I'm interested in calculating time down to the femtosecond.

2011-01-24 Thread Slie


I found that there was a code submission at NumPy 1.4 but I can not find in the 
documentation search for Date nor have found anything other then that 
discussion of the ability.

Anyone have any ideas suggestions? I just want my program to be able to 
calculate it nothing special.


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Graphing API,

2011-01-05 Thread Slie
Is there a graphing API, someone suggests?
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Re: Graphing API,

2011-01-05 Thread Slie
Thank you, 

I will defiantly look into that.



On Jan 5, 2011, at 4:32 AM, Tim Harig user...@ilthio.net wrote:

 On 2011-01-05, Slie stacks...@gmail.com wrote:
 Is there a graphing API, someone suggests?
 
 You should check the archives, variations of this question get asked
 a lot.
 
 I use GNUplot to do my graphing.  I simply pipe it commands and data
 through the subprocess module; but, there are libraries available for
 interacting with it.
 
 Posts here also indicate that Google offers a web service based API for
 generating graphs.  I have never actually used it; but, the documentation
 seems to be clear enough to get it working without too much trouble.
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Searching Python-list

2011-01-05 Thread Slie
I was wondering if anyone could tell me how to search through the Archives 
otter then manually looking through each month.

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Google Chart API, HTTP POST request format.

2011-01-05 Thread Slie

http://code.google.com/apis/chart/docs/post_requests.html

Google will return a chart in your browser from a URL that you have built. If 
your URL is bigger then 2K characters it will allow you to submit POST requests.

They gives examples of HTML, JavaScript, and PHP POST requests. Is there a way 
I can submit a request with Python? Or possibly submit the HTML, JavaScript or 
PHP using python?(That was a long shot thought). If I do that I would need to 
find out what to do with the .PNG it gives me.

Am I headed in the right direction, is the above paragraph about submitting an 
HTML form from my program even logical?

I have read several examples on python post requests but I'm not sure mine 
needs to be that complicated.


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Re: Arrays

2010-11-25 Thread Slie
I have an exercise im working on. 
I have an array of strings, and I would like to take each peace of the array 
and assign it to a new array so I can iterate over each of those pieces and 
replace the sting I want then put it back together.

I hope that is not too confusing. This is how im trying to solve the problem.

I have a program that takes in integers and it prints out the integers in 
bigger ones made up of asterisks. Im supposed to alter the program so so that 
instead of asterisks it prints them in bigger ones made up of the number itself.

I am given arrays built to look like the numbers,  already. 

- Reply message -
From: Stefan Behnel stefan...@behnel.de
Date: Wed, Nov 24, 2010 2:18 am
Subject: Arrays
To: python-list@python.org

Garland Fulton, 24.11.2010 06:55:
 Is there a way I can define an Array of and unknown size so I can add and
 remove to or from it?

 Are arrays immutable?

Python has lists and tuples as basic data structures. Tuples are completely 
immutable, lists are completely mutable. If you want a container that has a 
fixed size but allows changing items, use a list and avoid calling 
.append() and .remove() to change items in favour of direct item 
assignments. If you want a completely mutable container, use a list and use 
it as you see fit. If you want a stack, a list will do. If you want a 
queue, a deque is a better option.

In any case, if you tell us more about what you actually want to do, we can 
give better suggestions.

Stefan

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Re: another newbie question

2010-11-20 Thread Slie
I really enjoyed it when I put the MacOsx font on my Ubuntu or any other.   

Anssi Saari a...@sci.fi wrote:

Roy Smith r...@panix.com writes:

 I'm still searching for as nice a font to use on Linux.

Envy Code R is a lookalike, so maybe worth considering. I haven't
tried actual Monaco on Linux, but apparently it's possible.
Personally, I use -lfp-gamow-medium-r-*-*-7-*-*-*-*-*-*-* in Linux
(Emacs).
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