The following announcement is in German.
Despite this we would like to post it here, because many
German speaking Python users read this group/list.
Heute ist der letzte Tag, an dem die ermäßigte Anmeldegebühr
gilt. Ab 1. September wird es teurer.
Anmelden kann man sich hier:
[Bcc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
The first Python 3000 release is out -- Python 3.0a1. Be the first one
on your block to download it!
http://python.org/download/releases/3.0/
Excerpts:
Python 3000 (a.k.a. Py3k, and released as Python 3.0) is a new
version of the language that is incompatible with
Hi,
I'm happy to announce the release of Wing IDE 3.0 beta 2. It is available from
http://wingware.com/wingide/beta
Changes since the previous beta release include:
* Stackless Python 2.4 and 2.5 are now supported
* Python 2.5 for 64-bit Windows is now supported
* Fixed Zope WingDBG so it will
Python really isn't suitable for in-flight controls for various
reasons, and mission critical concerns is a minor one (systems with
Do you know anything about the FAA certification process for flight-
critical systems? I am not an expert on it, but I know it is very
expensive. If I am not
'Good code' is code that works, is bug free, and is readable and
maintainable. Standards need to be followed for coding. Read more...
http://brsx.co.uk/SWtesting/FAQs/FAQs012.asp
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
( Details and abstracts coming to the APL 2007 web page
http://www.sigapl.org/apl2007.html
shortly. In the meantime ... )
Tutorials and workshops
Introduction to APL (Ray Polivka)
OO for APLers, APL for OOers (Dan Baronet)
... others in the works
Presentations
On 8/30/07, mhearne808 wrote:
I'm having a number of problems with the fcntl module.
Read this first: http://linux.die.net/man/2/flock
First of all, if I try this:
file = open(counter.txt,w+)
fcntl.flock(file.fileno(), fcntl.LOCK_NB)
I get this:
Sorry, that last quote-only reply was accidental. :)
On 8/30/07, mhearne808 wrote:
I've been doing some experiments, and here are some specific examples
to try.
[snipped examples]
From these last two experiments I can only conclude that file locking
isn't doing a durned thing.
What's
Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
| On Thu, 30 Aug 2007 17:09:36 +1000, Ben Finney wrote:
|
| [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
|
| What's with the index() function of lists throwing an exception on not
| found?
|
| It's letting you know that the
[EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit :
'Good code' is code that works, is bug free, and is readable and
maintainable. Standards need to be followed for coding. Read more...
http://brsx.co.uk/SWtesting/FAQs/FAQs012.asp
You misstyped your URL and referenced a C++ related document, for Python
its here:
On Fri, 31 Aug 2007 01:15:04 -0400, Roy Smith wrote:
Carl Banks [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Python really isn't suitable for in-flight controls for various
reasons, and mission critical concerns is a minor one (systems with
less underlying complexity tend to have fewer failure modes). But
[EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit :
On Aug 30, 4:28 pm, Ben Finney [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Aug 30, 12:09 am, Ben Finney [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
It's letting you know that the item isn't in the list. There's no
sensible return value from an index function in that
Jeff [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Granted. But what I will be writing really will take a lot of extra
work to get even close to the level of usability needed on the web vs.
a desktop app. And I'll try not to write a crappy GUI ;-)
OK. In the discussion with Chris, one factor that came up is
Carsten Haese car...ys.com wrote:
.. If we start labeling
people, this thread will earn you a label that rhymes with roll.
weird this - maybe a native English speaker can comment -
when I pronounce what fishermen do - it rhymes with roll,
but when I am talking about the thing
Hendrik van Rooyen wrote:
weird this - maybe a native English speaker can comment -
when I pronounce what fishermen do - it rhymes with roll,
but when I am talking about the thing that lives under bridges
and munches goats, the O sound is shorter, and more
towards the back of my mouth.
Senior Position Vacant for www.123greetings.com
Head of Technology
(Kolkata, India)
Responsibilities:
To Scale the website to handle large volumes of user traffic.
To lead the development
Hello!
When I try to import the MySQLdb lib python generates an error:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File pyshell#0, line 1, in module
import MySQLdb
File C:\Python25\lib\site-packages\MySQLdb\__init__.py, line 19,
in module
import _mysql
ImportError: DLL load failed with error
On Aug 30, 7:20 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Alex Martelli) wrote:
Russ [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
...
programs. Any idea how much Python is used for flight control systems
in commercial
transport aircraft or jet fighters?
Hi Alex. I've always enjoyed your Piggies talks at
Google (although
On Aug 30, 11:35 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
I have an object and wish to set an attribute on it which,
unfortunately for me, is read-only.
How can I go about this?
Cheers.
-T
Could you show the object you want to set his attribute?
Until that, it's difficult to answer
On Thu, 30 Aug 2007 22:56:54 -0700, Russ wrote:
Python really isn't suitable for in-flight controls for various
reasons, and mission critical concerns is a minor one (systems with
Do you know anything about the FAA certification process for flight-
critical systems? I am not an expert on
[EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit :
(snip)
I don't think that is the definition used across computer science.
It suddenly dawned on me that what would be best would be a contains()
(or IN syntax for those who can't afford to wait) for lists.
No need to wait:
'a' in ['a', 'b']
True
['a',
IamIan wrote:
Thank you very much! That did it.
In the source XML item tags have rdf:about attributes with the link
to the story, and it was here I planned on grabbing the link and
matching it up with the title child text. After seeing the output of
elmenttree's getiterator() though, it now
Thank you for the help that you are going to give me.
I have a project where in which i want to create a msi file just as
python-package while installing python on the system. Just copying the files to
the user given target directory.
i want to create similar msi file for my project that
bambam a écrit :
Bruno Desthuilliers [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
As a side note, in Python, inheritance ...
... should usually not be used for typing.
:~(
I'm sorry, I don't even know what that means... The code I
have inherited from someone only a little
Russ a écrit :
Pre and post conditions applying to the class ? Now that's an
interesting concept. IIRC, Eiffels pre and post conditions only apply to
methods, and I fail to see how they could apply to a class. But since
you're an expert on the subject, I don't doubt you'll enlighten us ?
I
Russ a écrit :
FWIW, the Eiffel and SPARK Ada folks also brilliantly explained why
one can not hope to write reliable programs without strict static
declarative type-checking.
And they are probably right.
And they are obviously wrong, by empiric experience.
I don't think you understand
On Aug 31, 8:47 am, Erik Max Francis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hendrik van Rooyen wrote:
weird this - maybe a native English speaker can comment -
when I pronounce what fishermen do - it rhymes with roll,
but when I am talking about the thing that lives under bridges
and munches goats, the
On Aug 31, 10:02 am, Russ [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi Alex. I've always enjoyed your Piggies talks at
Google (although I missed he last one because I was out
of town). I'm disappointed to see that you seem to have
taken personal offense from remarks I made to someone else who
attacked me
Paddy wrote:
I say the 'oll' in troll like the 'ol' in frolic, and pronounce roll
and role similarly.
My accent is probably from the East Midlands of the UK, but is not
pronounced.
_Troll_ and _frolic_ aren't pronounced with the same o sound in any
accent I've ever heard of. Which you
Erik Max Francis wrote:
Paddy wrote:
I say the 'oll' in troll like the 'ol' in frolic, and pronounce roll
and role similarly.
My accent is probably from the East Midlands of the UK, but is not
pronounced.
_Troll_ and _frolic_ aren't pronounced with the same o sound in any
accent I've
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Alex Martelli) writes:
Yeah, good question indeed, and I'm asking myself that -- somebody who
posts to this group in order to attack the reliability of the language
the group is about (and appears to be supremely ignorant about its use
in air-traffic control and for
On 2007-08-31, Erik Max Francis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I say the 'oll' in troll like the 'ol' in frolic, and pronounce roll
and role similarly.
My accent is probably from the East Midlands of the UK, but is not
pronounced.
_Troll_ and _frolic_ aren't pronounced with the same o sound in
Michele Simionato [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
http://archive.eiffel.com/doc/manuals/technology/contract/ariane/page...
That paper contains only a good think: a link to the contrarian view
http://home.flash.net/~kennieg/ariane.html#s3.1.5
I like the contrarian article much better than the
Tim Golden wrote:
Erik Max Francis wrote:
Paddy wrote:
I say the 'oll' in troll like the 'ol' in frolic, and pronounce roll
and role similarly.
My accent is probably from the East Midlands of the UK, but is not
pronounced.
_Troll_ and _frolic_ aren't pronounced with the same o sound in
Russ wrote:
I've always wondered... Are the compilers (or interpreters), which take
these programs to machine code, also formally proven correct?
No, they are not formally proven correct (too complicated for that),
but I believe they are certified to a higher level than your typical
Ricardo Aráoz [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
In that case why don't we just 'certify to a higher level' the programs
and get done with this formal proofs? We should remember that the level
of security of a 'System' is the same as the level of security of it's
weakest component, so either we
[Carsten]
.. If we start labeling
people, this thread will earn you a label that rhymes with roll.
[Hendrik]
weird this - maybe a native English speaker can comment -
when I pronounce what fishermen do - it rhymes with roll,
but when I am talking about the thing that lives
fernando [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Could someone post an example on how to register a python function as
a callback in a C function?
If I understand correctly, your C function receives a Python function
(as a function object of type PyObject *), which you need to call from
C. To do that, call
On Thu, 30 Aug 2007 21:33:43 -0700, TheFlyingDutchman wrote
On Aug 30, 9:06 pm, Carsten Haese [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Thu, 30 Aug 2007 20:17:00 -0700, zzbbaadd wrote
Well IN was what I was looking for and would have saved this thread.
However I don't believe IN showed up on the doc
I always bit the bullet and finally just did that.
and here the steps to follow ...
http://plexity.blogspot.com/2006/02/profiling-python-extensions.html
laurent
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hello.
I have pylons 0.96 (SVN) and current SQLAlchemy (0.3.10), and I have bug
that
doesn't exist earlier.
My connection code:
code
import sqlalchemy.mods.threadlocal
from sqlalchemy import DynamicMetaData, objectstore
metadata = DynamicMetaData( case_sensitive = False )
def db_connect( dsn
Adam Kubica a écrit :
Hello.
I have pylons 0.96 (SVN) and current SQLAlchemy (0.3.10), and I have bug
that
doesn't exist earlier.
My connection code:
code
import sqlalchemy.mods.threadlocal
from sqlalchemy import DynamicMetaData, objectstore
metadata = DynamicMetaData(
Hello,
I start my script convert.py simultaneously in any dos-shells several
times. But I get every time the same solidworks instance.
I see in the proccess (task) manager only one solidworks.exe
Therefore I get for all simultaneous conversions the same output file.
I tested the same code with
Thomas Rademacher wrote:
Hello,
I start my script convert.py simultaneously in any dos-shells several
times. But I get every time the same solidworks instance.
I see in the proccess (task) manager only one solidworks.exe
Therefore I get for all simultaneous conversions the same output file.
On Fri, 31 Aug 2007 14:03:48 +0200, Adam Kubica wrote:
Hello.
I have pylons 0.96 (SVN) and current SQLAlchemy (0.3.10), and I have bug
that
doesn't exist earlier.
My connection code:
code
import sqlalchemy.mods.threadlocal
from sqlalchemy import DynamicMetaData, objectstore
I would like to upload a tab-separated file to a Google spreadsheet
from Python. Does anybody
have a recipe handy? TIA,
Michele Simionato
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 2007-08-31, Lawrence D'Oliveiro
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], Neil
Cerutti wrote:
Keeping in mind which came first, isn't it at least as
accurate to attribute this problem to Python's choice of
escape character?
No, it's Microsoft's fault. The use of backslash as
On 2007-08-31, Ricardo Aráoz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Russ wrote:
Yes, thanks for reminding me about that. With SPARK Ada, it is
possible for some real (non-trivial) applications to formally
(i.e., mathematically) *prove* correctness by static analysis.
I doubt that is possible without static
On 31 A ustos, 04:24, Steven Bethard [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sönmez Kartal wrote:
I've had an encoding issue and solved it by
sys.setdefaultencoding('utf-8')...
My first try wasn't successful since setdefaultencoding is not named
when I imported sys module. After, I import sys module, I
Disappointing me extremely, with the generate python function within
Resource Editor, I only get a segment of python code which load
xrc(xml format) file, rather than real python code in which I could
append my own code.
Does that mean RE(Resource Editor) is of little use?
I hope not, maybe the
Neil Hodgson wrote:
Gerardo Herzig:
Hi dudes. Im looking for a python implementation for sending sms to a
cell phone. I was try using some free pages, but i want to use a python.
Do i need a cellphone conected to my machine? Or can i send sms to some
cell via some python library?
Barry OGrady wrote:
He has some wrong ideas. The blacks are victims of the jews as well.
And Jews are the victims of Christians. And Christians are the victims
of Muslims.
Anybody not a victim of anyone else, please raise your hand!
/W
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 8/31/07, Gerardo Herzig [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Well, im not triyng to send a SMS `FROM' a cellphone, im trying to send
a SMS `TO' a cellphone. Here (in Argentina) are several sites who lets
you send a sms for free. You also can receive SMS responses via this page
On Aug 30, 11:55 pm, Alan Isaac [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
code
OK, creating bulleted lists, or tables,
or adding pictures is all straightforward.
How about chart creation (in Ppt 2003)?
I do not see how to do this with Python.
Thanks,
Alan
Alan,
You probably
On Aug 31, 7:49 am, codemania [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Disappointing me extremely, with the generate python function within
Resource Editor, I only get a segment of python code which load
xrc(xml format) file, rather than real python code in which I could
append my own code.
Does that mean
On Aug 31, 12:23 am, Miles [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sorry, that last quote-only reply was accidental. :)
On 8/30/07, mhearne808 wrote:
I've been doing some experiments, and here are some specific examples
to try.
[snipped examples]
From these last two experiments I can only conclude
On 31 Aug, 15:36, Gerardo Herzig [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Neil Hodgson wrote:
This is likely to cost some money similar to sending an SMS from a
'phone.
[...]
Well, im not triyng to send a SMS `FROM' a cellphone, im trying to send
a SMS `TO' a cellphone.
Yes, but he did write similar
Fair enough, but that's a tutorial. It would be foolish to demand that a
tutorial be a complete reference for everything that can be done with a list.
I wasn't demanding anything of the page. I was pointing out how I made
the assumption there was no way to find out if a list has a value
other
On 8/30/07, Carsten Haese [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is the Pythonic way
try:
i = somelist.index(thing)
# Do something with i
except IndexError:
# Do something if thing not found
That is not the Pythonic way. # Do something with i might also raise
an IndexError and they you are
On Fri, 31 Aug 2007 12:53:36 +, Sönmez Kartal wrote:
On 31 A ustos, 04:24, Steven Bethard [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Snmez Kartal wrote:
I've had an encoding issue and solved it by
sys.setdefaultencoding('utf-8')...
My first try wasn't successful since setdefaultencoding is not named
How about chart creation (in Ppt 2003)?
I do not see how to do this with Python.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
You probably need to browse the COM object using PythonWin, which is a
part of the ActiveState distro. You can also use Python's builtin
function, dir, to find out various methods of COM.
On 8/31/07, mhearne808 wrote:
I have a script that will be run from a cron job once a minute. One
of the things this script will do is open a file to stash some
temporary results. I expect that this script will always finish its
work in less than 15 seconds, but I didn't want to depend on
I am a Flash developer (also a Python dev) and I use an editor called
SEPY Actionscript Editor. The latest release version does not support
Flash CS3, so I downloaded the source from subversion, edited it, and
recompiled to get a version that worked with CS3. Right now, in order
to run the
E.D.G. wrote:
dave_w [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
My main Perl program is presently about 3500 lines of code long and 160 KB
in size. So I am not too anxious to translate it into another language.
Apparently, having painted himself into a corner, our warrior
Hi Everyone,
I've created a 'C' dll that is accessed via ctypes library containing
a bunch of functions. I've successfully been able to use the
functions. However, I would like to throw python exceptions from some
of them.
I throw them using: ::PyErr_SetString(::PyExc_RuntimeError,
On 8/31/07, sberry [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
So, how do I create an executable (on Windows)
to install the program so it will run without the aforementioned
framework being installed?
Check out py2exe.
--
Cheers,
Simon B.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
Ben Finney wrote:
Wildemar Wildenburger [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
But what use is there for floats, then? When is it OK to use them?
When one is willing to sacrifice decimal precision for speed of
calculation, and doesn't need the numbers to stay precise. E.g. when
performing millions of
Sjoerd wrote:
Hello!
When I try to import the MySQLdb lib python generates an error:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File pyshell#0, line 1, in module
import MySQLdb
File C:\Python25\lib\site-packages\MySQLdb\__init__.py, line 19,
in module
import _mysql
ImportError:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have an object and wish to set an attribute on it which,
unfortunately for me, is read-only.
How can I go about this?
This seems like a bizarre requirement. Why is the attribute read-only in
the first place? How is the read-only mechanism enforced? Is the object
mhearne808[insert-at-sign-here]gmail[insert-dot-here]com [EMAIL PROTECTED]
writes:
I think I'm still confused.
What Miles tried to tell you is that you should call fcnt.flock from
both PA and PB. In the example you posted, you failed to call it from
PB. No lock call, so no locking happened.
On Aug 31, 8:42 am, Miles [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 8/31/07, mhearne808 wrote:
I have a script that will be run from a cron job once a minute. One
of the things this script will do is open a file to stash some
temporary results. I expect that this script will always finish its
work in
Robert Kern wrote:
Ivan Voras wrote:
Jeffrey Barish wrote:
If you take the difference between two uniformly distributed random
variables, the probability density function forms an isosceles triangle
centered at 0. Take the absolute value of that variable and the pdf is
a
straight line
On Aug 31, 9:52 am, sberry [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am a Flash developer (also a Python dev) and I use an editor called
SEPY Actionscript Editor. The latest release version does not support
Flash CS3, so I downloaded the source from subversion, edited it, and
recompiled to get a version
Hello Thomas,
excel registers its COM objects with REGCLS_SINGLEUSE that means one COM
object is created
per process. In Solidworks it seems that that they register with
REGCLS_MULTIPLEUSE, which means
on process can serve more than one COM object. Hence you have no chance
to get multiple
Gente Inteligente y Distinguida, soy un aficionado y apelo a Ustedes, para
resolver éste problema. Para WebMaster de Google, me solicita instalar o
ejecución de pitón, cómo comprenderán no dispongo de ningún guru de web, por
lo que solicito en la medida de sus posibilidades me ayuden a ejecutar
On 8/31/07, mhearne808 wrote:
Looking at my flock(3) man page, I'm guessing that 35 is the error
code for EWOULDBLOCK. Which system header file am I supposed to look
in to figure that magic number out?
I got the error number by looking at the IOError exception raised when
playing with the
On Aug 31, 6:14 pm, Alexandre Badez [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Aug 30, 11:35 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
I have an object and wish to set an attribute on it which,
unfortunately for me, is read-only.
How can I go about this?
Cheers.
-T
Could you show the object
Thank you for the help that you are going to give me.
I have a project where in which i want to create a msi file just as
python-package while installing python on the system. Just copying the files to
the user given target directory.
i want to create similar msi file for my project that
On 31 Aug, 02:12, Wildemar Wildenburger
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've heard (ok, read) that several times now and I understand the
argument. But what use is there for floats, then? When is it OK to use them?
There are fractions that can be exactly represented by floats that
cannot be exactly
Hi,
I have a string which is constructed like this:
string = Butler's 15\ TV
s = my string goes here %s % string
the single string, unfortunately, gets escaped which is something I
want to avoid because I have to load the data into a database using
the json format and I get an invalid escape
On Aug 31, 8:25 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Aug 31, 9:52 am, sberry [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am a Flash developer (also a Python dev) and I use an editor called
SEPY Actionscript Editor. The latest release version does not support
Flash CS3, so I downloaded the source from
Can anybody point me to a Delaunay triangulation module (for
Win32)? I'm currently using http://flub.stuffwillmade.org/delny/ under Linux,
but I have
been unable to find a build for Windows. I don't have the tools
(or skills) to build libqhull and Pythion extensions on Win32).
I've also found
Like in math where you put letters that represent numbers for place holders
to try to find the answer type complex numbers?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Guys, anybody know if is possible to press a button linked a
javascript function using python?
My Firefox send something like that:
POST /msgs.aspx TOKEN=B8B83BGDBC191B9FE0A0BE1393294FABsig=gpaiOqbp0Nr
%2BoecRLF4FGGDOAao
%3DtoUserId=1331299rawAddedDate=118854fromUserId=23029Action.delete=Send
mmacrobert schrieb:
Hi Everyone,
I've created a 'C' dll that is accessed via ctypes library containing
a bunch of functions. I've successfully been able to use the
functions. However, I would like to throw python exceptions from some
of them.
I throw them using:
Paul Rubin http://[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
...
Hi Alex, I'm a little confused: does Production Systems mean stuff
like the Google search engine, which (as you described further up in
your message) achieves its reliability at least partly by massive
redundancy and failover when something
Michele Simionato [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
...
I would not call that an attack. If you want to see an attack, wait
for
Alex replying to you observations about the low quality of code at
Google! ;)
I'm not going to deny that Google Groups has glitches, particularly in
its user interface
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
...
Why wouldn't the one obvious way be:
def inAnotB(A, B):
inA = set(os.listdir(A))
inBs = set(os.listdir(B))
return inA.difference(inBs)
If you want a set as the result, that's one possibility (although
possibly a bit
On Thu, 2007-08-30 at 20:11 -0500, Lamonte Harris wrote:
Like in math where you put letters that represent numbers for place
holders to try to find the answer type complex numbers?
Is English your native language? I'm having a hard time decoding your
question.
--
Carsten Haese
-- Forwarded message --
From: Lamonte Harris [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: python-list@python.org
Date: Thu, 30 Aug 2007 20:11:14 -0500
Subject: So what exactly is a complex number?
Like in math where you put letters that represent numbers for place
holders to try to find the answer
sturlamolden wrote:
On 31 Aug, 02:12, Wildemar Wildenburger
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've heard (ok, read) that several times now and I understand the
argument. But what use is there for floats, then? When is it OK to use them?
There are fractions that can be exactly represented by floats
On 8/31/07, Carsten Haese [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Thu, 2007-08-30 at 20:11 -0500, Lamonte Harris wrote:
Like in math where you put letters that represent numbers for place
holders to try to find the answer type complex numbers?
Is English your native language? I'm having a hard time
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Aug 31, 6:14 pm, Alexandre Badez [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Aug 30, 11:35 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
I have an object and wish to set an attribute on it which,
unfortunately for me, is read-only.
How can I go about this?
Cheers.
-T
Could
Russ wrote:
I've always wondered... Are the compilers (or interpreters), which take
these programs to machine code, also formally proven correct?
No, they are not formally proven correct (too complicated for that),
but I believe they are certified to a higher level than your typical
On 8/31/07, Steve Holden [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
sturlamolden wrote:
On 31 Aug, 02:12, Wildemar Wildenburger
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've heard (ok, read) that several times now and I understand the
argument. But what use is there for floats, then? When is it OK to use
them?
string = Butler's 15\ TV
s = my string goes here %s % string
Couldn't find anything wrong in
string = Butler's 15\ TV
s = my string goes here %s % string
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
You could write a simple escape function.
def escape(html):
Return the given TEXT with ampersands, quotes and carets
encoded.
return html.replace('', 'amp;').replace('',
'lt;').replace('', 'gt;').replace('', 'quot;').replace(',
'#39;')
--
python has modules for forms and other things... and for it?
Check out httplib and urlib2, it might be useful for you.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I am new to python, and have written a simple program to read a port
via telnet. I would like it to run until any key is pressed. Of
course I wouldn't mind requiring a specific keystroke in the future,
but I would think this is simpler for now.
I have used kbhit() and getch() many times in C,
Let's suppose you get Python for Vista Windows today from
http://www.python.org/download/.
Should you then conclude that the tests:
if platform.system() in ('Windows', 'Microsoft'):
if not (platform.system() in ('Windows', 'Microsoft')):
are now exactly what you should write for that 2.5.1
1 - 100 of 229 matches
Mail list logo