Mocker 0.8

2007-11-12 Thread Gustavo Niemeyer
Hello Pythonistas, Mocker 0.8 is now public. Where - http://labix.org/mocker What - Graceful platform for test doubles in Python (mocks, stubs, fakes, and dummies). - Inspiration from real needs, and also from pmock, jmock, pymock, easymock, etc. - Expectation of expressions

Re: Binary search tree

2007-11-12 Thread Michel Albert
On Nov 9, 11:45 pm, Bruno Desthuilliers [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: [EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit : Hi, I have to get list of URLs one by one and to find the URLs that I have more than one time(can't be more than twice). I thought to put them into binary search tree, this way they'll be

Re: Binary search tree

2007-11-12 Thread Martin v. Löwis
Now, I can see that this method has some superfluous data (the `1` that is assigned to the dict). So I suppose this is less memory efficient. But is this slower then? As both implementations use hashes of the URL to access the data. Just asking out of curiosity ;) Performance-wise, there is

Re: python - an eggs...

2007-11-12 Thread thebjorn
On Nov 12, 1:12 am, bruce [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi Diez... I've never used setuptools, (it's not on the box) and i don't have easy_install tools installed... In the link you were given there is a section titled Installing setuptools. I'm reading it aloud for you now... -- bjorn --

Re: email.get_filename() with newline

2007-11-12 Thread Gabriel Genellina
En Fri, 09 Nov 2007 10:46:15 -0300, Thomas Guettler [EMAIL PROTECTED] escribi�: if I use part.get_filename() with the following email part: --_=_NextPart_001_01C81B11.52AB8006 Content-Type: application/vnd.ms-excel;

Re: How to get a set of keys with largest values?

2007-11-12 Thread cokofreedom
On Nov 12, 10:07 am, Davy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi all, I have a dictionary with n elements, and I want to get the m(m=n) keys with the largest values. For example, I have dic that includes n=4 elements, I want m=2 keys have the largest values) dic = {0:4,3:1,5:2,7:8} So, the the

Re: how to know if folder contents have changed

2007-11-12 Thread Jorge Godoy
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: can someone suggest a better way? i know it is a general programming problem..but i wish to know if a python solution exists Use pyfam. I believe all docs are in fam but it integrates with that. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

comp.lang.python 2007

2007-11-12 Thread ashik
sdfg dsv vcjgsdgsy http://www.freewebs.com/thuiss/ http://indianfriendfinder.com/go/g906725-pmem -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: How to get a set of keys with largest values?

2007-11-12 Thread Duncan Booth
Davy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: For example, I have dic that includes n=4 elements, I want m=2 keys have the largest values) dic = {0:4,3:1,5:2,7:8} So, the the largest values are [8,4], so the keys are [7,0]. Is there any fast way to implement this algorithm? Any suggestions are welcome!

Re: Binary search tree

2007-11-12 Thread Scott SA
On 11/12/07, Michel Albert ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: On Nov 9, 11:45 pm, Bruno Desthuilliers [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: [EMAIL PROTECTED] a Ècrit : Hi, I have to get list of URLs one by one and to find the URLs that I have more than one time(can't be more than twice). I thought to put

Re: Using python as primary language

2007-11-12 Thread Martin Vilcans
On Nov 10, 2007 12:48 AM, Rhamphoryncus [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Nov 9, 1:45 pm, Terry Reedy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: 2. If micro-locked Python ran, say, half as fast, then you can have a lot of IPC (interprocess communition) overhead and still be faster with multiple processes rather

Re: Python iPod challenge

2007-11-12 Thread Gabriel Genellina
En Sun, 11 Nov 2007 13:33:09 -0300, [EMAIL PROTECTED] escribi�: it seems the problem you guys found appears... when combining Windows OS and MSIE... (apologies... m_._m ) Or any other OS+browser with javascript disabled. BTW, why do you require JS? Looks like it should be possible

How to get a set of keys with largest values?

2007-11-12 Thread Davy
Hi all, I have a dictionary with n elements, and I want to get the m(m=n) keys with the largest values. For example, I have dic that includes n=4 elements, I want m=2 keys have the largest values) dic = {0:4,3:1,5:2,7:8} So, the the largest values are [8,4], so the keys are [7,0]. Is there any

PyServlet Error

2007-11-12 Thread alwin
Hi I was trying to write a simple web application using Tomcat 6.0.14, Jython 2.2.1. My web.xml is as follows ?xml version = '1.0' encoding = 'UTF-8'? !DOCTYPE web-app PUBLIC -//Sun Microsystems, Inc.//DTD Web Application 2.3//EN http://java.sun.com/dtd/web-app_2_3.dtd; web-app

Re: Extended date and time

2007-11-12 Thread Jeremy Sanders
John Machin wrote: What does dates in the past mean?? Please be more specific about the earliest date that you want to be able to handle. Python's datetime starts at 0001-01-01. Somebody mentioned the time module, which is implementation-dependent but typically starts at 1970-01-01 . What

Re: why ctypes+dll gives a strange result

2007-11-12 Thread Gabriel Genellina
En Sun, 11 Nov 2007 08:21:25 -0300, oyster [EMAIL PROTECTED] escribi�: import ctypes mydll=ctypes.windll.LoadLibrary(mydll.dll) _TwoTimes=getattr(mydll,'[EMAIL PROTECTED]') _TwoTimes.argtypes=[ctypes.c_double] def TwoTimes(i): return _TwoTimes(i) in fact, twotimes function

Re: Using python as primary language

2007-11-12 Thread Hrvoje Niksic
Martin Vilcans [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: But if Python gets slow when you add fine-grained locks, then most certainly it wouldn't get so slow if the locks were very fast, right? Given the sheer number of increfs and decrefs happening, they should be impossibly fast (meaning: nonexistent).

ODBC links?

2007-11-12 Thread Mr. Connolly
Lo' there. I'm a new user of Python, what I'm looking for is an easy way to create ODBC links to Access databases (obviously, Access isn't the best database out there I can use, but its easiest to just piece together for this quick project). What modules would I want to be looking for to create

RE: python - an eggs...

2007-11-12 Thread Diez B. Roggisch
bruce wrote: Hi Diez... I've never used setuptools, (it's not on the box) and i don't have easy_install tools installed... But in looking at your output, I have some questions... -The 1st, I'm assuming that easy_install works with python2.4.3? -The 2nd, In the output, is see the durus

Re: ODBC links?

2007-11-12 Thread Johannes Findeisen
On Mon, 2007-11-12 at 10:13 +, Mr. Connolly wrote: Lo' there. I'm a new user of Python, what I'm looking for is an easy way to create ODBC links to Access databases (obviously, Access isn't the best database out there I can use, but its easiest to just piece together for this quick

Re: Populating a dictionary, fast

2007-11-12 Thread Hrvoje Niksic
Paul Rubin http://[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Michael Bacarella [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: If only it were so easy. I think I know what's going on, the dictionary updates are sending the GC into quadratic behavior. Try turning off the GC: import gc gc.disable() This is becoming an

Re: Using python as primary language

2007-11-12 Thread Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch
On Mon, 12 Nov 2007 10:28:02 +0100, Martin Vilcans wrote: Actually, I would prefer to do parallell programming at a higher level. If Python can't do efficient threading at low level (such as in Java or C), then so be it. Perhaps multiple processes with message passing is the way to go. It

Re: Extended date and time

2007-11-12 Thread John Machin
On Nov 12, 8:46 pm, Jeremy Sanders jeremy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: John Machin wrote: What does dates in the past mean?? Please be more specific about the earliest date that you want to be able to handle. Python's datetime starts at 0001-01-01. Somebody mentioned the time module, which is

Re: PyQt with embedded python in Qt App

2007-11-12 Thread Bart.
Saturday 03 of November 2007 02:43:21 cgrebeld napisał(a): http://python.pastebin.com/m18c67b3a Thank You, now I understand. Now how to extend this interpreter with Qt Application classes/objects to do some usefull things with this embeded interpreter ? Bart. --

Only one week left for PyCon proposals!

2007-11-12 Thread David Goodger
There is only one week left for PyCon tutorial scheduled talk proposals. If you've been thinking about making a proposal, now's the time! Tutorial details and instructions here: http://us.pycon.org/2008/tutorials/proposals/ Scheduled talk details and instructions here:

Re: Populating a dictionary, fast

2007-11-12 Thread Steven D'Aprano
On Sun, 11 Nov 2007 11:42:08 -0700, Arkanes wrote: It takes about 20 seconds for me. It's possible it's related to int/long unification - try using Python 2.5. If you can't switch to 2.5, try using string keys instead of longs. I'm getting similar behaviour to the Original Poster, and I'm

Comp. Lang. python

2007-11-12 Thread sskumartry
To see more python computer language click here. http://www.geocities.com/bhauqz/ http://indianfriendfinder.com/go/g910673-pmem http://bigchurch.com/go/g910673-pmem http://www.bidvertiser.com/ -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Populating a dictionary, fast

2007-11-12 Thread Steven D'Aprano
On Sun, 11 Nov 2007 08:25:15 -0800, Michael Bacarella wrote: Firstly, thank you for all of your help so far, I really appreciate it. So, you think the Python's dict implementation degrades towards O(N) performance when it's fed millions of 64-bit pseudo-random longs? No. Yes. I

Re: How to get a set of keys with largest values?

2007-11-12 Thread Jeff
Why are you doing that with key-value pairs? Why not with the array module or lists? -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

PyGilState_Ensure interrupts python critical sections

2007-11-12 Thread billy . omahony
Hi, I have a native windows thread in a c python module which calls into python code and adds an item to a data structure (a home-grown circular buffer). At the same time my main python application is removing items from this data structure. Unlike native python containers adding and removing

Re: Coding Help

2007-11-12 Thread Billows
Maybe AutoFlowchart can help you! AutoFlowchart is a excellent source code flowcharting tool to generate flowchart from source code. Its flowchart can expand and shrink. and you can pre-define the the width , height,Horizontal spacing and vertical spacing. Move and zoom is also very easy.

Re: How to get a set of keys with largest values?

2007-11-12 Thread Duncan Booth
Jeff [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Why are you doing that with key-value pairs? Why not with the array module or lists? The original poster asked about a problem with key-value pairs. I just answered his question. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Populating a dictionary, fast

2007-11-12 Thread Hrvoje Niksic
Michael Bacarella [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: $ uname -a Linux xxx 2.6.9-22.ELsmp #1 SMP Sat Oct 8 21:32:36 BST 2005 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux We've also tried it on this version (on a different machine): $ uname -a Linux yyy 2.6.18-8.el5 #1 SMP Thu Mar 15 19:46:53 EDT 2007 x86_64

Re: Some pythonic suggestions for Python

2007-11-12 Thread Loic Mahe
Chris M write : Multi-return value lambda? Just so you know, there is no concept of returning more than one value from a function. I wrote: * multi return value lambda I meant: multiple return statement, not return multiple values pseudo code here: lambda x: if A return B, if C return D,

Re: which tool to use?

2007-11-12 Thread Yoram Hekma
On Sun, Nov 11, 2007 at 01:06:35PM -0500, Brian Blais wrote: Hello, I'm looking for a system for managing submissions of proposals, with multiple parts, and possible updating of those parts by the user (so it needs some basic version control). There has to be some sort of permissions

Re: Some pythonic suggestions for Python

2007-11-12 Thread Hrvoje Niksic
Loic Mahe [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Chris M write : Multi-return value lambda? Just so you know, there is no concept of returning more than one value from a function. I wrote: * multi return value lambda I meant: multiple return statement, not return multiple values pseudo code here:

Moving from java to python.

2007-11-12 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hi, I have recently been learning python, and coming from a java background there are many new ways of doing things that I am only just getting to grips with. I wondered if anyone could take a look at a few pieces of code I have written to see if there are any places where I am still using java-

Re: Moving from java to python.

2007-11-12 Thread Jarek Zgoda
[EMAIL PROTECTED] napisał(a): def getConnected(self): return self._connected No need to use accessors. Just plain attribute lookup is sufficient. -- Jarek Zgoda Skype: jzgoda | GTalk: [EMAIL PROTECTED] | voice: +48228430101 We read Knuth so you don't have to. (Tim

regex that is equivalent to perl's syntax

2007-11-12 Thread Lee Sander
hi, does python's re library have a similar capability of the perls regular expression to search for pattern that appears a variable number of times within the lower and upper bounds given? For example, what is the python's equivalent to the following perl's search string? m/^\S{1,8}\.\S{0,3}/

Re: Populating a dictionary, fast

2007-11-12 Thread Jeffrey Froman
Hrvoje Niksic wrote: Note that both machines are x86_64.  Please try your test on a 32-bit machine and report the results.  I suspect performance won't degrade there. This theory seems to be supported by my findings. Running the test on a 32-bit machine took 45 seconds, while the same test on

Re: Moving from java to python.

2007-11-12 Thread Paul Hankin
On Nov 12, 3:25 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi, I have recently been learning python, and coming from a java background there are many new ways of doing things that I am only just getting to grips with. I wondered if anyone could take a look at a few pieces of code I have

Re: regex that is equivalent to perl's syntax

2007-11-12 Thread Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch
On Mon, 12 Nov 2007 07:38:57 -0800, Lee Sander wrote: does python's re library have a similar capability of the perls regular expression to search for pattern that appears a variable number of times within the lower and upper bounds given? For example, what is the python's equivalent to the

Re: regex that is equivalent to perl's syntax

2007-11-12 Thread Tim Chase
does python's re library have a similar capability of the perls regular expression to search for pattern that appears a variable number of times within the lower and upper bounds given? For example, what is the python's equivalent to the following perl's search string? m/^\S{1,8}\.\S{0,3}/

Re: Moving from java to python.

2007-11-12 Thread Hrvoje Niksic
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: def __init__(self, connections = None, uid = None): You can use connections=(), so you don't need the if below. In fact, you can further write: for node, weight in connections: self._connected.append(node)

Re: Moving from java to python.

2007-11-12 Thread Tim Chase
def __init__(self, connections = None, uid = None): Args: [connections - a list of (connected node, weight) tuples. ] [uid - an identifier for comparisons.] self._connected = [] self._weights = [] if connections: for i in

reading file objects in chunks

2007-11-12 Thread Martin Marcher
Hi, I'm looking for something that will give me an iterator to a file-(like)-object. I have large files with only a single line in it that have fixed length fields like, record length is 26bytes, dataA is 10 bytes, dataB is 16 bytes. Now when I made my parsing stuff but can't find anything that

Re: Looking for a good Python environment

2007-11-12 Thread VSmirk
On Nov 11, 4:39 pm, Paul Rubin http://[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Russell Warren [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Wing now has multi-threaded debugging. Cool, is it windows-only? I'm using Linux. A quick look at the current state of SPE shows that it now has multi- threaded debugging via WinPDB

Re: PyGilState_Ensure interrupts python critical sections

2007-11-12 Thread Chris Mellon
On Nov 12, 2007 6:56 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi, I have a native windows thread in a c python module which calls into python code and adds an item to a data structure (a home-grown circular buffer). At the same time my main python application is removing items from this data structure.

Re: Moving from java to python.

2007-11-12 Thread Larry Bates
Paul Hankin wrote: On Nov 12, 3:25 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi, I have recently been learning python, and coming from a java background there are many new ways of doing things that I am only just getting to grips with. I wondered if anyone could take a look at a few

RE: python - an eggs...

2007-11-12 Thread bruce
diez... i was being polite in thanking you for your input/thoughts... i actually had read what you'd posted, as i stated. in act, i did manage to get things working, thanks to you. but your comment about ignoring pointers indicates that you are a jerk, so... i now find your emails/tone

Re: reading file objects in chunks

2007-11-12 Thread Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch
On Mon, 12 Nov 2007 17:47:29 +0100, Martin Marcher wrote: I'd really like something nicer than chunksize = 26 f = file(datafile.dat, buffering=chunksize) chunk = f.read(chunksize) while len(chunk) == chunksize: compute_data(chunk) f.read(chunksize) I just don't feel comfortable

Re: how to know if folder contents have changed

2007-11-12 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Nov 11, 11:03 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: hi i am trying to create a cache of digitized values of around 100 image files in a folder..In my program i would like to know from time to time if a new image has been added or removed from the folder.. Why not use the file

Re: how to know if folder contents have changed

2007-11-12 Thread Martin Marcher
2007/11/12, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]: Why not use the file creation/modification timestamps? because you'd have to a) create a thread that pulls all the time for changes or b) test everytime for changes fam informs in a notification like way. Personally I'd create a hidden cache

RE: Populating a dictionary, fast [SOLVED]

2007-11-12 Thread Michael Bacarella
id2name[key 40][key 0x100] = name Oops, typo. It's actually: Id2name[key 40][key 0xff] = name -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

RE: Populating a dictionary, fast

2007-11-12 Thread Michael Bacarella
and see it take about 45 minutes with this: $ cat cache-keys.py #!/usr/bin/python v = {} for line in open('keys.txt'): v[long(line.strip())] = True On my system (windows vista) your code (using your data) runs in: 36 seconds with python 2.4 25 seconds with python 2.5

Re: Using python as primary language

2007-11-12 Thread Rhamphoryncus
On Nov 12, 2:28 am, Martin Vilcans [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Nov 10, 2007 12:48 AM, Rhamphoryncus [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Nov 9, 1:45 pm, Terry Reedy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: 2. If micro-locked Python ran, say, half as fast, then you can have a lot of IPC (interprocess communition)

RE: Populating a dictionary, fast [SOLVED SOLVED]

2007-11-12 Thread Michael Bacarella
You can download the list of keys from here, it's 43M gzipped: http://www.sendspace.com/file/9530i7 and see it take about 45 minutes with this: $ cat cache-keys.py #!/usr/bin/python v = {} for line in open('keys.txt'): v[long(line.strip())] = True It takes

Rothschilds own half the worlds wealth directly and indirectly thru zionist proxies Re: Bill Gates was never the Richest man on earth

2007-11-12 Thread zionist . news
On Nov 11, 5:48 am, GOH, Kheng-Swee [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Tue, 06 Nov 2007 17:53:01 -, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: ... Using an innovative system of pigeons for communication and encoded letters, ... I didn't believe you until I read that part. It all makes sense now!

Re: A JEW hacker in California admits distributing malware that let him steal usernames and passwords for Paypal accounts.

2007-11-12 Thread zionist . news
On Nov 10, 3:02 pm, ChairmanOfTheBored [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Sat, 10 Nov 2007 22:10:15 -, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: The mapping of Muslim communities You're a goddamned retard. A Jew hacker in California admits distributing malware that let him steal usernames and passwords for

why there is no pythonscript insine web browsers?

2007-11-12 Thread Timuçin Kızılay
I'm an old programmer coming from a cobol background and started to learn python. I'm using javasript for web based applications but after I started to learn python, the javascript language started to seem ugly to me. Now I'm wondering why there is java support on web browsers but no python

Re: Rothschilds own half the worlds wealth directly and indirectly thru zionist proxies Re: Bill Gates was never the Richest man on earth

2007-11-12 Thread Simon Spiegel
On 2007-11-12 18:57:07 +0100, [EMAIL PROTECTED] said: On Nov 11, 5:48 am, GOH, Kheng-Swee [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Tue, 06 Nov 2007 17:53:01 -, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: ... Using an innovative system of pigeons for communication and encoded letters, ... I didn't believe you

RE: python - an eggs...

2007-11-12 Thread Diez B. Roggisch
bruce wrote: diez... i was being polite in thanking you for your input/thoughts... i actually had read what you'd posted, as i stated. Really? Did you? Here your third question: -3rd question.. in searching the 'net, it appears that i have to download setuptools in order to get

Re: why there is no pythonscript insine web browsers?

2007-11-12 Thread Diez B. Roggisch
Timuçin Kızılay wrote: I'm an old programmer coming from a cobol background and started to learn python. I'm using javasript for web based applications but after I started to learn python, the javascript language started to seem ugly to me. Now I'm wondering why there is java support on web

crawler in python and mysql

2007-11-12 Thread Fabian López
Hi, I would like to write a code that needs to crawl an url and take all the HTML code. I have noticed that there are different opensource webcrawlers, but they are very extensive for what I need. I only need to crawl an url, and don't know if it is so easy as using an html parser. Is it? Which

Re: Rothschilds own half the worlds wealth directly and indirectly thru zionist proxies Re: Bill Gates was never the Richest man on earth

2007-11-12 Thread Robert J. Kolker
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: You would learn a lot MORE if you listened to the videos whose links are provided. Please share these links anonymously with your friends, neighbors or anyone whose email you know. Spread quality knowledge. That means the Goyim own the other half. So what are

RE: python - an eggs...

2007-11-12 Thread bruce
hey dietz... if you give me your email i'll correspond with you directly.. but yeah, you are a jerk. in that you make assumptions that may/may not be correct, but you appear to have a holier than thou mentality... i did download the setuptools tar file i read through the txt files that came

Python-URL! - weekly Python news and links (Nov 12)

2007-11-12 Thread Gabriel Genellina
QOTW: AOP is a programming paradigm in the same way indie is a genre of film. - Carl Banks http://groups.google.com/group/comp.lang.python/msg/224e922a3e1a8638 I really like Python's notion of having just one data type: the duck. - itsme

Re: OT: concatenating targets for python with (eg.) Gnu make

2007-11-12 Thread Carl Banks
On Nov 12, 1:22 pm, Jon Nicoll [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: My question is, how can I specify a makefile rule so that *all* of the changed .A files are invoked on the AtoB command line - ie if 1.A, 2.A and 3.A are newer than 1.B, 2.B, 3.B, I want make to invoke AtoB.py 1.A 2.A 3.A 4.A rather

webbrowser.open still gives problem with file://

2007-11-12 Thread krishnakant Mane
hello, some days bac I posted a problem about webbrowser.open() not opening the file on the local machine. I get a few responses and I tryed working it out. I also refered to the cookbook example posted on that thread. I still can't figure out why

Re: Binary search tree

2007-11-12 Thread Scott SA
On 11/12/07, Scott SA ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: Uhm sorry, there is a slightly cleaner way of running the second option I presented (sorry for the second post). If you would find an index and count useful, you could do something like this: for idx in range(len(urls)):

Re: Information manager/organizer with tags question.

2007-11-12 Thread Aaron Watters
On Nov 11, 5:44 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hello, I would like to write an information manager/organizer type of app but first I'd like to ask if there is something like that already... Your outline sounds like a killer app, and I don't know of anything like it (especially for free).

Re: Populating a dictionary, fast [SOLVED]

2007-11-12 Thread Paul Rubin
Michael Bacarella [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: id2name[key 40][key 0x100] = name Oops, typo. It's actually: Id2name[key 40][key 0xff] = name Are you saying this is a patch that appeared after python 2.3? Somehow I don't think it's come up in this thread whether

RE: crawler in python and mysql

2007-11-12 Thread Adam Pletcher
In the standard Python install (Windows 2.5, at least), there's there's a couple example scripts you might find useful: python\Tools\webchecker\webchecker.py Crawls specified URL, checking for broken links. python\Tools\webchecker\websucker.py Variant on the above that archives the

Re: Python iPod challenge

2007-11-12 Thread jose Barcelona
Gabriel, Now it works fine with FIREFOX , SAFARI and MSIE. (MSIE didnt like the the way prototype.js deals with CR LF) BTW, why do you require JS? The python interpreter comunicates back and forth via a widget just like gmail XD. Sorry for that. Anyway we stil need volunteers...

Override method name and original method access

2007-11-12 Thread Donn Ingle
In an unusual twist of code I have a subclass which overrides a method but it also needs to call the original method: class One: def add (self, stuff): self.stuff.append(stuff) class Two(One): def __init__(self, otherstuff): MYSTERY(otherstuff) #otherstuff must go into list within the

Transfer socket connection between programs

2007-11-12 Thread JamesHoward
Does anyone know any method to have one program, acting as a server transfer a socket connection to another program? I looked into transferring the connection via xml rpc to no avail. It seems to be a problem of getting access to a programs private memory space and giving another program access

Re: python - an eggs...

2007-11-12 Thread Diez B. Roggisch
bruce schrieb: hey dietz... if you give me your email i'll correspond with you directly.. but yeah, you are a jerk. in that you make assumptions that may/may not be correct, but you appear to have a holier than thou mentality... i did download the setuptools tar file i read through

Re: Python-URL! - weekly Python news and links (Nov 12)

2007-11-12 Thread Laszlo Nagy
Gabriel Genellina wrote: QOTW: AOP is a programming paradigm in the same way indie is a genre of film. - Carl Banks http://groups.google.com/group/comp.lang.python/msg/224e922a3e1a8638 I was following links and hit PEP 246 here: http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0246/ On that page,

Re: why there is no pythonscript insine web browsers?

2007-11-12 Thread Daniel Fetchinson
I'm an old programmer coming from a cobol background and started to learn python. I'm using javasript for web based applications but after I started to learn python, the javascript language started to seem ugly to me. Now I'm wondering why there is java support on web browsers but no python

Re: optional arguments with compact reporting in optparse

2007-11-12 Thread braver
Steve -- thanks for your pointer to argparse, awesome progress -- optional arguments. However, I still wonder how I do reporting. The idea is that there should be a list with tuples of the form: (short, long, value, help) -- for all options, regardless of whether they were specified on the

Re: Transfer socket connection between programs

2007-11-12 Thread Grant Edwards
On 2007-11-12, JamesHoward [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Does anyone know any method to have one program, acting as a server transfer a socket connection to another program? The only way I know of is to use fork. When you fork a process, all open file-descriptors (including network connections)

Re: Python-URL! - weekly Python news and links (Nov 12)

2007-11-12 Thread Carl Banks
On Nov 12, 2:46 pm, Laszlo Nagy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Gabriel Genellina wrote: QOTW: AOP is a programming paradigm in the same way indie is a genre of film. - Carl Banks http://groups.google.com/group/comp.lang.python/msg/224e922a3e1a8638 I was following links and hit PEP 246 here:

Re: Override method name and original method access

2007-11-12 Thread Chris Mellon
On Nov 12, 2007 1:41 PM, Donn Ingle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: In an unusual twist of code I have a subclass which overrides a method but it also needs to call the original method: class One: def add (self, stuff): self.stuff.append(stuff) class Two(One): def __init__(self, otherstuff):

Re: Override method name and original method access

2007-11-12 Thread Laszlo Nagy
Donn Ingle wrote: In an unusual twist of code I have a subclass which overrides a method but it also needs to call the original method: class One: def add (self, stuff): self.stuff.append(stuff) class Two(One): def __init__(self, otherstuff): MYSTERY(otherstuff) #otherstuff must go

Re: Transfer socket connection between programs

2007-11-12 Thread Paul Rubin
JamesHoward [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Does anyone know any method to have one program, acting as a server transfer a socket connection to another program? I looked into transferring the connection via xml rpc to no avail. You have to use an out of band communication mechanism. On Linux

Re: Transfer socket connection between programs

2007-11-12 Thread JamesHoward
On Nov 12, 12:50 pm, Grant Edwards [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On 2007-11-12, JamesHoward [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Does anyone know any method to have one program, acting as a server transfer a socket connection to another program? The only way I know of is to use fork. When you fork a

Re: Transfer socket connection between programs

2007-11-12 Thread Grant Edwards
On 2007-11-12, JamesHoward [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Private memory has nothing to do with it. The connection is a data structure that lives in kernel space, not in user space. Even if you could grant another process access to your private memory space, it wouldn't help you transfer a socket

Re: Python-URL! - weekly Python news and links (Nov 12)

2007-11-12 Thread Aurélien Campéas
Laszlo Nagy a écrit : Gabriel Genellina wrote: QOTW: AOP is a programming paradigm in the same way indie is a genre of film. - Carl Banks http://groups.google.com/group/comp.lang.python/msg/224e922a3e1a8638 I was following links and hit PEP 246 here:

Re: Information manager/organizer with tags question.

2007-11-12 Thread andrei . avk
On Nov 12, 2:24 pm, Aaron Watters [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Nov 11, 5:44 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hello, I would like to write an information manager/organizer type of app but first I'd like to ask if there is something like that already... Your outline sounds like a killer app,

Re: Transfer socket connection between programs

2007-11-12 Thread Laszlo Nagy
JamesHoward wrote: Does anyone know any method to have one program, acting as a server transfer a socket connection to another program? I looked into transferring the connection via xml rpc to no avail. It seems to be a problem of getting access to a programs private memory space and giving

Re: Questions about remembering and caching function arguments

2007-11-12 Thread Aurélien Campéas
thebjorn a écrit : On Nov 12, 1:05 am, Anand Patil [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi all, I have two questions about a class, which we'll call MyWrapperClass, in a package to which I'm contributing. 1) MyWrapperClass wraps functions. Each instance has an attribute called 'value' and a method

imaplib unexpected error

2007-11-12 Thread KeefTM
Hello, I am getting an odd error when trying to establish an IMAP connection: File /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.4//lib/python2.4/ imaplib.py, line 904, in _get_response raise self.abort(unexpected response: '%s' % resp) imaplib.abort: unexpected response: '220

Re: Transfer socket connection between programs

2007-11-12 Thread marek . rocki
JamesHoward napisa (a): Does anyone know any method to have one program, acting as a server transfer a socket connection to another program? I looked into transferring the connection via xml rpc to no avail. It seems to be a problem of getting access to a programs private memory space and

Re: Transfer socket connection between programs

2007-11-12 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Nov 12, 1:41 pm, JamesHoward [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Does anyone know any method to have one program, acting as a server transfer a socket connection to another program? I looked into transferring the connection via xml rpc to no avail. It seems to be a problem of getting access to a

Re: imaplib unexpected error

2007-11-12 Thread KeefTM
Nevermind. It always seems I figure out what I did wrong right after I post. Turns out I was using the wrong port. On Nov 12, 12:51 pm, KeefTM [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hello, I am getting an odd error when trying to establish an IMAP connection: File

Re: Populating a dictionary, fast

2007-11-12 Thread Istvan Albert
On Nov 12, 12:39 pm, Michael Bacarella [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: The win32 Python or the cygwin Python? What CPU architecture? it is the win32 version, a dual core laptop with T5220 Core 2 -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: imaplib unexpected error

2007-11-12 Thread Laszlo Nagy
KeefTM wrote: Hello, I am getting an odd error when trying to establish an IMAP connection: File /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.4//lib/python2.4/ imaplib.py, line 904, in _get_response raise self.abort(unexpected response: '%s' % resp) imaplib.abort: unexpected

Re: imaplib unexpected error

2007-11-12 Thread KeefTM
On Nov 12, 1:46 pm, Laszlo Nagy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: KeefTM wrote: Hello, I am getting an odd error when trying to establish an IMAP connection: File /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.4//lib/python2.4/ imaplib.py, line 904, in _get_response raise

preparing data for visualization

2007-11-12 Thread Bryan . Fodness
I would like to have my data in a format so that I can create a contour plot. My data is in a file with a format, where there may be multiple fields field = 1 1a 0 2a 0 3a 5 4a 5 5a 5 6a 5 7a 5 8a 5 9a 0 10a 0 1b 0 2b 0 3b 5 4b

Re: A JEW hacker in California admits distributing malware that let him steal usernames and passwords for Paypal accounts.

2007-11-12 Thread thermate
On Nov 12, 11:29 am, radiosrfun [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: It was MUSLIMS who killed close to 3000 people of all races/religions. Where is your proof ? Where is the Anthrax Mailer ?? His proof that the moslems did not do it is painted all over the internet in

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