On Nov 1, 10:51 am, Christian Meesters [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Thanks everyone,
I knew there must be a snippet somewhere, just couldn't find one! (Just for
the sake of completeness: Order doesn't matter and I hope that with my data
I won't reach the recursion depth limit.)
Christian
My
On Mon, 05 Nov 2007 23:33:16 -0800, awel wrote:
I am trying to to make a script to move all the files that has been
created at today's to another folder but my problem is the date format
that I receive from the 'os.stat [stat.ST_CTIME]' is different from
the one that I receive from the
Hello all,
I'm a student. I wanna know how to do about my project.
I implemented aplication using Ironpython because I have to use .NET library
and c# code but I also have to use this application with another Python
implemented application. My teacher want me to create DLL file of IronPython
On Mon, 05 Nov 2007 23:33:16 -0800, awel wrote:
I am trying to to make a script to move all the files that has been
created at today's to another folder but my problem is the date format
that I receive from the 'os.stat [stat.ST_CTIME]' is different from
the one that I receive from
Hi Matimus and Boris,
Thank you :)
And a further question about vector above rank 1, how can I use it as
the key of dictionary?
For example, if I have list like L=[[1,2,3],[4,5,6,7]],
Then I do L_tuple = tuple(L)
L_tuple = ([1,2,3],[4,5,6,7])
But {L_tuple:'hello'} cause an error?
Best
Thanks to everybody !
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
D.Hering vel.a..mail.com wrote:
[1] Anything/everything that is physical/virtual, or can be conceived
is hierarchical... if the system itself is not random/chaotic. Thats a
lovely revelation I've had... EVERYTHING is hierarchical. If it has
context it has hierarchy.
Do I hear Echoes of What
On Nov 5, 6:05 pm, scripteaze [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[...]
Well, i wasnt sure if you could have a form without a form name, i was
just thinking that it had one but maybe hidden and that i could
retrieve it
I see you've got the answer you wanted already, but just for
completeness: the
Davy wrote:
Hi Matimus and Boris,
Thank you :)
And a further question about vector above rank 1, how can I use it as
the key of dictionary?
For example, if I have list like L=[[1,2,3],[4,5,6,7]],
Then I do L_tuple = tuple(L)
L_tuple = ([1,2,3],[4,5,6,7])
But {L_tuple:'hello'}
Hello,
I want to try something like:
for (a, b, c, d, e, f) in [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]:
When I do that I get an error:
TypeError: unpack non-sequence
My main intention is to state that each of the variables namely a, b,
c, ## can take value from 1 to 9.
How do I go about this ?
Wildemar Wildenburger [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
maybe something like this could help:
def tupleize(non_tuple):
try:
return tuple(tupleize(thing) for thing in non_tuple)
except TypeError:
# non_tuple is not iterable
return non_tuple
Just don't try
On 6 nov, 09:00, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, 05 Nov 2007 23:33:16 -0800, awel wrote:
I am trying to to make a script to move all the files that has been
created at today's to another folder but my problem is the date format
that I receive from the 'os.stat
On Tue, 6 Nov 2007, Boris Borcic wrote:
We know that list cannot be used as key of dictionary.
Yeah, but do we know why ?
I think, because lists are mutable and a key of a dictionary
MUST be unmutable, not to crash the dictionary by accidently
changing one of its keys!
Mike
--
On Nov 6, 3:09 pm, Ant [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 6, 9:59 am, Shriphani [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
...
My main intention is to state that each of the variables namely a, b,
c, ## can take value from 1 to 9.
How do I go about this ?
It sounds like you are after something like:
for
On 11/6/07, Shriphani [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello,
I want to try something like:
for (a, b, c, d, e, f) in [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]:
When I do that I get an error:
TypeError: unpack non-sequence
My main intention is to state that each of the variables namely a, b,
c, ## can
Shriphani wrote:
Hello,
I want to try something like:
for (a, b, c, d, e, f) in [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]:
When I do that I get an error:
TypeError: unpack non-sequence
My main intention is to state that each of the variables namely a, b,
c, ## can take value from 1 to 9.
How
On Nov 6, 9:59 am, Shriphani [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
...
My main intention is to state that each of the variables namely a, b,
c, ## can take value from 1 to 9.
How do I go about this ?
It sounds like you are after something like:
for var in (a, b, c, d, e, f):
assert var in [1, 2, 3, 4,
On Nov 6, 3:58 am, Duncan Booth [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Wildemar Wildenburger [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
maybe something like this could help:
def tupleize(non_tuple):
try:
return tuple(tupleize(thing) for thing in non_tuple)
except TypeError:
# non_tuple
And there may be more complex list(vector like 3 or 4 dimentional data
structure), is there any easy method to tackle this problem?
Any suggestions are welcome!
Best regards,
Davy
On Nov 6, 4:50 pm, Davy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi Matimus and Boris,
Thank you :)
And a further question
On Tue, 06 Nov 2007 01:45:02 -0800, awel wrote:
On 6 nov, 09:00, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, 05 Nov 2007 23:33:16 -0800, awel wrote:
I am trying to to make a script to move all the files that has been
created at today's to another folder but my problem is the
On Nov 6, 4:08 am, Dustan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 6, 3:58 am, Duncan Booth [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Wildemar Wildenburger [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
maybe something like this could help:
def tupleize(non_tuple):
try:
return tuple(tupleize(thing) for thing in
Paul McGuire [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 6, 4:08 am, Dustan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 6, 3:58 am, Duncan Booth [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Wildemar Wildenburger [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
maybe something like this could help:
def tupleize(non_tuple):
try:
Hello,
Recently I'm working on a new data structure written in python: Tree,
by operator overloading. I want it can act as a builtin type, such as
list and dict, but do something like a tree, to make those things need
trees can be more convenient.
For example,
1. to create a Tree, there are
On Tue, 06 Nov 2007 10:46:48 +0100, Wildemar Wildenburger wrote:
Davy wrote:
Hi Matimus and Boris,
Thank you :)
And a further question about vector above rank 1, how can I use it as
the key of dictionary?
For example, if I have list like L=[[1,2,3],[4,5,6,7]], Then I do
You could also index on the repr() of your objects, which
is an immutable str value.
Davy wrote:
And there may be more complex list(vector like 3 or 4 dimentional data
structure), is there any easy method to tackle this problem?
Any suggestions are welcome!
Best regards,
Davy
On Nov
On Tue, 06 Nov 2007 02:35:46 -0800, awel wrote:
In [438]: !touch test.py
In [439]:
datetime.date.fromtimestamp(os.stat('/home/bj/test.py').st_ctime)
Out[439]: datetime.date(2007, 11, 6)
Could you explain a little more because I am new in scripting?
Not really. I showed you the
On 6 nov, 11:27, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 06 Nov 2007 01:45:02 -0800, awel wrote:
On 6 nov, 09:00, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, 05 Nov 2007 23:33:16 -0800, awel wrote:
I am trying to to make a script to move all the files that
Le Mon, 29 Oct 2007 20:39:29 -0700, sandipm a écrit :
seeing posts from students on group. I am curious to know, Do they teach
python in academic courses in universities?
I am teaching assistant for the course
http://www.etudes.ecp.fr/cours/claroline/course/index.php?cid=TI1210
held at
Hi all,
I am curious about whether there is function to fransform pure List to
pure Tuple and pure Tuple to pure List?
For example,
I have list L = [[1,2,3],[4,5,6]]
something list2tuple() will have T=list2tuple(L)=((1,2,3),(4,5,6))
And the tuple2list()
Any suggestions are welcome!
Best
On Nov 6, 11:18 am, Davy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all,
I am curious about whether there is function to fransform pure List to
pure Tuple and pure Tuple to pure List?
For example,
I have list L = [[1,2,3],[4,5,6]]
something list2tuple() will have T=list2tuple(L)=((1,2,3),(4,5,6))
And
Steven D'Aprano [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Not quite, because that will also convert strings to tuples, which may
not be what you want for a general solution.
I take it you didn't actually try the original code then. Converting
strings to tuples is not something it did.
That works for all
Hello,
so far it seems to me as if the only ORM module for Python which
supports composite primary/foreign keys was SQLAlchemy. Which looks a
little bit overbloated for my needs: I just need to be able to
define a logical model (à la UML) in Python and have the ORM connect
to a database
On Nov 6, 4:19 am, Hendrik van Rooyen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
D.Hering vel.a..mail.com wrote:
[1] Anything/everything that is physical/virtual, or can be conceived
is hierarchical... if the system itself is not random/chaotic. Thats a
lovely revelation I've had... EVERYTHING is
Davy wrote:
Hi all,
I am curious about whether there is function to fransform pure List to
pure Tuple and pure Tuple to pure List?
For example,
I have list L = [[1,2,3],[4,5,6]]
something list2tuple() will have T=list2tuple(L)=((1,2,3),(4,5,6))
And the tuple2list()
Any
On Nov 6, 10:19 am, Shriphani [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 6, 3:09 pm, Ant [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 6, 9:59 am, Shriphani [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
...
My main intention is to state that each of the variables namely a, b,
c, ## can take value from 1 to 9.
How do I go about
Shriphani wrote:
On Nov 6, 3:09 pm, Ant [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 6, 9:59 am, Shriphani [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
...
My main intention is to state that each of the variables namely a, b,
c, ## can take value from 1 to 9.
How do I go about this ?
It sounds like you are after something
Wolfgang Keller wrote:
so far it seems to me as if the only ORM module for Python which
supports composite primary/foreign keys was SQLAlchemy. Which looks a
little bit overbloated for my needs: I just need to be able to
define a logical model (à la UML) in Python and have the ORM connect
On 2007-11-05, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
please open this link this is will help you
http://www.55a.net
This one might help as well:
http://www.python.org/
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Roc Zhou wrote:
Hello,
Hello,
This post is too long. The right place for such is
as a python reciepe on ActiveState. BTW, I bet you can
find 3+ equivalents to you Tree type in the recorded
reciepes.
Regards, BB
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Nov 6, 7:10 am, Aaron Watters [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 6, 4:19 am, Hendrik van Rooyen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
D.Hering vel.a..mail.com wrote:
[1] Anything/everything that is physical/virtual, or can be conceived
is hierarchical... if the system itself is not random/chaotic.
Django has a wonderful ORM that can be used separately from the
framework, but it is pretty top-heavy as well. I'm afraid that size
is the price you pay for abstraction. Your business logic code
shrinks, but the supporting libraries grow.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Nov 6, 8:29 am, Jeff [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Django has a wonderful ORM that can be used separately from the
framework, but it is pretty top-heavy as well. I'm afraid that size
is the price you pay for abstraction. Your business logic code
shrinks, but the supporting libraries grow.
But
I would like to display some charts in a Qt application. But all the
docs I find online are rather dusty and talk about Qt3. My application
uses Qt4 however. I ran into PyQwt and matplotlib. But the docs of
matplotlib are horrid and the example in their wiki covers Qt3, and
things look quite
I have a kinda hard question i am trying to build a jigsaw game with
python, i would like to give the option for people to create there own
puzzle piece does anyone know how to accomplish this it is becoming
increasingly difficult for me
--
On Tue, 06 Nov 2007 12:58:02 +0100, Wolfgang Keller [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello,
[snip]
So, is there another ORM module for Python besides SQLAlchemy which
supports composite porimary (and foreign) keys, and maybe also other
more advanced, maybe even some of the PostgreSQL-specific features
I'm reading http://norvig.com/spell-correct.html
and do not understand the expression listed in the subject which is
part of this function:
def train(features):
model = collections.defaultdict(lambda: 1)
for f in features:
model[f] += 1
return model
Per
Hi..
If I wanted to be able to build/test/use parallel python versions, what
would I need to do/set (paths/libs/etc...) and where would I need to place
the 2nd python version, so as not to screw up my initial python dev env.
I'd like to be able to switch back/forth between the different versions
On Nov 6, 8:54 am, metaperl.com [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm readinghttp://norvig.com/spell-correct.html
and do not understand the expression listed in the subject which is
part of this function:
def train(features):
model = collections.defaultdict(lambda: 1)
for f in features:
jay graves wrote:
On Nov 6, 8:29 am, Jeff [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Django has a wonderful ORM that can be used separately from the
framework, but it is pretty top-heavy as well. I'm afraid that size
is the price you pay for abstraction. Your business logic code
shrinks, but the supporting
metaperl.com [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Per http://docs.python.org/lib/defaultdict-examples.html
It seems that there is a default factory which initializes each key to
1. So by the end of train(), each member of the dictionary model will
have value = 1
But why wouldnt he set the value to
Michel Albert wrote:
Has anyone ever successfully used these graphing libraries with PyQt?
Or are there other graphing libraries available? In fact, my needs are
modest. A Line- and Bar-Chart would solve the majority of problems.
Veusz does line charts, and stepped charts (which are almost
On 2007-11-05, Just Another Victim of the Ambient Morality
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Kay Schluehr [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
I'm not sure one needs to start again with a naive approach
just to avoid any parser theory. For a user of a parser it is
quite important
On Tue, 06 Nov 2007 11:25:29 +, Duncan Booth wrote:
Steven D'Aprano [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Not quite, because that will also convert strings to tuples, which may
not be what you want for a general solution.
I take it you didn't actually try the original code then.
No I didn't.
Hello
Can you tell me where i can find some example that's show how to open
an existing oocalc document and get some data from it?
Thanks Luca
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Tue Nov 6 15:46:07 CET 2007, Michel Albert wrote:
[PyQwt and matplotlib]
PyQwt looks much more interesting, but I have trouble installing it.
On my machine it complains that sipconfig has no attribute
'_pkg_config'.
Is the configuration script finding the sipconfig file for SIP 3 or SIP
* bruce (Tue, 6 Nov 2007 07:13:43 -0800)
If I wanted to be able to build/test/use parallel python versions, what
would I need to do/set (paths/libs/etc...)
nothing
and where would I need to place the 2nd python version, so as not to
screw up my initial python dev env.
Anywhere you like
In Gentoo Linux you can select between installed python version using
python-config script.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Nov 2, 6:47 am, Paul McGuire [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Well I'll be darned! All this time, I thought recursive descent
described the recursive behavior of the parser, which pyparsing
definitely has. I never knew that backing up in the face of parse
mismatches was a required part of the
bruce wrote:
Hi..
If I wanted to be able to build/test/use parallel python versions, what
would I need to do/set (paths/libs/etc...) and where would I need to place
the 2nd python version, so as not to screw up my initial python dev env.
I'd like to be able to switch back/forth between
heckle in ruby is inspired by jester for java. I quote:
Heckle is a mutation tester. It modifies your code and runs your tests
to make sure they fail. The idea is that if code can be changed and
your tests don't notice, either that code isn't being covered or it
doesn't do anything.
from
On 11/6/07, rustom [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
heckle in ruby is inspired by jester for java. I quote:
Heckle is a mutation tester. It modifies your code and runs your tests
to make sure they fail. The idea is that if code can be changed and
your tests don't notice, either that code isn't being
On Nov 6, 4:49 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
hi i am looking for pattern in regular expreesion that replaces
anything starting with and betweeen http:// until /
likehttp://www.start.com/startservice/yellow/fdhttp://helo/abcdwill
be replaced as
p/startservice/yellow/ fdp/abcd
What have you
Maybe here: http://www.broffice.org/odfpy1
On 11/6/07, luca72 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello
Can you tell me where i can find some example that's show how to open
an existing oocalc document and get some data from it?
Thanks Luca
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
PyQt and PySDL are AFAIK not much less weight.
They don't use X11. That's a _lot_ less weight.
Do you mean the X11 server or the libraries? The kdrive server should be
fairly small (depending on features). I think it builds from the main xorg
source today?? Isn't that what maemo uses.
I
Hi,
I'm doing something odd with pycairo and friends and I want to see what
commands are coming out of my objects.
Here's some code:
class Box:
def draw()
self.context.set_source_rgb(1, 0, 0)
self.context.rectangle(0, 00, 50, 50)
self.context.fill()
Box.draw() draws a red box, all fine.
Thanks for the useful info ... appreciate your efforts.
On Oct 26, 10:37 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/56cb5b92-10a7-11dc-96d3-000b5df10621.html?n...
Harvard legal expert vows to sue lecturers boycotting Israel
By Jon Boone
Published: June 2 2007 03:00
A top
On Tue, Nov 06, 2007 at 08:49:33AM -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote regarding
regular expressions:
hi i am looking for pattern in regular expreesion that replaces
anything starting with and betweeen http:// until /
like http://www.start.com/startservice/yellow/ fdhttp://helo/abcd will
be
2007/11/6, Donn Ingle [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Hi,
I'm doing something odd with pycairo and friends and I want to see what
commands are coming out of my objects.
Here's some code:
class Box:
def draw()
self.context.set_source_rgb(1, 0, 0)
self.context.rectangle(0, 00, 50, 50)
2007/11/6, Donn [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
import inspect
class Box:
def draw(self):
print hi
return 3
x = Box()
print inspect.getsource(x.draw)
Tried that, but get this error. I did a dir(inspect) in the command env. and
getsource it definitely there...
Traceback (most recent call
On Tue, 06 Nov 2007 19:42:08 +0200, Donn wrote:
Tried that, but get this error. I did a dir(inspect) in the command env. and
getsource it definitely there...
Traceback (most recent call last):
File inspect.py, line 1, in ?
import inspect
File
import inspect
class Box:
def draw(self):
print hi
return 3
x = Box()
print inspect.getsource(x.draw)
Tried that, but get this error. I did a dir(inspect) in the command env. and
getsource it definitely there...
Traceback (most recent call last):
File inspect.py,
On Tue, 06 Nov 2007 19:09:21 +0200, Donn Ingle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I'm doing something odd with pycairo and friends and I want to see what
commands are coming out of my objects.
Here's some code:
class Box:
def draw()
self.context.set_source_rgb(1, 0, 0)
self.context.rectangle(0,
The world have been after Bill Gates for no reason. The richest group
was and remains the Zionist jew Rothschilds family who own HALF the
worlds total wealth through numerous frontmen zionists.
Mikhail Khodorkovsky, whom Russian President Vladimir I Putin put in
jail rose from the Rothschilds
Thanks for the replies -- Python, is there anything it can't do? :D
\d
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Nov 6, 11:07 am, J. Clifford Dyer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, Nov 06, 2007 at 08:49:33AM -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote regarding
regular expressions:
hi i am looking for pattern in regular expreesion that replaces
anything starting with and betweeen http:// until /
On 2007-11-06, Damjan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
PyQt and PySDL are AFAIK not much less weight.
They don't use X11. That's a _lot_ less weight.
Do you mean the X11 server or the libraries?
Both.
--
Grant Edwards grante Yow! Bo Derek ruined
Zionist wrote:
The world have been after Bill Gates for no reason. The richest group
was and remains the Zionist jew Rothschilds family who own HALF the
worlds total wealth through numerous frontmen zionists.
google video and youtube have many videos on the family. You can set
aside part of
For various reasons I need to cache about 8GB of data from disk into core on
application startup.
Building this cache takes nearly 2 hours on modern hardware. I am surprised
to discover that the bottleneck here is CPU.
The reason this is surprising is because I expect something like this to
Rothschilds control half the world's wealth directly and indirectly
using zionist proxies, and loyalty based on the zionist racist cult
History of the Rothschilds part 1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o_u2MaNg-EQ
History of the Rothschilds part 2
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o2cw-0N_Unk
FBI,
jane janet wrote:
I'm a student. I wanna know how to do about my project.
I implemented aplication using Ironpython because I have to use .NET library
and c# code but I also have to use this application with another Python
implemented application. My teacher want me to create DLL file of
On Nov 6, 2007 12:18 PM, Michael Bacarella [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
For various reasons I need to cache about 8GB of data from disk into core on
application startup.
Are you sure? On PC hardware, at least, doing this doesn't make any
guarantee that accessing it actually going to be any
On Nov 6, 12:53 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The world have been after Bill Gates for no reason. The richest group
was and remains the Zionist jew Rothschilds family who own HALF the
worlds total wealth through numerous frontmen zionists.
Everyone should know that the Zionists (among others)
Hi,
We use a script here at work that runs whenever someone logs into
their machine that logs various bits of information to a database. One
of those bits is the CPU's model and speed. While this works in 95% of
the time, we have some fringe cases where the only thing returned is
the processor
On Nov 6, 2007 1:18 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
We use a script here at work that runs whenever someone logs into
their machine that logs various bits of information to a database. One
of those bits is the CPU's model and speed. While this works in 95% of
the time, we have some fringe
On Nov 6, 1:35 pm, Chris Mellon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 6, 2007 1:18 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
We use a script here at work that runs whenever someone logs into
their machine that logs various bits of information to a database. One
of those bits is the CPU's model and
Using bash on Debian Etch.
If word_doc = sys.argv[1] and it's a file name like My\ Word.doc this
function reads My and Word as two separate files unless the second
'%s' is quoted. Took me a lot of trial and error to discover. Is this
the most elegant way to do it? I was using popen originally,
On Nov 6, 2:27 pm, Chris Mellon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 6, 2007 2:12 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 6, 1:35 pm, Chris Mellon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 6, 2007 1:18 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
We use a script here at work that runs whenever someone logs
For various reasons I need to cache about 8GB of data from disk into
core on
application startup.
Are you sure? On PC hardware, at least, doing this doesn't make any
guarantee that accessing it actually going to be any faster. Is just
mmap()ing the file a problem for some reason?
I
* BartlebyScrivener (Tue, 06 Nov 2007 20:32:33 -)
Using bash on Debian Etch.
If word_doc = sys.argv[1] and it's a file name like My\ Word.doc this
function reads My and Word as two separate files unless the second
'%s' is quoted. Took me a lot of trial and error to discover. Is this
En Tue, 06 Nov 2007 17:32:33 -0300, BartlebyScrivener
[EMAIL PROTECTED] escribió:
Using bash on Debian Etch.
If word_doc = sys.argv[1] and it's a file name like My\ Word.doc this
function reads My and Word as two separate files unless the second
'%s' is quoted. Took me a lot of trial and
http://www.linuxhardware.org/features/01/10/09/1514233.shtml
AMD has historically used model numbers that are slightly higher than
the actual clock speed. I have a 2300 that runs at 1.9.
-Jeff
On Nov 6, 2007, at 3:27 PM, Chris Mellon wrote:
On Nov 6, 2007 2:12 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On the problem PCs, both of these methods give me the same information
(i.e. only the processor name). However, if I go to System
Properties and look at the General tab, it lists the CPU name and
processor speed. Does anyone else know of another way to get at this
information?
This
On Nov 6, 2007 2:12 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 6, 1:35 pm, Chris Mellon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 6, 2007 1:18 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
We use a script here at work that runs whenever someone logs into
their machine that logs various bits of
On 2007-11-06, Michael Bacarella [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
And there's no solace in lists either:
$ time python eat800.py
real4m2.796s
user3m57.865s
sys 0m3.638s
$ cat eat800.py
#!/usr/bin/python
import struct
d = []
f = open('/dev/zero')
for i in xrange(1):
Note that you're not doing the same thing at all. You're
pre-allocating the array in the C code, but not in Python (and I don't
think you can). Is there some reason you're growing a 8 gig array 8
bytes at a time?
They spend about the same amount of time in system, but Python spends 4.7x
as
I hope job posting is appropriate on this mailing list. I couldn't find
anything indicating otherwise.
I'm looking for software engineers of all levels to help create a
next-generation spam filtering solution for Abaca Technology. Abaca is located
in San Jose, CA.
The job posting for the
Michael Bacarella [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Very sure. If we hit the disk at all performance drops
unacceptably. The application has low locality of reference so
on-demand caching isn't an option. We get the behavior we want when
we pre-cache; the issue is simply that it takes so long to
Looks like you forgot to import EMR_globals, EMR_main, etc.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
] On Behalf Of barronmo
Sent: Tuesday, November 06, 2007 2:57 PM
To: python-list@python.org
Subject: global name is not defined
I'm getting an error
On Nov 6, 2007 3:42 PM, Michael Bacarella [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Note that you're not doing the same thing at all. You're
pre-allocating the array in the C code, but not in Python (and I don't
think you can). Is there some reason you're growing a 8 gig array 8
bytes at a time?
They
En Tue, 06 Nov 2007 18:57:12 -0300, barronmo [EMAIL PROTECTED] escribió:
I'm getting an error msg I don't understand, global name EMR_globals
is not defined, and could use some help.
I've separated the application I'm building into several modules. One
of the modules holds variables I need
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