Changes:
Web
- Message headers are case-insensitive.
- Implement the parameter HTTP-Date as of specified in the RFC.
- Fix the format of the Date header in the response.
- Implement the headers Last-Modified and If-Modified-Since.
- Fix the HEAD method: don't return any entity, only
Scott David Daniels [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Remi Villatel wrote:
Tim Hochberg wrote:
I am currently at 39 bytes following the requirements and the
principle given above (my module passes the test). Anyone able to
beat that?
Wow! It'll be interesting
On Tue, 27 Dec 2005 07:40:12 +, DIBS wrote:
I'm new to Python and I don't understand what I'm doing wrong.
I'm running windows xp.
In the command line window, I type:
Python Sudoku.py
and I get the response
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
If anyone cane help me I'd be very
David Murmann wrote:
so this is where the problem has to be, but i am still not sure what to do
about this. is this a problem with my configuration, with my build or
with python?
it's a python bug, and it has been introduced relatively recently. iirc,
there has been some recent tweaks to the
On Mon, 26 Dec 2005 20:56:17 -0800, homepricemaps wrote:
sorry for asking such beginner questions but i tried this and nothing
wrote to my text file
for food, price, store in bs(food, price, store):
out = open(test.txt, 'a')
out.write (food + price + store)
Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
On 26 Dec 2005 21:39:11 -0800, Mondal [EMAIL PROTECTED] declaimed
the following in comp.lang.python:
c=MySQLdb.Connect(host='localhost',user='root',passwd='',db='shop',port=3306)
So what is that - doing in the port number... So far as I know,
Paul McGuire [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
snip
Well *I'm* certainly looking forward to learning some new tricks! My
(non-cheat) version is a comparatively-portly 245, and no alternatives are
popping into my head at the moment!
-- Paul
down to 2 lines, 229
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
Please post the *full* traceback of the error, not just the last
description.
For example, something like this:
x = x+*9
File stdin, line 1
x = x+*9
^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
Just SyntaxError on its own is not enough to tell what is going
Guido at Google: a message in THE public forum c.l.p.
A confirmation by Martellibot, that Guido is IN FACT sitting 15m
distant from him; and everybody in Python knows where Martellibot has
his desk.
Can it get more official than this?
yeah:
a confirmation by Greg Stein @ Google within slashdot,
Sebastjan Trepca wrote:
I have a question about image processing. We have a website which will
process a lot of images a day.It will be running Apache(worker) with
mod_python. My question is what should we use for processing. If we
use PIL the processing will be done with the same process
Gerard Flanagan wrote:
Pseudo-XPath support for ElementTree with the emphasis on 'Pseudo'.
http://gflanagan.net/site/python/pagliacci/ElementFilter.html
It's an approach suggested by the Specification Pattern
eg. http://www.martinfowler.com/apsupp/spec.pdf
Not tested beyond what
Scott David Daniels wrote:
I definitively need a new algorythm. g
And I am sadly stuck at 169. Not even spitting distance from 149 (which
sounds like a non-cheat version).
Throw it away and start again with a fresh (clean) solution. That's what I
did when I'd reached the limit of nested
Paul McGuire wrote:
Paul McGuire [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
snip
Well *I'm* certainly looking forward to learning some new tricks! My
(non-cheat) version is a comparatively-portly 245, and no alternatives are
popping into my head at the moment!
-- Paul
python sudoku.py
File stdin, line 1
python sudoku.py
^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
Thanks for your help.
The above is the extact message.
DIBS
Steven D'Aprano [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Tue, 27 Dec 2005 07:40:12 +,
Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
cut
So I guess you volunteer http://www.python.org/psf/volunteer.html ?
--
mph
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Shane Hathaway [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
I'm down to 133 characters (counted according to 'wc -c') on a single
line. It contains about 11 whitespace characters (depending on what you
consider whitespace.) It's way too tricky for my taste, but it's fun to
play
DIBS [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
python sudoku.py
File stdin, line 1
python sudoku.py
^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
Thanks for your help.
The above is the extact message.
that looks like the Python interpreter window, not the Windows command-
line window.
Here's my solution
_unicodeRe = re.compile((\\\u[\da-f]{4}))
def unisub(mo):
return unichr(int(mo.group(1)[2:],16))
unicodeStrFromNetwork = '\u5927'
unicodeStrNative = _unicodeRe(unisub, unicodeStrFromNetwork)
But I think there must be a more straightforward way to do it.
--
Here's my solution
_unicodeRe = re.compile((\\\u[\da-f]{4}))
def unisub(mo):
return unichr(int(mo.group(1)[2:],16))
unicodeStrFromNetwork = '\u5927'
unicodeStrNative = _unicodeRe(unisub, unicodeStrFromNetwork)
But I think there must be a more straightforward way to do it.
--
hello over there!
I have the following question:
Suppose I created a class: class Point:
pass
then instanciated an instance: new = Point()
So now how to get the instance new as a string: like ' new ' ; Is
there any built
I now have a version which passes the test suite in 32 bytes evil
grin
-T.
--
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Chris Song wrote:
Here's my solution
_unicodeRe = re.compile((\\\u[\da-f]{4}))
def unisub(mo):
return unichr(int(mo.group(1)[2:],16))
unicodeStrFromNetwork = '\u5927'
unicodeStrNative = _unicodeRe(unisub, unicodeStrFromNetwork)
But I think there must be a more straightforward
Chris == Chris Song [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Here's my solution
_unicodeRe = re.compile((\\\u[\da-f]{4}))
def unisub(mo):
return unichr(int(mo.group(1)[2:],16))
unicodeStrFromNetwork = '\u5927'
unicodeStrNative = _unicodeRe(unisub, unicodeStrFromNetwork)
How about unicodeStrNative
Ganesan Rajagopal wrote:
unicodeStrFromNetwork = '\u5927'
unicodeStrNative = _unicodeRe(unisub, unicodeStrFromNetwork)
How about unicodeStrNative = eval(u'%s' % (unicodeStrFromNetwork,))
unicodeStrFromNetwork = ' + str(__import__('os').system('really bad idea')) +
'
/F
--
BartlebyScrivener wrote:
What you need to do is include the following line in autoexec.bat:
set .py=c:\python24\python.exe
Whatever works for you. I don't have that command in my autoexec.bat
file and my python scripts execute from any location because the
directory they are stored in is in
Peter Hansen wrote:
BartlebyScrivener wrote:
What you need to do is include the following line in autoexec.bat:
set .py=c:\python24\python.exe
Whatever works for you. I don't have that command in my autoexec.bat
file and my python scripts execute from any location because the
directory they are
Because embedding KHTML means that you have a GUI application that runs
on a special operation system.
But what we propose is that you can write a web application in the same
way like your GUI application and it appears like a normal GUI. Web
application means in these case that you have a
Fredrik == Fredrik Lundh [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Ganesan Rajagopal wrote:
unicodeStrFromNetwork = '\u5927'
unicodeStrNative = _unicodeRe(unisub, unicodeStrFromNetwork)
How about unicodeStrNative = eval(u'%s' % (unicodeStrFromNetwork,))
unicodeStrFromNetwork = ' +
Tim Roberts wrote:
Mark Carter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What you need to do is include the following line in autoexec.bat:
set .py=c:\python24\python.exe
This will achieve the desired result. I'm suprised more people don't use it.
They don't use it, because it doesn't do anything. I'd be
Ciao, Shane Hathaway! Che stavi dicendo?
I'm down to 133 characters (counted according to 'wc -c') on a single
line. It contains about 11 whitespace characters (depending on what you
consider whitespace.)
$ wc -c seven_seg.py
137 seven_seg.py
$ sed 's/ //g' seven_seg.py|wc -c
120
(yeah, too
novice schrieb:
class Point:
def _func_that_we_want_(self):
return ...
return self.__class__.__name__
http://docs.python.org/ref/types.html#l2h-109
--
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Hello all,
I know how to exclude 1 charecter from a compiled sequence of the re
module- '[^a]', but if I want to exclude a word or a sequence as one
unit (not as separate charecters) to be checked how do I do that?
I tried re.compile('[^(abc)]')
... or re.compile('[^a][^b][^c]')
... or
Hi,
I've posted this patch on Source forge :
http://sourceforge.net/tracker/index.php?func=detailaid=1391204group_id=5470atid=305470
If you want to update a dictionary with another one, you can simply use
update :
a = dict(a=1,c=3)
b = dict(a=0,b=2)
a.update(b)
assert a == dict(a=0,b=2,c=3)
I am using libxml2dom but having problem when parsing. It gives me the
following error:
File exlibxml2dom.py, line 4, in ?
document = libxml2dom.parse(moc.xml)
File /usr/lib/python2.2/site-packages/libxml2dom/__init__.py, line
472, in parse
return parseFile(stream_or_string, html)
ankit [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am using libxml2dom but having problem when parsing. It gives me the
following error:
File exlibxml2dom.py, line 4, in ?
document = libxml2dom.parse(moc.xml)
File /usr/lib/python2.2/site-packages/libxml2dom/__init__.py, line
472, in parse
return
A good idea... but I would prefer it being abstracted from Zope...
--
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Paul McGuire wrote:
Shane Hathaway [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
I'm down to 133 characters (counted according to 'wc -c') on a single
line. It contains about 11 whitespace characters (depending on what you
consider whitespace.) It's way too tricky for my taste,
Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
[ panic, fear, worry ]
What's wrong with just saying Congratulations! ? First thing I thought was
ooh, maybe Guido will be able to work on P3K there - after all that would
benefit Google *and* everyone else :-)
(Especially if he uses PyPy to experiment and play in ... :)
Hi Sybren,
the idea of pyhtmlgui is that you can develop a web application the
same way like a standard gui application. So what you get is a widget
tree (buttons, forms, title bars, etc.) on the server side and a gui on
the client side. The server in our case would be something like Apache
or
Yes, there is a clear winner : python zope = 3.950.000
Pierre
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
28tommy wrote:
I know how to exclude 1 charecter from a compiled sequence of the re
module- '[^a]', but if I want to exclude a word or a sequence as one
unit (not as separate charecters) to be checked how do I do that?
I tried re.compile('[^(abc)]')
... or re.compile('[^a][^b][^c]')
On Tue, 27 Dec 2005 02:42:18 -0800, novice wrote:
hello over there!
I have the following question:
Suppose I created a class: class Point:
pass
then instanciated an instance: new = Point()
So now how to get the
Tim Hochberg wrote:
Paul McGuire wrote:
Shane Hathaway [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
I'm down to 133 characters (counted according to 'wc -c') on a single
line. It contains about 11 whitespace characters (depending on what you
consider whitespace.) It's way too
I heard that you can use .ui files with python or something of the likes.
Could anyone help me with telling me how to do this?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Why don't you use pickle instead of directly writing to the file yourself?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Martijn Brouwer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
...
I read this one, which was the reason that I tried os.close instead of
sys.stdXXX.close(). But I would like to know why it does not close a
file discriptor is I call its close method().
They're special. I suppose
Tim Hochberg wrote:
This is interesting. I have a six line solution that is 133 characters
long. I use no long integers, which is what's interesting; two
distinct solutions with the same length. I played with long integers
for a bit, and I can see how one could use a single long integer, but
On Tuesday 27 December 2005 5:10 pm, Siraj Kutlusan wrote:
I heard that you can use .ui files with python or something of the likes.
Could anyone help me with telling me how to do this?
You can either convert the .ui file to Python code using pyuic or you can load
the .ui file directly using
Shane Hathaway wrote:
Tim Hochberg wrote:
Paul McGuire wrote:
Shane Hathaway [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
I'm down to 133 characters (counted according to 'wc -c') on a single
line. It contains about 11 whitespace characters (depending on what you
consider
That is part of what I was asking but I was also hoping to hear the
common wisdom so to speak. When I posted I had considered the idea for
a bit and the situations people have mentioned were similar to the
scenario I came up with as a good time to break such a rule. My
hypothetical situation was
On Tue, 27 Dec 2005 09:32:18 GMT
DIBS [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
python sudoku.py
File stdin, line 1
python sudoku.py
^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
Thanks for your help.
The above is the extact message.
Based on the prompt, I'd say you tried to type this
Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
I don't see anything with 324 in there ? What do you mean ?
A direct copy from about ten lines above.
c=MySQLdb.Connect(host='localhost',user='root',passwd='',db='shop',port=3306)
330 minus 6 equals 324
except that the - you're seeing is a soft hyphen, so most
Gekitsuu wrote:
That is part of what I was asking but I was also hoping to hear the
common wisdom so to speak. When I posted I had considered the idea for
a bit and the situations people have mentioned were similar to the
scenario I came up with as a good time to break such a rule. My
So, is an ugly short one a candidate?
i managed in 199 bytes :)
i'll send it in anyway
ciao
http://gumuz.looze.net/
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
When you guys say 127~150 characters, did you guys mean usinging test_vectors.py in some way? Or there's no import at all?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 12/25/05, Simon Hengel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
I'm envisioning lots of convoluted one-liners which
are more suitable to a different P-language... :-)
I feel that python is more beautiful and readable, even if you write
short programs.
..
On 27 Dec 2005 10:02:17 -0800, Gekitsuu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
My
hypothetical situation was as follows. I'm writing a new generic SQL
module and I want to make it so I only call the appropriate module for
the type of SQL server I'm talking to. Then it would make sense to
load, for
py pan wrote:
When you guys say 127~150 characters, did you guys mean
usinging test_vectors.py in some way? Or there's no import at all?
No import at all. The shortest solution reported so far is 131
characters. Getting down to 127 is just a guess as to where the lower
bound is likely to
hi everybody
am trying to modify a particular string from a csv file.
for ex
say i have
compName, ipAddr, MacAddr,Os
sdfsdf ,129.122.12.34 , dsfiasdf, wsfdjhs
hsdfdf , 123.234.34.34, dsfiasdfds, wewr
etc
now if i got to modify one particular line from these three rows ,
yogi now if i got to modify one particular line from these three rows,
yogi how can i do that.
Check out the csv module.
Skip
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
«use bytes; # Larry can take Unicode and shove it up his ass
sideways.
# Perl 5.8.0 causes us to start getting incomprehensible
# errors about UTF-8 all over the place without this.»
From: the source code of WebCollage (1998)
http://www.jwz.org/webcollage/
by Jamie W.
Shane Hathaway wrote:
Paul McGuire wrote:
Paul McGuire [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
snip
Well *I'm* certainly looking forward to learning some new tricks! My
(non-cheat) version is a comparatively-portly 245, and no alternatives are
popping into my head at the
u can use`pyuic` for this ..
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi Marco,
that is one of our goals. But so far we didn't had the time to do it.
PyHtmlGUI is already complete independent from Zope but it still needs
some kind of request handling (another small script). One of our next
steps will be to create a abstraction of the request handling to be
Tim Hochberg wrote:
py pan wrote:
When you guys say 127~150 characters, did you guys mean
usinging test_vectors.py in some way? Or there's no import at all?
No import at all. The shortest solution reported so far is 131
characters. Getting down to 127 is just a guess as to where the
On Tue, 27 Dec 2005 14:02:57 -0700, Tim Hochberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Shane Hathaway wrote:
Paul McGuire wrote:
Also, here's another cheat version. (No, 7seg.com does not exist.)
import urllib2
def seven_seg(x):return urllib2.urlopen('http://7seg.com/'+x).read()
And another one
What did you expect?
There are two interpretations to this Microsoft's JavaScript doc
problem:
1. They didn't do it intentionally.
2. They did it intentionally.
If (1), then it would be a fucking incompetence of inordinate order. If
(2), they would be assholes, even though they have the right
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I now have a version which passes the test suite in 32 bytes evil
grin
-T.
After I have posted the statement, that I have one with 39 bytes, I had
the 32 version five minutes later, but thougt that instead of posting it
I can maybe use it as entry on the contest
[EMAIL PROTECTED] enlightened us with:
the idea of pyhtmlgui is that you can develop a web application the
same way like a standard gui application. So what you get is a
widget tree (buttons, forms, title bars, etc.) on the server side
and a gui on the client side.
Ah, okay - it's the other
hi skip
i really tried with csv module, but i dint get anything, could u plase
tell me the method to modify a particular row, or atleast let me know
how can i delete a row in a csv file.
thanks
yogi
--
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What's a good way to resize pictures so that they work well on html
pages? I have large jpg files. I want the original images to remain as
they are, just resize the displayed image in the browser.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Tim Hochberg wrote:
Note that in principle it's possible to encode the data for how to
display a digit in one byte. Thus it's at least theoretically possible
to condense all of the information about the string into a string that's
10 bytes long. In practice it turns out to be hard to do that,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
i really tried with csv module, but i dint get anything,
http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html#beprecise
could u plase tell me the method to modify a particular row, or
atleast let me know how can i delete a row in a csv file.
the same way as you'd
Hi everybody
Am trying to read a csv file temp.csv, which has the below info,
compName macAddripAddr
opSys
Chris-Dev 0003469F44CC 10.160.24.226 Microsoft
Windows XP
Professional
Shivayogi-Dev 000D5234F44C 10.160.24.136 Microsoft Windows XP
Jean-Paul Calderone wrote:
On Tue, 27 Dec 2005 14:02:57 -0700, Tim Hochberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Shane Hathaway wrote:
Paul McGuire wrote:
Also, here's another cheat version. (No, 7seg.com does not exist.)
import urllib2
def seven_seg(x):return
On the other hand, in terms of documentation quality, technologicalexcellence, responsibility in software, Microsoft in the 21st century
is the holder of human progress when compared to the motherfucking OpenSourcers lying thru their teeth fuckheads. XahThis is not amusing anymore, somebody please
Michael wrote:
Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
[ panic, fear, worry ]
What's wrong with just saying Congratulations! ?
nothing.
But enouth people do this.
I am focusing on weaknesses threats:
http://lazaridis.com/efficiency/graph/analysis.html
First thing I thought was
ooh, maybe Guido will
QOTW: My wild-ass guess is that, same as most other Open Source
communities, we average about one asshole per member. - Tim Peters
http://groups.google.com/group/comp.lang.python/msg/02236cc5ab54fd90?hl=en
[T]he only fundamentally new concept that has been added since Python
1.5.2 is
Martin P. Hellwig wrote:
Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
cut
So I guess you volunteer http://www.python.org/psf/volunteer.html ?
I volunteer and contribute already (with a general validity and python
specific analysis)
A mediator should communicate the findings and suggestion (after
verifying them)
Can stdout and stderr be redirected to the same file? I would like to redirect both to the same file but I'm not sure how to do it. Currenting I'm redirectiong stdout using the following code:
saveout = sys.stdout fsock = open('runtime.log', 'w') sys.stdout = fsock
The problem is that when en
Harald Armin Massa wrote:
[...] - (comments)
Thank you for your comments.
-
TAG.python.evolution.negate.apotheosis
.
--
http://lazaridis.com
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Guido has never been, is not, and will not in the future be, a threat
to Python. End of story.
Unless of course aliens come into play. You never know.
Robert
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I want to build a simple validator for rss2 feeds, that checks basic
structure and reports channels , items , and their attributes etc.
I have been reading Mark Pilgrims articles on xml.com, diveintopython
and someother stuff on sgmllib, sax.handlers and content handlers,
xml.dom.minidom
why is
James Tanis wrote:
On 12/25/05, Simon Hengel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
I'm envisioning lots of convoluted one-liners which
are more suitable to a different P-language... :-)
I feel that python is more beautiful and readable, even if you write
You should redirecte sys.stderr if you want to log error message. saveout = sys.stdout saveerr = sys.stderr fsock = open('runtime.log', 'w') sys.stdout
= sys.stderr = fsock2005/12/28, Randy Kreuziger [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Can stdout and stderr be redirected to the same file? I would like to
rbt wrote:
What's a good way to resize pictures so that they work well on html
pages? I have large jpg files. I want the original images to remain as
they are, just resize the displayed image in the browser.
These two things are mutually exclusive by most people's definition of
work well.
Peter Hansen wrote:
rbt wrote:
What's a good way to resize pictures so that they work well on html
pages? I have large jpg files. I want the original images to remain as
they are, just resize the displayed image in the browser.
These two things are mutually exclusive by most people's
Scott David Daniels wrote:
[--CUT---]
39 bytes... 53 bytes... It gives me the impression to follow a jet
plane with a bike with my 179 bytes!
[--CUT--]
And I am sadly stuck at 169. Not even spitting distance from 149 (which
sounds like a non-cheat version).
Try harder!
Robert Hicks wrote:
Guido has never been, is not, and will not in the future be, a threat
to Python. End of story.
Unless of course aliens come into play. You never know.
Robert
-
TAG.python.evolution.negate.apotheosis.faith
.
--
http://lazaridis.com
--
Remi Villatel wrote:
Scott David Daniels wrote:
[--CUT---]
39 bytes... 53 bytes... It gives me the impression to follow a jet
plane with a bike with my 179 bytes!
[--CUT--]
And I am sadly stuck at 169. Not even spitting distance from 149 (which
sounds like a non-cheat
On Tue, 27 Dec 2005 14:45:16 -0800, muttu2244 wrote:
Hi everybody
Am trying to read a csv file temp.csv, which has the below info,
compName macAddripAddr
opSys
Chris-Dev 0003469F44CC 10.160.24.226 Microsoft
Windows XP Professional
[snip]
Christian Tismer wrote:
[SNIP]
And then help me to setup a different contest about content -- chris
As usual, I expect that actually having some working code measuring
'Pythonic' length (and I'm sure we could get into all sorts of fun
arguments about the exact definition of that) would go a
On 12/27/05, Christian Tismer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
And we are of course implementing algorithms with a twisted goal-setin mind: How to express this the shortest way, not elegantly,just how to shave off one or even two bytes, re-iterating thepossible algorithms again and again, just to find a
Steven D'Aprano [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Why are you calling it a Comma Separated Values file when there are no
commas separating values in it?
It's common usage -- the Python standard library's csv also lets you
parse files where the separator is not a comma -- you just need to have
an
hi all
am searching for a key in a list, am using
Found = 0
for item in list:
if not key == item:
Found = 0
elif key == item:
Found =1
Now based on the Found value i ll manipulate the list.
but whenever the key and item doesnt match it makes Found
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
hi all
am searching for a key in a list, am using
Found = 0
for item in list:
if not key == item:
Found = 0
elif key == item:
Found =1
Now based on the Found value i ll manipulate the list.
but whenever the key
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED], Jarek Zgoda [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Gekitsuu napisal(a):
use strict;
use WWW::Mechanize;
use CGI;
This seems to be the de facto standard in the Perl community but in
python it seems most of the code I look at has import statements
everywhere in
On Tue, 27 Dec 2005 19:24:57 -0800, Alex Martelli wrote:
Steven D'Aprano [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Why are you calling it a Comma Separated Values file when there are no
commas separating values in it?
It's common usage
Well you learn something new every day. Of course I know about
Steven D'Aprano [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 27 Dec 2005 19:24:57 -0800, Alex Martelli wrote:
Steven D'Aprano [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Why are you calling it a Comma Separated Values file when there are no
commas separating values in it?
It's common usage
Well you learn
Does anyone know if the table align property is available in
HTMLgen.Table?
The docs don't show it, but I find it hard to believe that it is not
available.
I want to center the table.
Only the cell align propterty is available
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