On 11Jun2019 10:35, John Hoeksema wrote:
Summer researcher using Raspbian and Python 3.5.
I'm trying to use a Raspberry Pi 3 B+ to broadcast a message using the
sockets library to other Pis (same model) over their shared ad-hoc network.
All of the Pis can ping the others over the ad hoc network
On 6/13/19 12:19 PM, Peter Otten wrote:
> Tom Hale wrote:
>
>> Hi all,
>>
>> I hope this is the best place to ask (please let me know if there is a
>> more appropriate list):
>>
>> Checking out CPython v3.8.0b1, I'm trying to run:
>>
>>% python Lib/test/test_shutil.py
>
> Are you sure
>
> %
Tom Hale wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I hope this is the best place to ask (please let me know if there is a
> more appropriate list):
>
> Checking out CPython v3.8.0b1, I'm trying to run:
>
>% python Lib/test/test_shutil.py
Are you sure
% python
invokes the 3.8 interpreter?
> I'm getting:
>
Hi all,
I hope this is the best place to ask (please let me know if there is a
more appropriate list):
Checking out CPython v3.8.0b1, I'm trying to run:
% python Lib/test/test_shutil.py
I'm getting:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "Lib/test/test_shutil.py", line 19, in
from
On 6/13/19 2:22 AM, Thomas Güttler wrote:
> Up to now I use this structure:
>
> src/myapp/setup.py
> src/myapp/myapp/real_code.py
>
> Now I want to write a test for a method which is implemented real_code.py.
>
> Where should I write store the file which contains the unittest?
>
> Is there a gu
Up to now I use this structure:
src/myapp/setup.py
src/myapp/myapp/real_code.py
Now I want to write a test for a method which is implemented real_code.py.
Where should I write store the file which contains the unittest?
Is there a guideline for the directory structure of tests?
I know that th