Hi there.
I want to learn about callbacks because we use it at work in our software.
I there a short hello world-like version of a callback example?
--
Med venlig hilsen/Kind regards
Michael B. Arp Sørensen
Programmør / BOFH
I am /root and if you see me laughing you better have a backup.
Greetings, my master.
I'm writing a game based on curses.
I have my own screen object and several child objects to handle sub windows
with e.g. menues, board/map/views and log outputs. All user input is done
with screen.getch and later sent to the dynamic menu for selecting menu
points.
My
On Dec 28, 2007, at 11:29 AM, doug shawhan wrote:
*sigh* Ignore folks. I had forgotten about .has_key().
.has_key() is deprecated in 2.6 and goes away in 3.0 IIRC
You should use
record in D
or
D.get(record)
On Dec 28, 2007 11:22 AM, doug shawhan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm building a
1. Don't name your dict 'dict' or your list 'list', as this then masks the
builtin dict and list types.
2. Your application is a textbook case for defaultdict:
from collections import defaultdict
recordDict = defaultdict(list)
for record in recordList: