Hey everyone,
I am having a very hard time understanding the list comprehension syntax. I've
followed the docs and could use some guidance from the fine folks here to
supplement my findings. If someone wouldn't mind replying back with an example
or two, with some explanation of each part I'd ap
On 23/12/12 14:33, Kirk Bailey wrote:
The best I have found still has some cereal in it- lots of flakes
and nuts. Anyone got some ideas on playing mp3 files in a windows
machine?
Since this is at least your third post on this subject, and I don't
think anyone has replied yet, I guess the answe
On 23/12/12 15:11, Harsh Bhatia wrote:
The document of python representing bug patching in windows is lot confusing ...
can anyone help me with an example of previous solved bug ... from its issue to
patch submission.
thank you !!
What document are you tal
On 21/12/12 10:46, Kirk Bailey wrote:
the robotradio program is coming along. It plays. it dances. it sings.
IT selects random libraries and random broadcast files. and it restarts
itself with consummate ease.
Is that a good thing or a bad thing?
Aka, NOW wtf?!? Jim is exchanging letters w
On 23/12/12 07:53, Albert-Jan Roskam wrote:
Hi,
Is the code below the only/shortest way to match unicode characters?
No. You could install a more Unicode-aware regex engine, and use it instead
of Python's re module, where Unicode support is at best only partial.
Try this one:
http://pypi.py
The document of python representing bug patching in windows is lot confusing ...
can anyone help me with an example of previous solved bug ... from its issue to
patch submission.
thank you !! ___
Tutor maillist - T
The best I have found still has some cereal in it- lots of flakes and
nuts. Anyone got some ideas on playing mp3 files in a windows machine?
--
-Shaboom.
Kirk Bailey
CEO, Freehold Marketing LLC
http://www.OneBuckHosting.com/
Fnord!
___
T
On Sat, Dec 22, 2012 at 9:53 PM, Albert-Jan Roskam wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Is the code below the only/shortest way to match unicode characters? I
> would like to match whatever is defined as a character in the unicode
> reference database. So letters in the broadest sense of the word, but not
> digits,
On 12/22/2012 05:38 PM, Farrukh Ali wrote:
> Hi, i am using ActivePython 2.7.2.5, and windows 8 professional.
> well the original ex3.py is:
> print "I will now count my chickens:"
> print "Hens", 25 + 30 / 6
> print "Roosters", 100 - 25 * 3 % 4
> print "Now I will count the eggs:"
> print 3 + 2 +
Hi, i am using ActivePython 2.7.2.5, and windows 8 professional.
well the original ex3.py is:
print "I will now count my chickens:"
print "Hens", 25 + 30 / 6
print "Roosters", 100 - 25 * 3 % 4
print "Now I will count the eggs:"
print 3 + 2 + 1 - 5 + 4 % 2 - 1 / 4 + 6
print "Is it true that 3 + 2 <
On 12/22/2012 04:02 PM, Farrukh Ali wrote:
> Hi Tutor,
>
> I am new to python, and a novice in the world of programming, I am learning
> python from learnpythonthehardway, and now a little bit confused in exercise
> 3, where the author of the book wants us to rewrite the ex3.py by saying
> Rewri
Hi Tutor,
I am new to python, and a novice in the world of programming, I am learning
python from learnpythonthehardway, and now a little bit confused in exercise 3,
where the author of the book wants us to rewrite the ex3.py by saying
Rewrite ex3.py to use floating point numbers so it’s more a
Hi,
Is the code below the only/shortest way to match unicode characters? I would
like to match whatever is defined as a character in the unicode reference
database. So letters in the broadest sense of the word, but not digits,
underscore or whitespace. Until just now, I was convinced that the r
On 22 December 2012 01:34, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On 18/12/12 01:36, Oscar Benjamin wrote:
>
>> I think it's unfortunate that Python's int() function combines two
>> distinct behaviours in this way. In different situations int() is used
>> to:
>> 1) Coerce an object of some type other than int i
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