Hi all,
I am pleased to announce a release of a python wrapper for
libsndfile.
This is a re-installment of a previous version from Rob Melby
(arcsin.org) with a numpy support.
This a early beta release that worked fine for years using numpy and
mostly intended for scientific applications.
PyCon 2011 Reminder: Call for Proposals, Posters and Tutorials - us.pycon.org
===
Well, it's October 25th! The leaves have turned and the deadline for submitting
main-conference talk proposals expires in 7 days (November 1st, 2010)!
We are currently
The course will be taught in German. Therefore, the
announcement is also in German.
Kurs: Django Python-Web-Framework
=
Kurzinfo
Vom 29.11. bis zum 01.12.2010 findet ein Kurs zu Django[1] mit dem Trainer
Markus Zapke-Gründemann[2] an der Python
I am proud to announce the first release of Pogo, probably the simplest
and fastest audio player for Linux.
You can get the tarball and an Ubuntu deb package at
http://launchpad.net/pogo
What is Pogo?
Pogo plays your music. Nothing else. It tries to be fast and
In message mailman.208.1287970911.2218.python-l...@python.org, MRAB wrote:
On 25/10/2010 02:19, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
In messagemailman.187.1287916654.2218.python-l...@python.org, Dave
Angel wrote:
No. GUI programs are marked as win-app, so w stands for Windows. Non
GUI programs run
In message mailman.216.1287980107.2218.python-l...@python.org, Steve
Holden wrote:
and, in fact, the console is only a GUI window in a windowed system. It
might be one of the console emulation windows that init starts under
linux, or even a terminal connected to a computer by a serila line,
On Mon, 2010-10-25, bruno.desthuilli...@gmail.com wrote:
On 25 oct, 15:34, Alex Willmer a...@moreati.org.uk wrote:
On Oct 25, 11:07 am, kj no.em...@please.post wrote:
In The Zen of Python, one of the maxims is flat is better than
nested? Why? Can anyone give me a concrete example that
On 10/26/2010 2:08 AM, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
In message mailman.208.1287970911.2218.python-l...@python.org, MRAB wrote:
On 25/10/2010 02:19, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
In messagemailman.187.1287916654.2218.python-l...@python.org, Dave
Angel wrote:
No. GUI programs are marked as
Greetings Philip !
File openastro.py, line 90, in module
TRANSLATION[LANGUAGES[i]] =
gettext.translation(openastro,TDomain,languages=['en'])
File /usr/lib/python2.6/gettext.py, line 484, in translation
raise IOError(ENOENT, 'No translation file found for domain', domain)
On Oct 25, 11:20 pm, Jorgen Grahn grahn+n...@snipabacken.se wrote:
On Mon, 2010-10-25, bruno.desthuilli...@gmail.com wrote:
On 25 oct, 15:34, Alex Willmer a...@moreati.org.uk wrote:
On Oct 25, 11:07 am, kj no.em...@please.post wrote:
In The Zen of Python, one of the maxims is flat is
On 25 oct, 17:18, Joost Molenaar j.j.molen...@gmail.com wrote:
Thanks, Bruno.
Your python-wiki page and walk-through for the Decorator code make it
clear. I now finally understand that methods are in fact ordinary
functions at the time the class is created, and that the descriptor
protocol
'''
C:\Documents and Settings\Administrator\Desktoppython wtf.py
301 Moved Permanently
b'HTMLHEADmeta http-equiv=content-type content=text/
html;charset=utf-8
\nTITLE301 Moved/TITLE/HEADBODY\nH1301 Moved/H1\nThe
document has mo
ved\nA HREF=http://www.google.de/;here/A.\r\n/BODY/HTML\r\n'
foo 5.328
John Nagle na...@animats.com writes:
On 10/25/2010 7:38 AM, Tim Chase wrote:
While a dirty hack for which I'd tend to smack anybody who used it...you
*can* assign to instance.__class__
That's an implementation detail of CPython. May not work in
IronPython, Unladen Swallow, PyPy, or Shed
recently wrote a article based on a debate here. (can't find the
original thread on Google at the moment)
• 〈What's List Comprehension and Why is it Harmful?〉
http://xahlee.org/comp/list_comprehension.html
it hit reddit.
Steve Holden wrote:
On 10/24/2010 1:55 PM, mukkera harsha wrote:
Hello
I was wondering if there is an existing function that would let me
determine the difference in time. To explain:
Upon starting a program:
startup = time.time()
After some very long processing:
now =
On Tue, 26 Oct 2010 02:38:43 -0400, Steve Holden wrote:
I really don't understand what you are trying to say here. Could you
please explain? I know you to be a capable and sensible person, but this
sounds like nonsense to me, so I must be misunderstanding.
I think he's saying that on a
In mailman.241.1288036400.2218.python-l...@python.org Terry Reedy
tjre...@udel.edu writes:
On 10/25/2010 3:11 PM, kj wrote:
Well, it's pretty *enshrined*, wouldn't you say?
No.
After all, it is part of the standard distribution,
So is 'import antigravity'
Are you playing with my
On Oct 25, 5:44 pm, gershar gerrys...@gmail.com wrote:
I had some problems with some Python projects that gave variable
results that I could not track down. Eventually and reluctantly I
converted them to Java. Later, when I had more time I tried to analyze
what the Python code was doing and
On Tue, Oct 26, 2010 at 9:05 AM, kj no.em...@please.post wrote:
In mailman.241.1288036400.2218.python-l...@python.org Terry Reedy
tjre...@udel.edu writes:
On 10/25/2010 3:11 PM, kj wrote:
Well, it's pretty *enshrined*, wouldn't you say?
No.
After all, it is part of the standard
I need to generate PDF files and I'm exploring what tools to use. I was planing
on using ReportLab, but recently found some references to pango
(http://www.pango.org/) and ciaro (http://cairographics.org/) being able to
generate PDF files. But am having difficulty finding details.
The program
On 2010-10-26, kj no.em...@please.post wrote:
(Though, humorless as it is of me, I still would prefer the ZoP
out of the standard library, to save myself having to tell those
who are even newer to Python than me not to take it seriously.)
Well, not to take it *too* seriously.
It's like any
[posted e-mailed]
In article 43bd55e3-e924-40b5-a157-b57ac8544...@f25g2000yqc.googlegroups.com,
Kruptein darragh@gmail.com wrote:
I've released the second alpha for minimal-D a program I've written in
python which should make developing easier.
I need people to test the app on bugs and
[posted e-mailed]
[chiming in late]
In article mailman.1095.1285602516.29448.python-l...@python.org,
Marco Gallotta ma...@gallotta.co.za wrote:
I'm sure you get a lot of 2 or 3 questions, but here's another.
Umonya [1] uses Python to introduce school kids to programming. The
initiative is
On 10/26/2010 9:05 AM, kj wrote:
Perhaps the disconnect here is that you're seeing the whole thing
from an insider's point of view, while I'm still enough of an
outsider not to share this point of view. (I happen to think that
one the hallmarks of being an initiate to a discipline is an
On 2010-10-26, Lawrence D'Oliveiro l...@geek-central.gen.new_zealand wrote:
In message mailman.216.1287980107.2218.python-l...@python.org, Steve
Holden wrote:
and, in fact, the console is only a GUI window in a windowed system. It
might be one of the console emulation windows that init
PyGUI 2.3 is available:
http://www.cosc.canterbury.ac.nz/greg.ewing/python_gui/
This version works on Snow Leopard with PyObjC 2.3.
Any reason your project is not easy_installable?
Cheers,
Daniel
--
Psss, psss, put it down! - http://www.cafepress.com/putitdown
--
On 26/10/2010 15:42, Steve Holden wrote:
he answer is probably the same as you will see if you try
from __future__ import braces
That feature*is* available in Python 2.6;-)
In the past I used to think it was really cool that one could do
from __future__ import exciting_and_cool_new_stuff
On 10/26/2010 06:18 AM, Ed Keith wrote:
I need to generate PDF files and I'm exploring what tools to use. I was planing
on using ReportLab, but recently found some references to pango
(http://www.pango.org/) and ciaro (http://cairographics.org/) being able to
generate PDF files. But am having
On Tue, 26 Oct 2010 08:38:45 -0700
Gary Herron gher...@islandtraining.com wrote:
On 10/26/2010 06:18 AM, Ed Keith wrote:
I was planing on using ReportLab, but recently found some references to
pango Try a package named reportlab. It's very comprehensive, opensource,
On the other hand, there
On 10/26/2010 2:31 AM, Xah Lee wrote:
recently wrote a article based on a debate here. (can't find the
original thread on Google at the moment)
• 〈What's List Comprehension and Why is it Harmful?〉
http://xahlee.org/comp/list_comprehension.html
it hit reddit.
On 10/19/2010 12:02 PM, Tobiah wrote:
I've been reading about the Unicode today.
I'm only vaguely understanding what it is
and how it works.
Please correct my understanding where it is lacking.
http://justfuckinggoogleit.com/
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 10/24/2010 11:44 PM, Stefan Behnel wrote:
josh logan, 25.10.2010 04:14:
I found the error. The HTML file I'm parsing has invalid HTML at line
193. It has something like:
a href=mystuff class = stuff
Note there is no space between the closing quote for the href tag
and the class attribute.
On 10/25/2010 6:34 AM, Alex Willmer wrote:
On Oct 25, 11:07 am, kjno.em...@please.post wrote:
In The Zen of Python, one of the maxims is flat is better than
nested? Why? Can anyone give me a concrete example that illustrates
this point?
I take this as a reference to the layout of the
On 10/26/2010 12:32 PM, John Nagle wrote:
On 10/19/2010 12:02 PM, Tobiah wrote:
I've been reading about the Unicode today.
I'm only vaguely understanding what it is
and how it works.
Please correct my understanding where it is lacking.
http://justfuckinggoogleit.com/
Neither friendly
Hello,
I occasionally use LCs, if they seem useful. However, what I don't like
about LCs is that they 'look-like' being a closed scope, while actually
they are in the scope of there call. Example:
i = 5
l = [i**2 for i in range(3)]
i
2
Regards
Andre
--
Andre Alexander Bell p...@andre-bell.de writes:
I occasionally use LCs, if they seem useful. However, what I don't like
about LCs is that they 'look-like' being a closed scope, while actually
they are in the scope of there call. Example:
i = 5
l = [i**2 for i in range(3)]
i
2
Although:
On Tue, Oct 26, 2010 at 11:07 AM, Andre Alexander Bell
p...@andre-bell.dewrote:
Hello,
I occasionally use LCs, if they seem useful. However, what I don't like
about LCs is that they 'look-like' being a closed scope, while actually
they are in the scope of there call. Example:
i = 5
l =
That's from the functional programming crowd.
Python isn't a functional language.
A noob question: what is a functional language? What does it meen?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Tue, 26 Oct 2010 14:44:11 +, Grant Edwards wrote:
There is no difference based on the name of your executable, how it
is built, or what libraries it links to; the only difference is in
its run-time behaviour, whether it invokes any GUI functions or not.
No, we're not talking about
On Tue, 2010-10-26 at 09:45 -0700, John Nagle wrote:
On 10/25/2010 6:34 AM, Alex Willmer wrote:
On Oct 25, 11:07 am, kjno.em...@please.post wrote:
In The Zen of Python, one of the maxims is flat is better than
nested? Why? Can anyone give me a concrete example that illustrates
this
Hi, I have a question about unittest: let's say I create a temp dir for
my tests, then use loadTestsFromNames() to load my tests from packages
and modules they're in, then use TextTestRunner.run() to run the tests,
how can I pass information to TestCase instances, e.g. the location of
the temp
In mailman.258.1288104186.2218.python-l...@python.org Steve Holden
st...@holdenweb.com writes:
The answer is probably the same as you will see if you try
from __future__ import braces
That feature *is* available in Python 2.6 ;-)
Now, that's hilarious.
kj
--
On Oct 19, 2:29 pm, David Boddie da...@boddie.org.uk wrote:
On Monday 18 October 2010 23:26, Andrew wrote:
I have two issues dealing with the table widget, though they may be
interconnected. I'm not sure. Both delete the cell widgets off of my
table but leave the rows, and then when I have
Schengen States free EDUCATION STUDY VISA
http://childschooledu.blogspot.com/2010/10/get-internship-in-united-states.html
The European Union (EU) allows for the free movement of goods between
Italy and other member states: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus,
Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia,
Schengen States free EDUCATION STUDY VISA
http://childschooledu.blogspot.com/2010/10/get-internship-in-united-states.html
The European Union (EU) allows for the free movement of goods between
Italy and other member states: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus,
Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia,
On 10/26/2010 10:54 AM, Daniel Fetchinson wrote:
PyGUI 2.3 is available:
http://www.cosc.canterbury.ac.nz/greg.ewing/python_gui/
This version works on Snow Leopard with PyObjC 2.3.
I suspect that Python 2.3 or later is required. should read
Python 2.3 to Python 2.7 is required.
--
Terry
Hello there.
I ve been using python a lot lately for my school in order to make small
gui(wxpython) apps.
Today a teacher came up with an interesting project.
The idea is that he gives you a series of photos with some objects inside.
For example a photo could contain two black circles in a white
Hello there.
I ve been using python a lot lately for my school in order to make small
gui(wxpython) apps.
Today a teacher came up with an interesting project.
The idea is that he gives you a series of photos with some objects inside.
For example a photo could contain two black circles in a white
On 26/10/2010 14:18, Benjamin Kaplan wrote:
This is a programming language named after a British comedy group (not
the snake). There are going to be jokes inserted in lots of otherwise
serious things. Like the standard library.
Please, lets NOT get a newsgroup cross feed!
I don't want spam,
On 10/26/2010 07:22 PM, Ian Kelly wrote:
i = 5
l = [i**2 for i in range(3)]
i
2
This has been corrected in Python 3.
Sorry. You're right. I forgot to mention that...
Andre
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 10/26/10, Mikael B mba...@live.se wrote:
That's from the functional programming crowd.
Python isn't a functional language.
A noob question: what is a functional language? What does it meen?
A language which supports the functional programming paradigm:
You should check out OpenCV.
On Tue, Oct 26, 2010 at 8:53 PM, Kechagias Apostolos
pasxal.an...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello there.
I ve been using python a lot lately for my school in order to make small
gui(wxpython) apps.
Today a teacher came up with an interesting project.
The idea is that he
On Tue, Oct 26, 2010 at 10:31 AM, Mikael B mba...@live.se wrote:
That's from the functional programming crowd.
Python isn't a functional language.
A noob question: what is a functional language? What does it meen?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
It's a
AK andrei@gmail.com writes:
Hi, I have a question about unittest: let's say I create a temp dir
for my tests, then use loadTestsFromNames() to load my tests from
packages and modules they're in, then use TextTestRunner.run() to run
the tests, how can I pass information to TestCase
On 10/26/2010 2:44 PM, kj wrote:
In mailman.258.1288104186.2218.python-l...@python.org Steve Holden
st...@holdenweb.com writes:
The answer is probably the same as you will see if you try
from __future__ import braces
That feature *is* available in Python 2.6 ;-)
Now, that's
On 10/26/2010 2:46 PM, AK wrote:
Hi, I have a question about unittest: let's say I create a temp dir for
my tests, then use loadTestsFromNames() to load my tests from packages
and modules they're in, then use TextTestRunner.run() to run the tests,
how can I pass information to TestCase
Curious if there are any higher level frameworks that attempt to
wrap Tkinter? For example, wxPython is wrapped by the Dabo
framework (http://dabodev.com/) and PythonCard.
Motivation: We've recently moved to Python 2.7 (Windows) and are
very impressed with the new ttk (Tile) support which allows
In message pan.2010.10.26.17.38.14.766...@nowhere.com, Nobody wrote:
python.exe is a console executable, pythonw.exe is a GUI executable. Hence
python.exe automatically gets a console window, while pythonw.exe doesn't.
That's the whole reason why Windows has separate python.exe and
Chris Rebert wrote:
On Mon, Oct 25, 2010 at 7:18 PM, Arthur Divot art...@example.com wrote:
Is there a python library equivalent to Perl's News::Article
(load a file containing a news or mail message into an
object, manipulate the headers and body, create a new empty
one, save one to a
Which is better for a beginner to get started in Python with?
Thanks! --
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
In message mailman.265.1288113240.2218.python-l...@python.org, Dennis Lee
Bieber wrote:
(The Amiga made it simple -- a shell invocation received a non-zero
argc, with command line parameters in argv; a clicked invocation
received argc of 0, and argv pointed to a structure containing the
On Wed, 27 Oct 2010 13:46:28 +1300, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
Why would you want both CLI and GUI functions in one program?
An obvious example was the one which was being discussed, i.e. the Python
interpreter. Depending upon the script, it may need to behave as a
command-line utility (read
Am 27.10.2010 02:16, schrieb Braden Faulkner:
Which is better for a beginner to get started in Python with?
Thanks!
It depends on your needs. Most 3rd party library haven't been ported to
Python 3 yet. You'll get more useful stuff with 2.7 or even 2.6.
Unittest assertRaises cannot handle exception raised inside
__getattr__ method. Is it a bug? or am I missing something obvious?
Here is a sample of this problem:
-
import unittest
class C():
def simple_attr(self):
raise
In brief summary, I have installed gnuradio [gnuradio.org] and the
gen2_rfid module [https://www.cgran.org/wiki/Gen2] on Ubuntu 10.04,
with all installed packages up to date as of a few days ago.
When I try to run the rfid reader/decoder script, I get the following
error:
Hi guys!
I got a new laptop computer which came with the 64-bit version of
Windows 7. I installed the 64-bit versions of Python and a few other
libraries and wrote a few Python programs right there. If I copy the
Python scripts to a 32-bit computer, it runs flawlessly. But in the
future I may
Am 27.10.2010 03:38, schrieb Jorge Biquez:
And what about if I only were to develop for the web? I mean web
applications, Mysql, etc? It would be better to still be in 2.7?
Most frameworks and database adapters at least target Python 2.6+ as
their main Python version. I guess the majority has
On 10/26/2010 1:46 PM, Krister Svanlund wrote:
You should check out OpenCV.
Yes. See
http://code.google.com/p/pyopencv/
Note the people detector example.
John Nagle
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Tue, Oct 26, 2010 at 5:24 PM, Ben bahr...@gmail.com wrote:
b...@sdrfid:~/gen2_rfid/trunk/src/app$ python -c from gnuradio import
rfid
works fine (at least, it doesn't say anything, which I take to be a
good sign), but
b...@sdrfid:~/gen2_rfid/trunk/src/app$ sudo python -c from gnuradio
Inyeol inyeol.lee at gmail.com writes:
or am I missing something obvious?
The attribute access is evaluated before the call to assertRaises, so unittest
never has a cache to cache it.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Tue, Oct 26, 2010 at 7:51 PM, Benjamin Peterson benja...@python.org wrote:
Inyeol inyeol.lee at gmail.com writes:
or am I missing something obvious?
The attribute access is evaluated before the call to assertRaises, so unittest
never has a
cache to cache it.
or rather, chance to catch
Hello Christian and all .
Thanks for the comments. I am newbie to Python trying to learn all
the comments, that , by the way, I am very impressed of the knowledge
of the people present in this list.
I was wondering if you can comment more about what alternatives to
use instead to MySql. My
On Oct 26, 2010, at 11:10 PM, Jorge Biquez wrote:
Hello Christian and all .
Thanks for the comments. I am newbie to Python trying to learn all the
comments, that , by the way, I am very impressed of the knowledge of the
people present in this list.
I was wondering if you can comment
On Oct 26, 11:29 am, John Nagle na...@animats.com wrote:
On 10/26/2010 2:31 AM, Xah Lee wrote:
recently wrote a article based on a debate here. (can't find the
original thread on Google at the moment)
• 〈What's List Comprehension and Why is it Harmful?〉
On Oct 26, 12:07 pm, Andre Alexander Bell p...@andre-bell.de wrote:
Hello,
I occasionally use LCs, if they seem useful. However, what I don't like
about LCs is that they 'look-like' being a closed scope, while actually
they are in the scope of there call. Example:
i = 5
l = [i**2 for i
On 10/26/2010 09:28 PM, rantingrick wrote:
On Oct 26, 12:07 pm, Andre Alexander Bellp...@andre-bell.de wrote:
Hello,
I occasionally use LCs, if they seem useful. However, what I don't like
about LCs is that they 'look-like' being a closed scope, while actually
they are in the scope of there
Andy wrote:
Hi guys!
I got a new laptop computer which came with the 64-bit version of
Windows 7. I installed the 64-bit versions of Python and a few other
libraries and wrote a few Python programs right there. If I copy the
Python scripts to a 32-bit computer, it runs flawlessly. But in
Ned Deily n...@acm.org added the comment:
The attached patches implement an exit callback for IDLE on OS X that ensures
IDLE will not terminate from an application Quit command without giving the
opportunity to save files.
--
assignee: ned.deily - ronaldoussoren
components: +Macintosh
Changes by Ned Deily n...@acm.org:
Added file: http://bugs.python.org/file19367/issue10107-27.patch
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue10107
___
Ned Deily n...@acm.org added the comment:
BTW, the patched IDLEs were tested on 2.7 and py3k (3.2a3+) on 10.4, 10.5, and
10.6 with the Apple-supplied Tk 8.4 (all), the Apple-supplied Tk 8.5 (available
only in 10.6), ActiveState Tk 8.4 (all), and ActiveState 8.5 (all). And the
patches have no
ptz ppt...@gmail.com added the comment:
As David suggested, it indeed seems to be a case of timing. When
telnetlib.Telnet(...) returns, the server still doesn't have the data cooked,
and read_very_eager() fetches nothing. So nothing here fails as such, it's just
that my 0 experience in
Antoine Pitrou pit...@free.fr added the comment:
Agreed with Benjamin. There is already a visible issue with the patch: it
breaks compatibility because the Py_VISIT() argument must now be an lvalue.
--
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
Antoine Pitrou pit...@free.fr added the comment:
Unless we want to test manually each memory allocation in the interpreter, the
only reasonable way seems to be some kind of fuzzing (perhaps using a
reproducible random seed).
--
nosy: +haypo
___
Nick Coghlan ncogh...@gmail.com added the comment:
Merging the interfaces for mkdtemp and TemporaryDirectory isn't going to happen.
mkstemp/mkdtemp are for when the user wants to control the lifecycle of the
filesystem entries themselves. (Note that context management on a regular
file-like
Ray.Allen ysj@gmail.com added the comment:
Agree with Jesse, the description in the patch is not quite correct. I think
detailed description of the GIL has been given in C API documentation:
http://docs.python.org/c-api/init.html#thread-state-and-the-global-interpreter-lock.
How about
Antoine Pitrou pit...@free.fr added the comment:
Shouldn't this be closed? Most of this has been done and we can't do the rest
anyway, without breaking backwards compatibility.
--
nosy: +pitrou
status: open - pending
___
Python tracker
Antoine Pitrou pit...@free.fr added the comment:
Is it still reproduceable with 2.7, 3.1 or 3.2?
--
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue3362
___
STINNER Victor victor.stin...@haypocalc.com added the comment:
Don't you know http://www.nongnu.org/failmalloc/?
--
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue10195
___
R. David Murray rdmur...@bitdance.com added the comment:
Yes, but in that particular case the exact line referenced is involved in the
error, since it that error is that the symbol is both nonlocal and an argument,
and the error points to the head of the block which is the 'def' statement.
Changes by R. David Murray rdmur...@bitdance.com:
--
Removed message: http://bugs.python.org/msg119601
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue10189
___
Antoine Pitrou pit...@free.fr added the comment:
Don't you know http://www.nongnu.org/failmalloc/?
This doesn't answer the question of what and how to test.
--
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue10195
R. David Murray rdmur...@bitdance.com added the comment:
Yes, but in that particular case the exact line referenced is involved in the
error, since it that error is that the symbol is both nonlocal and an argument,
and the error points to the head of the block which is the 'def' statement.
R. David Murray rdmur...@bitdance.com added the comment:
Ah, I hadn't noticed Benjamin assigned this to himself when I submitted that
patch. Well, maybe it will be marginally useful anyway :)
--
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
New submission from jldm j_l_domen...@yahoo.com:
Hi, first of all sorry for my English.
On windows XP SP3, the following code:
import subprocess
subprocess.getoutput(dir)
returns
'{ is not recognized as an internal or external command,\noperable
program or batch file.'
I made a
R. David Murray rdmur...@bitdance.com added the comment:
Committed to py3k in r85846, 3.1 in r85847.
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resolution: - fixed
stage: unit test needed - committed/rejected
status: open - closed
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Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
R. David Murray rdmur...@bitdance.com added the comment:
Oddly, the test suite skips getoutput and getstatusoutput on windows with the
comment that the source says it is relevant only for posix, but the
documentation does not have 'availability: unix' tags. (It is also odd that
getoutput
Changes by Brian Curtin cur...@acm.org:
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components: +Windows
nosy: +brian.curtin
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Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue10197
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Peter Ingebretson pinge...@yahoo.com added the comment:
Thanks, I've started a thread on python-dev to discuss the patch.
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Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue10194
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New submission from David Barnett davidbarne...@gmail.com:
If the first call to writeframes happens to take an empty string as the data to
write, then the next call to writeframes writes a 2nd header into the file, and
forever after fails to patch the data length correctly.
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David Barnett davidbarne...@gmail.com added the comment:
This patch against the python 2.6 version fixes the problem for me.
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keywords: +patch
Added file: http://bugs.python.org/file19369/fix_double_header.patch
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