flebber, 16.08.2010 05:30:
I am looking at a project that will import and modify an XML file and
then export it to a table. Currently a flat file table system should
be fine.
I want to export the modified data to the table and then perform a
handful of maths(largely simple statistical
in 639663 20100815 120123 Lawrence D'Oliveiro
l...@geek-central.gen.new_zealand wrote:
In message mailman.2084.1281741048.1673.python-l...@python.org, Ian Kelly
wrote:
The ability to change the minimum index is evil.
Pascal allowed you to do that. And nobody ever characterized Pascal as
Hello,
I am using things like:
except Exception as inst:
and
with open(myfile.txt) as f:
for line in f:
print line
Things that seems to be new in python 2.6 and higher, however reading
http://docs.python.org/tutorial/errors.html and this not clear when this new
syntaxes appeared.
jyoun...@kc.rr.com wrote:
Just curious if anyone knows if it's possible to work with pdf documents
with Python? I'd like to do the following:
- Pull out text from each PDF page (to search for specific words)
- Combine separate pdf documents into one document
- Add bookmarks (with destination
Hi Hans-Peter,
It seems, that my other posts did not get through.
On 08/15/2010 11:17 PM, Hans-Peter Jansen wrote:
For a starter, tell us the versions of python-sip, and python-qt4 or however
they're called in Ubuntu. For the record,
python-sip-4.10.5-1.1
python-qt4-4.7.4-1.1
doesn't
[Q] How far can stack [LIFO] solve do automatic garbage collection and
prevent memory leak ?
Because a stack has push and pop, it is able to release and allocate
memory. We envisage an exogenous stack which has malloc() associated
with a push and free() associated with a pop.
The algorithm using
On 08/16/2010 12:06 AM, Alan wrote:
Hello,
I am using things like:
except Exception as inst:
and
The old syntax for exceptions still works in Python2.x (all versions).
The new syntax works in Python2.6+ and Python3.
try:
whatever
except Exception,msg: # Old syntax
* Standish P, on 16.08.2010 09:20:
[garble garble]
Nonsense article We look for an exogenous stack cross-posted to
[comp.lang.c],
[comp.lang.c++],
[comp.theory],
[comp.lang.python],
[comp.lang.forth].
Please refrain from following up on Standish' article.
Cheers,
- Alf
--
blog
Standish P, 16.08.2010 09:20:
We envisage an exogenous stack which has malloc() associated
with a push and free() associated with a pop.
What's your use case?
Stefan
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
f = open(myfile.txt)
for line in f:
print line
f.close() # This is what the with statement guarantees; so now just do
it yourself
Not exactly. More like:
f = open(myfile.txt)
try:
for line in f:
print line
finally:
f.close()
Daniel
--
On Mon, Aug 16, 2010 at 12:29 AM, Gary Herron
gher...@islandtraining.com wrote:
On 08/16/2010 12:06 AM, Alan wrote:
Hello,
I am using things like:
snip
with open(myfile.txt) as f:
for line in f:
print line
You don't need the new fangled with statement if you want to be
On 10 Αύγ, 01:43, MRAB pyt...@mrabarnett.plus.com wrote:
Íßêïò wrote:
D:\convert.py
File D:\convert.py, line 34
SyntaxError: Non-ASCII character '\xce' in file D:\convert.py on line
34, but no
encoding declared; seehttp://www.python.org/peps/pep-0263.htmlfor
details
D:\
What
this is heavily x-posted I'm answering from comp.lang.c
On 16 Aug, 08:20, Standish P stnd...@gmail.com wrote:
[Q] How far can stack [LIFO] solve do automatic garbage collection and
prevent memory leak ?
I'm having trouble understanding your question (I read your whole post
before replying). I
On Aug 15, 2010, at 11:51 PM, Ian Kelly wrote:
On Sun, Aug 15, 2010 at 4:36 PM, Baba raoul...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Mel,
indeed i thought of generalising the theorem as follows:
If it is possible to buy n, n+1,…, n+(x-1) sets of McNuggets, for
some
x, then it is possible to buy any number of
On Aug 16, 12:47 am, Nick Keighley nick_keighley_nos...@hotmail.com
wrote:
this is heavily x-posted I'm answering from comp.lang.c
On 16 Aug, 08:20, Standish P stnd...@gmail.com wrote:
[Q] How far can stack [LIFO] solve do automatic garbage collection and
prevent memory leak ?
I'm having
www.127760.blogspot.com
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I still keep getting more downloads then usual which is awesome, but I
still don't get any kind of response!
please mail me or reply to this post with what you think, You can tell
me that the program sucks but if you want to, do it in such a way that
you also describe what exactly is the problem
On 16 Aug, 09:33, Standish P stnd...@gmail.com wrote:
On Aug 16, 12:47 am, Nick Keighley nick_keighley_nos...@hotmail.com
On 16 Aug, 08:20, Standish P stnd...@gmail.com wrote:
this is heavily x-posted I'm answering from comp.lang.c
I also note that another poster has suggested you are a
Often the first line of a file tells how to read or interpret the other
lines.
Depending on the result, you then have to ...
- skip the first line, or
- treat the first line in another special way, or
- treat the first line in the same way as the other lines.
I can handle this by opening the file
HI all,
In an effort to avoid re-inventing the wheel so to speak
I was wondering if anyone's come across libraries/tools, etc
that achieve the same kind of functionality as the tools
library in this java app.
http://code.google.com/p/ipddump/source/browse/trunk/src/ipddump/tools/Gsm2Iso.java
Egbert Bouwman wrote:
Often the first line of a file tells how to read or interpret the other
lines.
Depending on the result, you then have to ...
- skip the first line, or
- treat the first line in another special way, or
- treat the first line in the same way as the other lines.
I can
On Aug 16, 4:00 pm, Stefan Behnel stefan...@behnel.de wrote:
flebber, 16.08.2010 05:30:
I am looking at a project that will import and modify an XML file and
then export it to a table. Currently a flat file table system should
be fine.
I want to export the modified data to the table and
On Aug 14, 11:15 am, Dennis Lee Bieber wlfr...@ix.netcom.com wrote:
On Fri, 13 Aug 2010 09:46:34 -0700 (PDT), Praveen
praveen.python.pl...@gmail.com declaimed the following in
gmane.comp.python.general:
I have a text file in this format
PRA 1:13 2:20 3:5
SRA 1:45 2:75 3:9
TRA 1:2 2:65
Hi all,
anybody can point me to a description of how the default comparison of
list objects (or other iterables) works?
Apparently l1 l2 is equivalent to all ( x y for x,y in
zip( l1, l2) ), has is shown in the following tests, but I can't find
it described anywhere:
[1,2,3] [1,3,2]
# initialize cookie
cookie = Cookie.SimpleCookie()
cookie.load( os.environ.get('HTTP_COOKIE', '') )
mycookie = cookie.get('visitor')
if ( mycookie and mycookie.value != 'nikos' ) or re.search( r'(cyta|
yandex|13448|spider|crawl)', host ) is None:
blabla...
I checked
Hi,
I am working on application where it requires uploaded document from has to
be converted to the html pages.Am searching for the suitable python package
i dint found any thing apart from word2html.py.But the word2html.py is not
available for download anywhere can any one suggest me how to
On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 13:46:07 +0300, Francesco Bochicchio bieff...@gmail.com
wrote:
anybody can point me to a description of how the default comparison of
list objects (or other iterables) works?
Sequences of the same type are compared using lexicographical ordering:
On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 01:52:52 -0700, Kruptein wrote:
I still keep getting more downloads then usual which is awesome, but I
still don't get any kind of response!
Welcome to the real world. For every user who sends you an email, you'll
probably have 1000 who don't. Or 10,000.
please mail me
On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 16:28:46 +1200, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
In message 8crg0effb...@mid.individual.net, Gregory Ewing wrote:
For example, the constant term of a polynomial is usually called term
0, not term 1.
That is not some kind of ordinal numbering of the terms, that is the
power
On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 21:01:04 -0700, Carey Tilden wrote:
On Sun, Aug 15, 2010 at 6:43 PM, bvdp b...@mellowood.ca wrote:
Not to belabor the point .. but func is not a standard lib module.
It's part of a much larger application ... and in that application it
makes perfect sense to terminate
On Aug 16, 10:20 am, Standish P stnd...@gmail.com wrote:
[Q] How far can stack [LIFO] solve do automatic garbage collection and
prevent memory leak ?
Most programs can be written so that most of their memory allocations
are matched by destructors at the same level.
However the allocations that
Francesco Bochicchio wrote:
Hi all,
anybody can point me to a description of how the default comparison of
list objects (or other iterables) works?
Apparently l1 l2 is equivalent to all ( x y for x,y in
zip( l1, l2) ), has is shown in the following tests, but I can't find
it
On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 17:36:07 -0700, Alex Willmer wrote:
On Aug 16, 1:07 am, Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-
cybersource.com.au wrote:
You're passing re.IGNORECASE (which happens to equal 2) as a count
argument, not as a flag. Try this instead:
re.sub(rpython\d\d + '(?i)', Python27, t)
On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 12:33:51 +1200, Gregory Ewing wrote:
Ian Kelly wrote:
On Fri, Aug 13, 2010 at 11:53 AM, Martin Gregorie
mar...@address-in-sig.invalid wrote:
real sample[-500:750];
Ugh, no. The ability to change the minimum index is evil.
Not always; it can have its uses,
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 01:52:52 -0700, Kruptein wrote:
I still keep getting more downloads then usual which is awesome, but I
still don't get any kind of response!
Welcome to the real world. For every user who sends you an email, you'll
probably have 1000 who don't.
Νίκος wrote:
# initialize cookie
cookie = Cookie.SimpleCookie()
cookie.load( os.environ.get('HTTP_COOKIE', '') )
mycookie = cookie.get('visitor')
if ( mycookie and mycookie.value != 'nikos' ) or re.search( r'(cyta|
yandex|13448|spider|crawl)', host ) is None:
blabla...
On Aug 15, 8:07 pm, Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-
cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 16:45:49 -0700, Christopher wrote:
I have the following problem:
t=Python26
import re
re.sub(rpython\d\d, Python27, t)
'Python26'
re.sub(rpython\d\d, Python27, t, re.IGNORECASE)
On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 18:43:49 -0700, bvdp wrote:
[...]
However, I have gotten hit with more than one comment like yours. So,
could you please clarify? Is it bad form to exit an application with
sys.exit(1) when an error in a file the application is processing is
found?
My two cents worth...
Kxepal wrote:
Hi all!
Sorry for dumb question if it is - I'd tried to google it before but
have found nothing.
Is there any way to dump current logging configuration for future
loading it via fileConfig/dictConfig?
I may be wrong but I don't think so.
JM
--
On Mon, Aug 16, 2010 at 9:53 AM, Gregory Ewing
greg.ew...@canterbury.ac.nz wrote:
On Aug 7, 2010, at 9:14 PM, John Nagle wrote:
The languages which have real multidimensional arrays, rather
than arrays of arrays, tend to use 1-based subscripts. That
reflects standard practice in
hi,
pls help me out with the following issue: I wrote a function that uses
a for loop that changes a value of a certain variable each iteration.
What I want is by clicking a button in GUI (with the command bound to
this function) this value each iteration is displayed in a textbox
(label). So far
On Aug 16, 3:20 pm, Standish P stnd...@gmail.com wrote:
[Q] How far can stack [LIFO] solve do automatic garbage collection and
prevent memory leak ?
Because a stack has push and pop, it is able to release and allocate
memory. We envisage an exogenous stack which has malloc() associated
with
On Aug 16, 7:20 pm, Malcolm McLean malcolm.mcle...@btinternet.com
wrote:
On Aug 16, 10:20 am, Standish P stnd...@gmail.com wrote: [Q] How far can
stack [LIFO] solve do automatic garbage collection and
prevent memory leak ?
Most programs can be written so that most of their memory
On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 14:26:09 +0300, Peter Otten __pete...@web.de wrote:
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
If nobody asks for any changes, then just keep doing what you're doing.
Or you can introduce a bug; if your users don't start complaining you don't
have any...
Even that doesn't work. They may blog
On Aug 16, 12:23 pm, Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-
cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 17:36:07 -0700, Alex Willmer wrote:
On Aug 16, 1:07 am, Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-
cybersource.com.au wrote:
You're passing re.IGNORECASE (which happens to equal 2) as a count
On 2010-08-15, John Nagle na...@animats.com wrote:
In retrospect, C's pointer=array concept was a terrible
mistake.
C arrays are not pointers.
--
Neil Cerutti
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Aug 16, 1:46 pm, Alex Willmer a...@moreati.org.uk wrote:
Note that the (?x) flag changes how the expression is parsed. It
should be used first in the expression string, or after one or more
whitespace characters. If there are non-whitespace characters before
the flag, the results are
On Sat, Aug 14, 2010 at 07:54:11PM -0700, Stephen Hansen wrote:
How are you implementing refusing-names-beginning-with-underscore, out
of curiosity?
I compile the expressions and look into co_names, e.g.:
expr = 0 .__class__
c=compile(expr,,eval)
c.co_names
('__class__',)
regards,
Hello,
In the last two weeks I've been trying to properly use UpdateLayeredWindow in
Python but I'm only getting errors. I searched a lot on the internet and you
are
the only person who posted about using ULW in Python. I tried with ctypes and I
also tried with win32gui win32api. I got all
Hello to all
I am new to python. I am facing problem to use variables as object
attributes. I have to use loop and dynamically add attributes to a
object and for this purpose I have to use variables with object names.
For example-:
Let us say object car has an attribute engine, then
varname =
you would need to define a class first with its attiributes and then you may
want to initiate the variables by calling the class initilializer
On Mon, Aug 16, 2010 at 7:10 PM, Vikas Mahajan vikas.mahaja...@gmail.comwrote:
Hello to all
I am new to python. I am facing problem to use variables
On Mon, Aug 16, 2010 at 11:59:57AM +0200, Peter Otten wrote:
with open(filename) as lines:
first_line = next(lines, )
if special(first_line):
# ...
else:
lines = itertools.chain([first_line], lines)
for line in lines:
# ...
Beautiful. And a nice
On 16 August 2010 19:23, Nitin Pawar nitinpawar...@gmail.com wrote:
you would need to define a class first with its attiributes and then you may
want to initiate the variables by calling the class initilializer
Actually I have to dynamically add attributes to a object. I am
writing python
thanks,
Stef Mientki
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Aug 16, 10:08 am, Vikas Mahajan vikas.mahaja...@gmail.com wrote:
On 16 August 2010 19:23, Nitin Pawar nitinpawar...@gmail.com wrote: you
would need to define a class first with its attiributes and then you may
want to initiate the variables by calling the class initilializer
Actually I
On Aug 16, 10:08 am, Vikas Mahajan vikas.mahaja...@gmail.com wrote:
On 16 August 2010 19:23, Nitin Pawar nitinpawar...@gmail.com wrote: you
would need to define a class first with its attiributes and then you may
want to initiate the variables by calling the class initilializer
Actually I
I have this:
image1 = ImageTk.PhotoImage(file = c:\\f1.jpg)
image2 = ImageTk.PhotoImage(file = c:\\f2.jpg)
imagelist.append(image1)
imagelist.append(image2)
self.label = tk.Label(image = imagelist[0])
is there a way that i can create a method to switch the display the
image2 (imagelist 2nd
Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
Kxepal wrote:
Hi all!
Sorry for dumb question if it is - I'd tried to google it before but
have found nothing.
Is there any way to dump current logging configuration for future
loading it via fileConfig/dictConfig?
I may be wrong but I don't think so.
JM
is it possible to convert any and all algorithms to stack based ones and thus
avoid memory leaks?
No, not really. If you keep the allocated things and free them in
reverse order on exit, then well yes, but practically, early free()
frees memory for reuse on low memory systems. In this sense
On Mon, Aug 16, 2010 at 4:23 AM, Roald de Vries downa...@gmail.com wrote:
I suspect that there exists a largest unpurchasable quantity iff at
least two of the pack quantities are relatively prime, but I have made
no attempt to prove this.
That for sure is not correct; packs of 2, 4 and 7 do
In this little script:
pre
import pdb
pdb.set_trace()
def main():
xm = 123
print(Hello,world!)
main()
/pre
When I run this, I use pdb to step through it until I reach the point
in main() where the xm variable has been initialized, and then I try
to use pdb to reset the value of
In article
414ff6dd-73ef-48df-bd2b-080a2c710...@h17g2000pri.googlegroups.com,
ChrisChia chrischi...@gmail.com wrote:
I have this:
image1 = ImageTk.PhotoImage(file = c:\\f1.jpg)
image2 = ImageTk.PhotoImage(file = c:\\f2.jpg)
imagelist.append(image1)
imagelist.append(image2)
self.label
On Aug 16, 3:14 pm, spinoza spinoza1...@yahoo.com wrote:
To build an explicit stack in this program would have been folly, for
it would have been necessary to either preallocate the stack and thus
legislate the maximum complexity of source code, or use a lot of
memory management in the
In article
993d9560-564d-47f0-b2db-6f0c6404a...@g6g2000pro.googlegroups.com,
Jah_Alarm jah.al...@gmail.com wrote:
hi,
pls help me out with the following issue: I wrote a function that uses
a for loop that changes a value of a certain variable each iteration.
What I want is by clicking a
On Aug 16, 8:40 pm, Vikas Mahajan vikas.mahaja...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello to all
I am new to python. I am facing problem to use variables as object
attributes. I have to use loop and dynamically add attributes to a
object and for this purpose I have to use variables with object names.
For
On Mon, Aug 16, 2010 at 11:04 AM, Ian Kelly ian.g.ke...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, Aug 16, 2010 at 4:23 AM, Roald de Vries downa...@gmail.com wrote:
I suspect that there exists a largest unpurchasable quantity iff at
least two of the pack quantities are relatively prime, but I have made
no
On Aug 16, 6:53 pm, Jean-Michel Pichavant jeanmic...@sequans.com
wrote:
Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
Kxepal wrote:
Hi all!
Sorry for dumb question if it is - I'd tried to google it before but
have found nothing.
Is there any way todumpcurrentloggingconfiguration for future
loading it
on steven, peter and eliasf:
Well okay I'm new to the world of developing programs, if I encounter
problems I directly post a bug on the relevant page, that's maybe why
I was a bit frustrated :)
but what you three say is indeed true..
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Mon, Aug 16, 2010 at 4:18 AM, Steven D'Aprano
st...@remove-this-cybersource.com.au wrote:
On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 21:01:04 -0700, Carey Tilden wrote:
On Sun, Aug 15, 2010 at 6:43 PM, bvdp b...@mellowood.ca wrote:
Not to belabor the point .. but func is not a standard lib module.
It's part of
Vikas Mahajan wrote:
On 16 August 2010 19:23, Nitin Pawar nitinpawar...@gmail.com wrote:
you would need to define a class first with its attiributes and then you may
want to initiate the variables by calling the class initilializer
Actually I have to dynamically add attributes to a
Thanks much,
Nope, no homework. This was a serious question from a serious but perhaps
simple physicist who grew up with Algol, FORTRAN and Pascal, taught himself
VB(A) and is looking for a replacement of VB and finding that in Python. You
can guess my age now.
Most of my work I do in R
Using the fileinput module to process lists of files:
for line in fileinput.input(logs):
Unfortunately, EOFError does not seem to indicate the end-of-file condition
correctly when using fileinput.
How would you find the EOF file for all the files in the file list 'logs'?
Thank you,
Alex
On Aug 15, 4:41 pm, Chris Hare ch...@labr.net wrote:
I have some code that pulls a value from a database. In this case, it is
three space delimited words. When I display the value in a Tkinter.Entry
widget, the text has curly braces around it, even when there are none in the
surrounding
On Aug 16, 2010, at 5:04 PM, Ian Kelly wrote:
On Mon, Aug 16, 2010 at 4:23 AM, Roald de Vries downa...@gmail.com
wrote:
I suspect that there exists a largest unpurchasable quantity iff at
least two of the pack quantities are relatively prime, but I have
made
no attempt to prove this.
That
Perhaps the ones here who think I was trying to make you do my homework can
actually help me for real. Since I run my own company (not working for any
of the big ones) I can't afford official training in anything. So I teach
myself, help is always welcome and sought for. If that feels like
I am trying to call a function with a couple additional parameters.
Unfortunately, for whatever reason I am unable to get this to work. I
am assuming that line is not passing correctly but I don't understand
why???
I can't share all of the code because it has IP in it but below are
the pertinent
On 16/08/2010 17:29, Alex van der Spek wrote:
Using the fileinput module to process lists of files:
for line in fileinput.input(logs):
Unfortunately, EOFError does not seem to indicate the end-of-file
condition correctly when using fileinput.
How would you find the EOF file for all the
On Aug 16, 7:30 am, ChrisChia chrischi...@gmail.com wrote:
I have this:
image1 = ImageTk.PhotoImage(file = c:\\f1.jpg)
image2 = ImageTk.PhotoImage(file = c:\\f2.jpg)
imagelist.append(image1)
imagelist.append(image2)
self.label = tk.Label(image = imagelist[0])
is there a way that i can
On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 18:26:46 +0200
Alex van der Spek zd...@xs4all.nl wrote:
Nope, no homework. This was a serious question from a serious but perhaps
simple physicist who grew up with Algol, FORTRAN and Pascal, taught himself
VB(A) and is looking for a replacement of VB and finding that in
@All
Thanks a lot.
getattr and setattr functions solved my problem.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi there,
Recently I'm facing a problem to convert 4 bytes on an bytearray into
an 32-bit integer. So far as I can see, there're 3 ways: a) using
struct module, b) using ctypes module, and c) manually manipulation.
Are there any other ways?
My sample is as following:
-
import struct
On Aug 16, 2010, at 11:40 AM, Jeff Hobbs wrote:
On Aug 15, 4:41 pm, Chris Hare ch...@labr.net wrote:
I have some code that pulls a value from a database. In this case, it is
three space delimited words. When I display the value in a Tkinter.Entry
widget, the text has curly braces around
On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 18:44:08 +0200
Alex van der Spek zd...@xs4all.nl wrote:
Perhaps the ones here who think I was trying to make you do my homework can
You keep replying to my message but as I pointed out in my previous
message, I'm not the one who thought that you posted a homework
question.
I found this question on
http://faq.pygtk.org/index.py?file=faq21.005.htpreq=show
but the answer did not help me.
For example I have a simple program below that I would like to
'compile' with py2exe (or anything else if it's simpler) to run in
windows as a single bundled executable file with no
On 14 Aug, 18:14, Raymond Hettinger pyt...@rcn.com wrote:
On Aug 12, 1:20 pm, Paddy paddy3...@googlemail.com wrote:
I find myself needing to calculate the difference between two Counters
or multisets or bags.
I want those items that are unique to each bag.
Tell us about your use cases.
On 16/08/2010 17:47, fuglyducky wrote:
I am trying to call a function with a couple additional parameters.
Unfortunately, for whatever reason I am unable to get this to work. I
am assuming that line is not passing correctly but I don't understand
why???
I can't share all of the code because it
fuglyducky wrote:
I am trying to call a function with a couple additional parameters.
Unfortunately, for whatever reason I am unable to get this to work. I
am assuming that line is not passing correctly but I don't understand
why???
[snip]
The function's parameters are the wrong way round.
--
Here is an excerpt. It works because the end condition is a fixed number
(ln==10255), the approximate number of data lines in a file. If I replace
that condition by EOFError, the program does not do the intended work. It
appears as if EOFError is always true in this case.
On Aug 16, 1:23 am, Roald de Vries downa...@gmail.com wrote:
On Aug 15, 2010, at 11:51 PM, Ian Kelly wrote:
On Sun, Aug 15, 2010 at 4:36 PM, Baba raoul...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Mel,
indeed i thought of generalising the theorem as follows:
If it is possible to buy n, n+1,…, n+(x-1) sets
Hello,
Im stuck with this problem:
I would like to os.stat st_mtime to copy only the files that have different
modification date.
so I found something on internet using this kind of line:
if os.stat(dest).st_mtime - os.stat(src).st_mtime 1:
shutil.copy2 (src, dst)
So I adapted it to my
On Monday 16 August 2010, it occurred to Jacky to exclaim:
Hi there,
Recently I'm facing a problem to convert 4 bytes on an bytearray into
an 32-bit integer. So far as I can see, there're 3 ways:
a) using struct module,
Yes, that's what it's for, and that's what you should be using.
b)
On Mon, Aug 16, 2010 at 12:43 PM, Roald de Vries downa...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm pretty sure that if there's no common divisor for all three (or more)
packages (except one), there is a largest unpurchasable quantity. That
is: ∀
i1: ¬(i|a) ∨ ¬(i|b) ∨ ¬(i|c), where ¬(x|y) means x is no divider of
On 8/16/2010 9:40 AM, Vikas Mahajan wrote:
Hello to all
I am new to python.
Hi, welcome to Python.
Hint 1: 'Variable' is a rather loose term with many meanings. Better to
think in terms of 'name' ('identifier'), which is specifically defined,
and 'object'.
I am facing problem to use
Hi Chas, Roald,
These are all complicated formula that i believe are not expected at
this level. If you look at the source (see my first submission) you
will see that this exercise is only the second in a series called
Introduction to Programming. Therefore i am convinced that there is
a much
On 8/15/10 10:33 PM, Standish P wrote:
...
I don't understand a lot of your post (and it's clear that I'm not
alone). I don't know whether it's a (human) language problem or simply
an issue of your having read too many books and not having enough
practical experience, but at least I can try
On Aug 16, 12:38 am, Alf P. Steinbach /Usenet alf.p.steinbach
+use...@gmail.com wrote:
* Standish P, on 16.08.2010 09:20:
[garble garble]
Nonsense article We look for an exogenous stack cross-posted to
[comp.lang.c],
[comp.lang.c++],
[comp.theory],
[comp.lang.python],
On Aug 16, 10:27 am, Mark Lawrence breamore...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
On 16/08/2010 17:47, fuglyducky wrote:
I am trying to call a function with a couple additional parameters.
Unfortunately, for whatever reason I am unable to get this to work. I
am assuming that line is not passing
Alban Nona wrote:
Hello,
Im stuck with this problem:
I would like to os.stat st_mtime to copy only the files that have
different modification date.
so I found something on internet using this kind of line:
if os.stat(dest).st_mtime - os.stat(src).st_mtime 1:
shutil.copy2 (src, dst)
On 8/16/2010 12:44 PM, Alex van der Spek wrote:
Anybody catches any other ways to improve my program (attached), you are
most welcome.
1. You don't need to separate out special characters (TABs, NEWLINEs,
etc.) in a string. So:
On Sun, 2010-08-15 at 15:14 +0200, Peter Otten wrote:
ChrisChia wrote:
dataList = [a, b, c, ...]
where a, b, c are objects of a Class X.
In Class X, it contains self.name and self.number
If i wish to test whether a number (let's say 100) appears in one of
the object, and return
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