Dear Saradhi,
I am using COM on Win32 for this,
based on the sample of Mark Hammond Andy Robinson
in the Programing Python on Win32 book.
That is a fairly simple way to do that.
The code itself can be downloaded from
http://examples.oreilly.com/pythonwin32/ppw32_samples.zip
You can find
saradhi dinavahi wrote:
I am new to the Python Programming. I want to Import Excel sheet data
using Python. Can any one please provide me the code and explain the
basic steps and method of executing the code.
If you can get your Excel data into CSV format, the csv module others
have already
Ian Witham wrote:
HI Saradhi,
I too am fairly new to Python, but I use the csv module successfully for
my work. Could you be a little more specific as to what your
requirements are and where you are finding difficulty?
Ian.
On 9/6/07, *saradhi dinavahi* [EMAIL PROTECTED]
David Bear wrote:
feedp.entry.title.decode('utf-8', 'xmlcharrefreplace')
I assume it would take any unicode character and 'do the right thing',
including replacing higher ordinal chars with xml entity refs. But I still
get
UnicodeEncodeError: 'ascii' codec can't encode character
I am trying to figure out the optimal way to make socket connections (INET) and
check for timeouts. The socket module has settimeout(timeout) and
setdefaulttimeout(timeout). However, so far as I can tell, these apply to
socket objects. The type of socket connection I want to make is
Hi guys, quick question, I've been trying to learn python lately, and have
written a few little apps to help with some day to day stuff I do, and
recently my fiance asked me if it was possible to come up with a simple web
based schedule she can use with the other teachers in her school to schedule
Hi,
If you have your own server to run it on, I think it would make sense to use
one of the Python web frameworks that are out there. I used cherrypy for my
first web-based python project and I found it very easy to learn and develop
in quickly.
Regards,
Michael
On 06/09/07, Fiyawerx [EMAIL
Thanks Michael, I'll be using my dreamhost account, and I'm pretty sure
cherrypy works there, will check into it.
On 9/6/07, Michael Connors [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
If you have your own server to run it on, I think it would make sense to
use one of the Python web frameworks that are out
Michael Connors wrote:
Hi,
If you have your own server to run it on, I think it would make sense
to use one of the Python web frameworks that are out there. I used
cherrypy for my first web-based python project and I found it very
easy to learn and develop in quickly.
That's debatable. I
Fiyawerx wrote:
Hi guys, quick question, I've been trying to learn python lately, and
have written a few little apps to help with some day to day stuff I do,
and recently my fiance asked me if it was possible to come up with a
simple web based schedule she can use with the other teachers in
Eric Brunson wrote:
Michael Connors wrote:
Hi,
If you have your own server to run it on, I think it would make sense
to use one of the Python web frameworks that are out there. I used
cherrypy for my first web-based python project and I found it very
easy to learn and develop in quickly.
Kent Johnson wrote:
Eric Brunson wrote:
Michael Connors wrote:
Hi,
If you have your own server to run it on, I think it would make sense
to use one of the Python web frameworks that are out there. I used
cherrypy for my first web-based python project and I found it very
easy to
Lets say I have a list object that I iterate over like this:
for item in myList:
process(item)
During execution of the for loop something happens and I want to know how
many items have be iterated over, how do I find out? Without resorting to
some counter inside the loop, is there some python
On Wednesday 05 September 2007 16:59, Jason Doege wrote:
Thanks for the good and useful information on this. Now for the
why...
I am building an API and for various reasons I have chosen Python
to implement it. I'd like to separate the implementation from the
interface as, for instance, C++
Michael Connors wrote:
Hi,
If you have your own server to run it on, I think it would make sense to
use one of the Python web frameworks that are out there. I used cherrypy
for my first web-based python project and I found it very easy to learn
and develop in quickly.
Regards,
Michael
I'd
David Bear wrote:
Lets say I have a list object that I iterate over like this:
for item in myList:
process(item)
During execution of the for loop something happens and I want to know how
many items have be iterated over, how do I find out? Without resorting to
some counter inside the
Since no one bit on this yet, let me simplify to the core issue I am having:
What is the best practice for checking for network connectivity errors when
making network calls? Is it better to wrap the functions that make said calls
in threads and time them? Or to use timeout variables for
On Thu, Sep 06, 2007 at 11:35:14AM -0400, Fiyawerx wrote:
recently my fiance asked me if it was possible to come up with a simple web
based schedule she can use with the other teachers in her school to schedule
library time. (She's the librarian). Basically, it will be a small calendar
like
Fiyawerx [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
Hi guys, quick question, I've been trying to learn python lately,
and have
written a few little apps to help with some day to day stuff I do,
and
recently my fiance asked me if it was possible to come up with a
simple web
based schedule she can use with
I'm working out of Core Python Programming (2nd
Edition) by Wesley Chun.
Here is the problem:
Have the user enter three numeric values and store
them in three different variables. Without using
lists or sorting algorithms, manually sort these three
numbers from smallest to largest.
Here is
Christopher Spears wrote:
I'm working out of Core Python Programming (2nd
Edition) by Wesley Chun.
Here is the problem:
Have the user enter three numeric values and store
them in three different variables. Without using
lists or sorting algorithms, manually sort these three
numbers
I've just noticed that you can use the import statement to import variables,
such that a simple file such as vars.py:
# File with predefined variables
var1= 'some text'
var2= 2
var3=['a','b','c']
Would then, upon import, provide:
vars.var1
'some text'
vars.var2
2
vars.var3
['a','b','c']
This
wormwood_3 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
Since no one bit on this yet, let me simplify to the core issue I am
having:
That may be because your question ventures into fairly deep areas of
networking
that most folk who are just learning Python(ie readers of this list)
have probably
not encountered.
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