice an
object is made with the same initialization parameters, the same
object is returned in both cases?
More specifically, suppose I have the following program:
class myObj(object):
def __init__(self,a):
self._a = a
s
Hi
just feeling my way into Python with a small app that reads data
from file, creates objects using that data, stores the objects in a list,
loops over the list doing comparison tests to filter out various
objects. Here is a code snippet:
class myObj:
def __init__(self,a,b):
self.a
Hi Mike,
It doesn't display any dialog box rather it gives a temporary name to the file.
Ex
newsheet.xls as newsheet1.xls
So i'm not able to save it. Is there an alternative to invoke the macro and save the file from my script itself .(saving it through macro wud be a better option : ) )
learner404 wrote:
> It works great, thanks very much to the three of you for these
> light-speed answers ... I love this list !
>
> Wesley, I've just pre-order your new edition "Core Python programming"
> on amazon France, it looks great. :)
>
> Thanks
I love this list too.
Da
__
On Mon, 24 Apr 2006, Keo Sophon wrote:
> Do you have any idea of how to use relative path of Linux environment in
> Python. For example, if a program would like to create an oupfile from
> these assignment: outputfile = "~/Desktop/" + workingfile, while "~" is
> the short cut to the path of c
Hi all,
Do you have any idea of how to use relative path of Linux environment in
Python. For example, if a program would like to create an oupfile from these
assignment: outputfile = "~/Desktop/" + workingfile, while "~" is the short
cut to the path of current user.
Thanks,
Phon
__
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