Re: Perl to Python conversion
2009/12/25 Aahz a...@pythoncraft.com: I'd write an imperial to metric converter in Python ;-) Should be possible to use unum (http://bit.ly/4X0PwR) to do the conversions. The SI units are already defined - adding in any necessary imperial units should be easy enough. -- Cheers, Simon B. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Re: Perl to Python conversion
In article 87zl5rnayz@crunchbang.belkin, Martin =?utf-8?B?U2Now7bDtm4=?= martin.sch...@gmail.com wrote: Problem: I have come across a small open source application that I find quite useful. It does have one major flaw though. Its output is in imperial units. Converting isn't a big deal for occasional use but if I start to use this stuff on a regular basis... I'd write an imperial to metric converter in Python ;-) -- Aahz (a...@pythoncraft.com) * http://www.pythoncraft.com/ Looking back over the years, after I learned Python I realized that I never really had enjoyed programming before. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Re: Perl to Python conversion
On Dec 13, 5:23 pm, martin.sch...@gmail.com (Martin Schöön) wrote: r0g aioe@technicalbloke.com writes: You'll probably find the majority of code in a GUI app is boring window handling stuff [...] Also, they probably didn't make it with QT which is fairly different from GTK. Tk is what they used. Well, on the surface then, it would seem that it might be easier to just use Python's included Tkinter for the GUI bits. However, PyQt is widely regarded as a nicer and more capable package. John -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Re: Perl to Python conversion
Martin Schöön wrote: Thanks all, great response! A little more background: I am not a programmer but I have done some programming in the past. This was all humble number crunching as part of my PhD project using FORTRAN. I also did some Rocky Mountain Basic coding for programs manipulating measurement instruments. And I did a minute amount of Turbo Pascal code, too little and too many years ago to count. Since then I have done some stuff in Matlab and (very basic) UNIX scripts. Does HTML, css and LaTeX count? So why Python? Well, I thought it would be fun to learn a little about GUI programming and a friend who is a real programmer recommended Python + PyQt. I have bought some books and lurked here for about a year but haven't managed to get going yet. I figured I needed some kind of project for that and now I have two. Learning Python and PyQt is spare time killer/brain teaser activity. The thermal contact conductance stuff is something that come in handy at work. So here is what I plan to do based on your kind advice and some thinking of my own. 1) I fix the unit thing by adding a conversion to the results presentation routine. 2) Recreating the functionality of the program in Python and PyQt will be a 'long term' educational project at home. There are various bits and pieces there: data base handling, GUI design, math, logic, error/exception handling... We have long, dark winters where I live :-) All the best, /Martin I'd recommend you start from scratch and refer to the perl version if and when you need to. You'll probably find the majority of code in a GUI app is boring window handling stuff rather, often this is machine generated (by progs like glade) rather than hand coded anyway so it will probably provide little insight. Also, they probably didn't make it with QT which is fairly different from GTK. It's like the housing industry, demolition + newbuild is almost always cheaper than renovation. If you can spare yourself the ordeal of learning perl and the chore of interpreting somebody else's perl then grasp it with both hands! Good luck. I'm sure you'll be fine - python is a deeply pleasing language to work in :) Roger. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Re: Perl to Python conversion
r0g aioe@technicalbloke.com writes: I'd recommend you start from scratch and refer to the perl version if and when you need to. That is my plan. You'll probably find the majority of code in a GUI app is boring window handling stuff rather, often this is machine generated (by progs like glade) rather than hand coded anyway so it will probably provide little insight. Also, they probably didn't make it with QT which is fairly different from GTK. Tk is what they used. /Martin -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Re: Perl to Python conversion
On 09-Dec-09 15:33 PM, Martin Schöön wrote: First off: I am new here and this is my first post after lurking for quite some time. Second off: I don't know much Python---yet. Problem: I have come across a small open source application that I find quite useful. It does have one major flaw though. Its output is in imperial units. Converting isn't a big deal for occasional use but if I start to use this stuff on a regular basis... So I down-loaded the source code and found this thing is written in Perl. Should I learn enough Perl to add the conversion? Probably but this may be a nice excuse to get my Python education going and if I do I might as well re-do the user interface. If I do re-write this thing in Python I might need to learn both Perl and Python... Hence, are there any Perl to Python converters? So far I have only found bridgekeeper which really is (was?) consultancy. Apart from that I only find people recommending a manual re-write. Any thoughts/recommendations? TIA, /Martin Martin, If you convert the Perl, you continue the other fellow's errors. If you do it yourself, you'll be able to make your own - there should be fewer of them. Google: unit conversion python you'll have lots of offers. Colin W. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Re: Perl to Python conversion
martin.sch...@gmail.com (Martin Schöön) writes: First off: I am new here and this is my first post after lurking for quite some time. Hi. Second off: I don't know much Python---yet. It's not a very big language. If you have experience programming in other languages, you can probably pick it up in a day or two. Problem: I have come across a small open source application that I find quite useful. It does have one major flaw though. Its output is in imperial units. Converting isn't a big deal for occasional use but if I start to use this stuff on a regular basis... So I down-loaded the source code and found this thing is written in Perl. Should I learn enough Perl to add the conversion? Probably but this may be a nice excuse to get my Python education going and if I do I might as well re-do the user interface. Well you can always call it from Python via subprocess (which basically wraps a shell and has fancy ways putting data in and extracting data out). If I do re-write this thing in Python I might need to learn both Perl and Python... You'll need to know one of them rather well and enough of the other to get by. It's probably easier to know more Perl than Python since Perl is a lot more expressive than Python (in the TMTOWTDI sense). Frankly I learned Perl before Python and find it rather easy to go between the two. YMMV. Hence, are there any Perl to Python converters? So far I have only found bridgekeeper which really is (was?) consultancy. Apart from that I only find people recommending a manual re-write. It depends where the two languages vary from one another. If the script your translating uses basic types or even simple classes and typical control structures and operations then translating from one to the other is a simple matter of copy-pasting the code and translating the syntax and small bits of grammar. However, in areas where there are high variations; you'll probably want to stay away from it. Perl has a lot of freedom to manipulate references and the programmer can modify the language to suit their needs. So just be careful of code that uses these features as they are difficult to translate into Python. Any thoughts/recommendations? Depends: - If you needed it done yesterday to get some work done, wrap the Perl script in a subprocess and buy yourself some time to think it over. - If your purpose is to learn Python, then start from scratch. Use the Perl as a guide if there are any maths or algorithms you are unsure about. - If you're just hacking around to learn stuff, learn a little of both. It will make you smarter if it doesn't confuse the heck out of you and make you quit before you finish. ;) TIA, /Martin HTH -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Re: Perl to Python conversion
Thanks all, great response! A little more background: I am not a programmer but I have done some programming in the past. This was all humble number crunching as part of my PhD project using FORTRAN. I also did some Rocky Mountain Basic coding for programs manipulating measurement instruments. And I did a minute amount of Turbo Pascal code, too little and too many years ago to count. Since then I have done some stuff in Matlab and (very basic) UNIX scripts. Does HTML, css and LaTeX count? So why Python? Well, I thought it would be fun to learn a little about GUI programming and a friend who is a real programmer recommended Python + PyQt. I have bought some books and lurked here for about a year but haven't managed to get going yet. I figured I needed some kind of project for that and now I have two. Learning Python and PyQt is spare time killer/brain teaser activity. The thermal contact conductance stuff is something that come in handy at work. So here is what I plan to do based on your kind advice and some thinking of my own. 1) I fix the unit thing by adding a conversion to the results presentation routine. 2) Recreating the functionality of the program in Python and PyQt will be a 'long term' educational project at home. There are various bits and pieces there: data base handling, GUI design, math, logic, error/exception handling... We have long, dark winters where I live :-) All the best, /Martin -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Re: Perl to Python conversion
Python and Perl often have different design idioms - learning to write *well* in a language involves understanding those idioms, and being able to translate between languages involves understanding the source language well enough to understand the intent of the program's code (even if its poorly written), and understanding the target language well enough to translate the intent into a design fitting the language. Perl and Python have enough syntactic similarities that you could, if you wanted, just translate the program verbatim. Overall, I would recommend adding your imperial-metric functionality to the Perl code for now, and on your free time work on translating to Python, so you don't feel rushed to get it finished. You will probably come to understand the Perl code better after having worked with it and been involved in a hands-on way with it. Likewise, you will become even more familiar with it and with Python as you learn how to translate the application. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Re: Perl to Python conversion
On Dec 9, 1:33 pm, martin.sch...@gmail.com (Martin Schöön) wrote: First off: I am new here and this is my first post after lurking for quite some time. Second off: I don't know much Python---yet. Problem: I have come across a small open source application that I find quite useful. It does have one major flaw though. Its output is in imperial units. Converting isn't a big deal for occasional use but if I start to use this stuff on a regular basis... So I down-loaded the source code and found this thing is written in Perl. Should I learn enough Perl to add the conversion? Probably but this may be a nice excuse to get my Python education going and if I do I might as well re-do the user interface. If I do re-write this thing in Python I might need to learn both Perl and Python... Hence, are there any Perl to Python converters? So far I have only found bridgekeeper which really is (was?) consultancy. Apart from that I only find people recommending a manual re-write. Any thoughts/recommendations? TIA, /Martin Martin, A full answer will depend a lot on several different factors, including the length of the Perl code, what style it was written in (there seem to be uncountably many possibilities), your experience with languages in general, and with that style in particular. In general, though, if your primary purpose is to learn Python and ending up with a useful tool is secondary, I'd recommend rewriting the tool from scratch, possibly keeping the Perl source handy. If the existing tool is command-line based, you might also be able to write a short script through which you can pipe the output of the original program to handle the conversion. Intchanter Daniel Fackrell -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Re: Perl to Python conversion
Martin Schöön wrote: Hence, are there any Perl to Python converters? So far I have only found bridgekeeper which really is (was?) consultancy. Apart from that I only find people recommending a manual re-write. Any thoughts/recommendations? Voice of almost no experience. I once ran a fortran programme through a fortran to c converter and when I saw the result I ran away screaming - it did not look very human friendly. -- http://www.petezilla.co.uk -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list