On 23Jul2017 19:02, Abdur-Rahmaan Janhangeer wrote:
ah pylint yes, great checker ! *some guys thought of inventing it*
Yes, very handy. Greate for checking for simple logic errors too (variable used
but never bound, missing imports, etc).
Just for folks' interest, I have a shell script call
On 23Jul2017 13:40, Winonah Ojanen wrote:
I also tried the correct command for the mac ox s in terminal shell,
running:
Jims-MacBook-Pro-2:~ Jim$
PYTHONPATH="/Users/Jim/Documents/illustris_python:$PYTHONPATH
export PYTHONPATH
[...]
I did use the pip command and am attempting to add the files
On Sun, Jul 23, 2017 at 07:02:09PM +0400, Abdur-Rahmaan Janhangeer wrote:
> assert(... is liked by some strongly typed programmers
Not just strongly-typed programmers:
http://import-that.dreamwidth.org/676.html
> data encapsulation might be depressing to some migrating coders
"Data encapsulat
On 24/07/17 00:19, Brandon Anderson wrote:
> 2. I’m trying to locate the directory path to where Python3 is located on my
> system, but when I enter
> the following command:
> $ type -a python3
You could also try
$ which python3
> -bash: $: command not found
The $ is the
thanks!
On Sun, Jul 23, 2017 at 5:35 PM, Danny Yoo wrote:
> On Sun, Jul 23, 2017 at 1:24 PM, Michael C
> wrote:
> > class mahschool:
> > def print():
> > print('Say something')
>
>
> By the way, you've chosen a name for your method that's spelled the
> same as the name of the built-
On Sun, Jul 23, 2017 at 09:54:09PM +0530, Deepen Patel wrote:
> ImportError: No module named cryptography.exceptions
>
> Currently, I am using virtual environments and in virtual environment this
> code not run properly.
> previously, I am running code without virtual environments. it works prope
> 2. I’m trying to locate the directory path to where Python3 is located on my
> system, but when I enter
> the following command:
> $ type -a python3
>
> I get:
> -bash: $: command not found
Ah. Do not include the leading "$" in the command that you're typing.
On 07/23/2017 02:42 PM, Michael C wrote:
> never mind, I forgot to put 'self' in the method definition!
class mahschool:
def print(self):
print('Say something')
a = mahschool()
a.print()
Indeed. The error message was clear on this - but not in a way that's
always instructive until
On Sun, Jul 23, 2017 at 1:24 PM, Michael C
wrote:
> class mahschool:
> def print():
> print('Say something')
By the way, you've chosen a name for your method that's spelled the
same as the name of the built-in "print" function. I'd recommend you
choose a different name than "print"
never mind, I forgot to put 'self' in the method definition!
class mahschool:
def print(self):
print('Say something')
a = mahschool()
a.print()
On Sun, Jul 23, 2017 at 1:24 PM, Michael C
wrote:
> class mahschool:
> def print():
> print('Say something')
>
>
> a = mahs
class mahschool:
def print():
print('Say something')
a = mahschool()
a.print()
With this, I get this error:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "test.py", line 8, in
a.print()
TypeError: print() takes 0 positional arguments but 1 was given
What did I do wrong?
Thank
Hello!
1. I have Python3 installed on my 2017 MacBook Pro. I know that it is
successfully installed because, when I enter “Python3’ into my terminal,
I get the following message:
Python 3.6.2 (v3.6.2:5fd33b5926, Jul 16 2017, 20:11:06)
[GCC 4.2.1 (Apple Inc.
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I did use the pip command and am attempting to add the files to my
python path. I used
import sys
sys.path.append("/Users/Jim/Documents/illustris_python")
and that worked. I even checked to make sure the files were there
import sys
pri
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I also tried the correct command for the mac ox s in terminal shell,
running:
Jims-MacBook-Pro-2:~ Jim$
PYTHONPATH="/Users/Jim/Documents/illustris_python:$PYTHONPATH
> export
Hi Deepen,
Without any more information, it looks like you didn't install cryptography
into your virtualenv. How did you install twisted?
Alex
On Sun, Jul 23, 2017 at 12:24 PM, Deepen Patel wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I got error like Import error.
>
> Traceback (most recent call last):
> File "startno
Thanks everybody, i wanted to get some pythonic ideas.
yes forgot that
assert(... is liked by some strongly typed programmers
anInt -> did not not some people liked tha
data encapsulation might be depressing to some migrating coders
ah pylint yes, great checker ! *some guys thought of inventin
The last python issue i'd like to resolve is the OpenCV issue
I just want some nice opencv tutorials apart from the official docs
also, some nice algos if any apart from Haar Cascades with examples.
P.s. This is a 3rd party lib, so, some links is fine !
Abdur-Rahmaan Janhangeer,
Mauritius
abdur
Hi,
I got error like Import error.
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "startnode.py", line 8, in
from twisted.conch import manhole, manhole_ssh
File
"/usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/twisted/conch/manhole_ssh.py", line
14, in
from twisted.conch.ssh import factory, session
Deepen Patel wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I got error like Import error.
>
> Traceback (most recent call last):
> File "startnode.py", line 8, in
> from twisted.conch import manhole, manhole_ssh
> File
> "/usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/twisted/conch/manhole_ssh.py",
> line 14, in
> fro
On 07/23/2017 09:16 AM, Alex Kleider wrote:
> On 2017-07-23 01:06, Anish Tambe wrote:
>>> for line in file:
>>
>> This line is not required as the you have opened your file to 'f'.
>> 'file' is a built-in class. Type -
>> help(file)
>> on the interpreter to know more about it.
>
> This appears to
On 2017-07-23 01:06, Anish Tambe wrote:
for line in file:
This line is not required as the you have opened your file to 'f'.
'file' is a built-in class. Type -
help(file)
on the interpreter to know more about it.
This appears to be true in python2x but not in python3:
alex@X301n3:~$ python3
N6Ghost wrote:
> C:\coderoot\python3\level1>python
> Python 3.6.2 (v3.6.2:5fd33b5, Jul 8 2017, 04:14:34) [MSC v.1900 32 bit
> (Intel)] on win32
> Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>
> /windows 10 x64
>
> new to python, but not really new to programming.
>
>
> for line in file:
This line is not required as the you have opened your file to 'f'.
'file' is a built-in class. Type -
help(file)
on the interpreter to know more about it.
> for line in f:
> print(line.rstripe())
> f.close()
Are you sure that you need to close the file aft
On 23/07/17 07:26, N6Ghost wrote:
>
> f = open("C:\coderoot\python3\level1\inputfile.txt", 'r')
> for line in file:
Note that you have no variable called 'file'.
So this line doesn't make sense.
> for line in f:
> print(line.rstripe())
This bit will work if you omit the line abov
C:\coderoot\python3\level1>python
Python 3.6.2 (v3.6.2:5fd33b5, Jul 8 2017, 04:14:34) [MSC v.1900 32 bit
(Intel)] on win32
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
/windows 10 x64
new to python, but not really new to programming.
going through the beginners docs
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