On 03Jun2015 22:37, richard kappler wrote:
Figured out the string delimiters problem, thanks for all the help. Now
I've run into another.
I've used the re.finditer that I think it was Peter suggested. So I have:
for line in file:
s = line
t = [m.start() for m in re.findit
Figured out the string delimiters problem, thanks for all the help. Now
I've run into another.
I've used the re.finditer that I think it was Peter suggested. So I have:
for line in file:
s = line
t = [m.start() for m in re.finditer(r"]", s)]
q = len(t)
which w
On 03Jun2015 17:35, richard kappler wrote:
Perhaps the better way for me to have asked this question would have been:
How can I find the location within a string of every instance of a
character such as ']'?
With the str.find method!
s = 'a]b]c'
pos = s.find(']')
while pos >= 0:
print(
On 03Jun2015 14:16, Alex Kleider wrote:
On 2015-06-03 12:53, Alan Gauld wrote:
...
If this is really about parsing dates and times have
you looked at the datetime module and its parsing/formatting
functions (ie strptime/strftime)?
I asssume strftime gets its name from 'string from time.'
What
On 03/06/15 22:16, Alex Kleider wrote:
On 2015-06-03 12:53, Alan Gauld wrote:
...
If this is really about parsing dates and times have
you looked at the datetime module and its parsing/formatting
functions (ie strptime/strftime)?
I asssume strftime gets its name from 'string from time.'
What a
>
>> Resetting execution engine
>> Running
>> C:\Users\cs062x\Desktop\python\projects\PanHandle\PanHandle\PanHandle.py
>> The Python REPL process has exited
>
>
> That's slightly unusual. How are you running this?
>
I am running it with Microsoft Visual Studio Community 2013 using
Python Tools for
On 2015-06-03 15:13, Mark Lawrence wrote:
'f' for format, 'p' for parse, having originally come from plain old
C. More here
https://docs.python.org/3/library/datetime.html#strftime-and-strptime-behavior
So I was wrong about the 'f' as well as having no clue about the 'p'!
Thank you very much
On 03/06/2015 22:16, Alex Kleider wrote:
On 2015-06-03 12:53, Alan Gauld wrote:
...
If this is really about parsing dates and times have
you looked at the datetime module and its parsing/formatting
functions (ie strptime/strftime)?
I asssume strftime gets its name from 'string from time.'
What
richard kappler wrote:
> Perhaps the better way for me to have asked this question would have been:
>
> How can I find the location within a string of every instance of a
> character such as ']'?
>>> import re
>>> s = "alpha]beta]gamma]delta"
>>> [m.start() for m in re.finditer(r"]", s)]
[5, 10,
Perhaps the better way for me to have asked this question would have been:
How can I find the location within a string of every instance of a
character such as ']'?
regards, Richard
On Wed, Jun 3, 2015 at 5:16 PM, Alex Kleider wrote:
> On 2015-06-03 12:53, Alan Gauld wrote:
> ...
>
>> If this
On 2015-06-03 12:53, Alan Gauld wrote:
...
If this is really about parsing dates and times have
you looked at the datetime module and its parsing/formatting
functions (ie strptime/strftime)?
I asssume strftime gets its name from 'string from time.'
What about strptime? How did that get its name
figured that out from your last post, and thank you, now I understand how
that works. I thought I was looking for the entire string, not each
character. That bit all makes sense now.
A descriptor is, for example, for the following part of a string '0032.4'
the descriptor would be weight, so the fo
On 03/06/15 21:13, richard kappler wrote:
I was trying to keep it simple, you'd think by now I'd know better. My
fault and my apology.
It's definitely not all dates and times, the data and character types
vary. This is the output from my log parser script which you helped on
the other day. t
On 03/06/15 21:23, richard kappler wrote:
hold the phone
I have no idea why it worked, would love an explanation, but I changed
my previous test script by eliminating
for tag in ("icdm"):
This loops over the string assigning the characters i,c,d and m to tag
if 'icdm' in line:
This
hold the phone
I have no idea why it worked, would love an explanation, but I changed my
previous test script by eliminating
for tag in ("icdm"):
and changing
if tag in line
to
if 'icdm' in line:
and it works perfectly! It only iterates over the file once, and the else
executes so both t
I was trying to keep it simple, you'd think by now I'd know better. My
fault and my apology.
It's definitely not all dates and times, the data and character types
vary. This is the output from my log parser script which you helped on the
other day. there are essentially two types of line:
Tue Ju
On 03/06/15 17:39, Chris Stinemetz wrote:
I am trying to create a dictionary of lists as I read a file. I
envision it looking like: {key: [float_type],[string_type]}
Thats not a dictionary of lists. You maybe mean:
{key: [[float_type],[string_type]]}
Which is a dictionary of lists of lists?
On 03/06/15 17:49, Eric Grey wrote:
declarations in a script. So I have the name of each file (i.e.,
apple.txt, blue.txt) in a separate "seed file" that I want the script to
read in and treat each line of the "seed file" as the variable I want to
request the FTP GET on.
So something like:
seed
On 03/06/15 20:10, richard kappler wrote:
for formatting a string and adding descriptors:
test = 'datetimepart1part2part3the_rest'
If this is really about parsing dates and times have
you looked at the datetime module and its parsing/formatting
functions (ie strptime/strftime)?
Can I stop us
for formatting a string and adding descriptors:
test = 'datetimepart1part2part3the_rest'
newtest = 'date=' + test[0:4] + ' time=' + test[4:8] + ' part1=' +
test[8:13] + ' part2=' + test[13:18] + ' part3=' + test[18:23] + ' the
rest=' + test[23:]
and while this may be ugly, it does what I want it
I'm fairly new to programming and as a result, Python too. I've been
researching the Tutor archives trying to find a solution to my need,
however, haven't stumbled across the exact example and are now in
information overload. Wondering if I could get some help? I have the need
to perform an FTP
I am trying to create a dictionary of lists as I read a file. I
envision it looking like: {key: [float_type],[string_type]}
For the first item in the list I am trying to add the value to the
existing value where the key matches but I am getting the following
error:
Resetting execution engine
Runn
On 03/06/15 13:57, Ila Kumar wrote:
However, now I am confused about what I need to type into the Command
prompt window (on a 64-bit windows computer, using python 2.7) in order to
convert a folder of data files. Does anyone know the proper code to do this?
You will need to give us a lot more
Laura, that was it! Thank you so much.
However, now I am confused about what I need to type into the Command
prompt window (on a 64-bit windows computer, using python 2.7) in order to
convert a folder of data files. Does anyone know the proper code to do this?
On Tue, Jun 2, 2015 at 4:45 AM, Laur
[ I've taken this discussion back to the tutor list. - Cameron ]
On 01Jun2015 18:14, Sydney Shall wrote:
On 31/05/2015 03:00, Cameron Simpson wrote:
You say that your results are "all rather close, consistent with the sigma
value I have chosen for the spread of my population". I would advocate
On 01/06/15 18:14, Sydney Shall wrote:
Finally, I have one comment for the respected Moderator, if he is not
out on a walk in the highlands in this cold and wet weather.
No, that's on tomorrow's schedule :-)
I have taken the liberty of raising my problem here rather than
elsewhere, because
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