REMEMBER STEVE
On Wed, Oct 5, 2011 at 9:58 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 2:36 PM, alex23 wrote:
> > On Oct 5, 11:10 pm, Chris Angelico wrote:
> >> The absence from the language doesn't prove that. All it means is
> >> that, on those rare occasions when a goto would have be
Hi Friends,
Here the isuue is i can't find the "li" element. that is because that
element is out of display, so i adjust scroll bar or do focus around
that area to get that element via find_element_by_id("loc_opt")
I already tested with scroll bar and focus and its working fine in my
laptop.
But
On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 3:39 PM, Greg wrote:
> Brilliant! It worked. Thanks!
>
> Here is the final code for those who are struggling with similar
> problems:
>
> ## open and decode file
> # In this case, the encoding comes from the charset argument in a meta
> tag
> # e.g.
> fileContent = fileObj.
On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 2:36 PM, alex23 wrote:
> On Oct 5, 11:10 pm, Chris Angelico wrote:
>> The absence from the language doesn't prove that. All it means is
>> that, on those rare occasions when a goto would have been correct, the
>> programmer had to make do with something else :-)
>
> Like th
Brilliant! It worked. Thanks!
Here is the final code for those who are struggling with similar
problems:
## open and decode file
# In this case, the encoding comes from the charset argument in a meta
tag
# e.g.
fileObj = open(filePath,"r").read()
fileContent = fileObj.decode("iso-8859-2")
fileSo
On Thu, Oct 06, 2011 at 02:44:33PM +1100, Cameron Simpson wrote:
> On 03Oct2011 13:10, rantingrick wrote:
> | Also for scoping.
> |
> | py> count = 0
> | py> def foo():
> | ... global.count += 1
> | py> print count
> | 1
> |
> | Why? Well because many times i find myself wondering if this or
Hehe, sure, why not?
:P
On Wed, Oct 5, 2011 at 2:24 PM, alex23 wrote:
> On Oct 5, 12:53 am, Alec Taylor wrote:
>> Sounds like a job for Processing...
>
> Don't you mean PyProcessing? :)
>
> http://code.google.com/p/pyprocessing/
> --
> http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
>
--
h
On Oct 6, 2:55 am, Stefano Maggiolo wrote:
> I would like to know if there is a (more) convenient way of doing this
> structure:
>
> ===(1)===
> for x in l:
> if P(x):
> do_stuff(x)
> ==
map(do_stuff, filter(P, l))
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http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Wed, 05 Oct 2011 16:35:59 -0700, Greg wrote:
> Hi, I am having some encoding problems when I first parse stuff from a
> non-english website using BeautifulSoup and then write the results to a
> txt file.
If you haven't already read this, you should do so:
http://www.joelonsoftware.com/article
On 03Oct2011 13:10, rantingrick wrote:
| Also for scoping.
|
| py> count = 0
| py> def foo():
| ... global.count += 1
| py> print count
| 1
|
| Why? Well because many times i find myself wondering if this or that
| variable is local or global -- and when i say "global" i am speaking
| of mod
Ben Finney wrote:
> This mocking is hurtful to people who identify too strongly with COBOL.
> I wonder whether that means it's intentionally hurtful.
Far, _far_ less hurtful than COBOL itself...
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On Oct 5, 11:10 pm, Chris Angelico wrote:
> The absence from the language doesn't prove that. All it means is
> that, on those rare occasions when a goto would have been correct, the
> programmer had to make do with something else :-)
Like the goto module? :)
http://entrian.com/goto/
--
http://
On Wed, 05 Oct 2011 18:55:53 +0200, Stefano Maggiolo wrote:
> Dear all,
>
> I would like to know if there is a (more) convenient way of doing this
> structure:
>
> ===(1)===
> for x in l:
> if P(x):
> do_stuff(x)
> ==
That seems pretty convenient to me. It's simple, obvious and
On Wed, 05 Oct 2011 13:31:41 -0500, Tim Chase wrote:
> I'm very -1 on the initial proposal with parens, but I wouldn't object
> to generators growing a method (__getitem__?) to do slices via
> itertools, something like
>
>gen = (a for a in iterator if test(a))
>for thing in gen[4::2]:
>
On 10/5/2011 5:31 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 8:22 AM, John Gordon wrote:
I assume he intended "S:" to indicate a remote server.
The most obvious understanding of it is a drive letter (ie Windows
box).
More exactly, a remote server filesystem 'mounted' (not sure of the
Hi, I am having some encoding problems when I first parse stuff from a
non-english website using BeautifulSoup and then write the results to
a txt file.
I have the text both as a normal (text) and as a unicode string
(utext):
print repr(text)
'Branie zak\xc2\xb3adnik\xc3\xb3w'
print repr(utext)
u
On Wed, Oct 5, 2011 at 3:28 PM, Westley Martínez wrote:
> Wait, how would this work fundamentally? A list can be sliced because
> all the values are there. A generator does not have all its value at
> once (it generates each value as requested). I don't like change so I
> look at these kinds of
On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 8:22 AM, John Gordon wrote:
> I assume he intended "S:" to indicate a remote server.
>
The most obvious understanding of it is a drive letter (ie Windows
box). But if not, more clarification is needed.
ChrisA
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On Wed, Oct 05, 2011 at 01:31:41PM -0500, Tim Chase wrote:
> On 10/04/11 20:45, Terry Reedy wrote:
> >On 10/4/2011 9:50 AM, Valiev Sergey wrote:
> >
> >>- `[]` - used for list comprehension,
> >>- `()` - used for generators,
> >>- `[start:stop]` / `[start:stop:step]` - used for slices.
> >>The idea
In Terry Reedy
writes:
> On 10/5/2011 10:34 AM, RVince wrote:
> > I have a project whereby I need it to write out a file to a different
> > server (that the originating server has write access to). So, say I
> > need to write out from myserver1, where my app is running, onto, say
> > S:/IT/tmp
On 10/5/2011 10:34 AM, RVince wrote:
I have a project whereby I need it to write out a file to a different
server (that the originating server has write access to). So, say I
need to write out from myserver1, where my app is running, onto, say
S:/IT/tmp how can I specify/do this? Thanks, RVince
On 10/5/2011 2:31 PM, Tim Chase wrote:
On 10/04/11 20:45, Terry Reedy wrote:
On 10/4/2011 9:50 AM, Valiev Sergey wrote:
- `[]` - used for list comprehension,
- `()` - used for generators,
- `[start:stop]` / `[start:stop:step]` - used for slices.
The idea is to use `(start:stop)` / `(start:stop
On 10/04/11 20:45, Terry Reedy wrote:
On 10/4/2011 9:50 AM, Valiev Sergey wrote:
- `[]` - used for list comprehension,
- `()` - used for generators,
- `[start:stop]` / `[start:stop:step]` - used for slices.
The idea is to use `(start:stop)` / `(start:stop:step)` as 'lazy
evaluated' slices (like
Dear Ian,
thank you for you kind response. I was pretty confident the issue had
already been discussed, but I was unable to look it up.
I suppose your "filter" syntax is the best given the options (I always
forget about map and filter...) and definitely I see that the work
needed to add such a fe
On Wed, Oct 5, 2011 at 11:24 AM, Ian Kelly wrote:
>> Is there some better and valid construction I missed? If not, is there
>> a reason why (2) is not in the language?
>
> I guess because, as you helpfully enumerated, there are already plenty
> of options for iterating with a condition. Syntax is
On Wed, Oct 5, 2011 at 10:55 AM, Stefano Maggiolo wrote:
> Dear all,
>
> I would like to know if there is a (more) convenient way of doing this
> structure:
>
> ===(1)===
> for x in l:
> if P(x):
> do_stuff(x)
> ==
>
> Let's say that my dream syntax would be
>
> ===(2)===
> for x in
Dear all,
I would like to know if there is a (more) convenient way of doing this
structure:
===(1)===
for x in l:
if P(x):
do_stuff(x)
==
Let's say that my dream syntax would be
===(2)===
for x in l if P(x):
do_stuff(x)
==
as if it was the second part of a list comprehe
On Wed, Oct 05, 2011 at 02:29:38PM +0100, Adam Funk wrote:
> On 2011-10-04, Derek Simkowiak wrote:
>
> > If this is strictly for 2D pixel graphics, I recommend using PyGame
> > (aka SDL). Why do you not think it's the way to go? It was built for
> > this type of thing.
>
> I only know Py
On Tue, Oct 04, 2011 at 08:20:34PM -0700, alex23 wrote:
> Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> > Imported modules are variables like any other, and as they usually exist
> > in the global scope, so they will all need to be explicitly referenced as
> > global. This will get tiresome very quickly, and is a cure
In <0d795922-d946-480d-8f41-95656e56f...@g23g2000vbz.googlegroups.com> RVince
writes:
> I have a project whereby I need it to write out a file to a different
> server (that the originating server has write access to). So, say I
> need to write out from myserver1, where my app is running, onto, s
Hi, (new to python and first message here \o/)
I was wondering something :
when you do : return value1, value2, value3
It returns a tuple.
So if I want to pass these value to a function, the function have to
look like :
def function(self,(value1, value2, value3)) #self because i'm working
with cl
Am 05.10.2011 15:33, schrieb faucheuse:
I was wondering something :
when you do : return value1, value2, value3
It returns a tuple.
Right.
So if I want to pass these value to a function, the function have to
look like :
def function(self,(value1, value2, value3))
[...]
No, you don't have to
On 01/-10/-28163 02:59 PM, faucheuse wrote:
Hi, (new to python and first message here \o/)
I was wondering something :
when you do : return value1, value2, value3
It returns a tuple.
So if I want to pass these value to a function, the function have to
look like :
def function(self,(value1, valu
Okey i figure it out how to do the job in fedora
i added slight delay before sending each command
either by the delaybeforesend attribute or by the time module
;)
cheers
On Wed, 2011-10-05 at 14:47 +0200, Nizamov Shawkat wrote:
> 2011/10/5 Daniel <5960...@gmail.com>:
> > Hello,
> > For about wee
this feature has been removed in python3 in accordance to the PEP 3113
(http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-3113/), you should consider using the *
operator
http://docs.python.org/tutorial/controlflow.html#unpacking-argument-lists .
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Well it was easy, apparently sqlalchemy.exceptions doesn't exist but
sqlalchemy.exc does,
and that's the correct one, maybe a version problem...
I get another problem right after
File
"/home/andrea/PSI_refactor/test_local_pypi/lib/python2.7/site-packages/EggBasket-0.6.1b-py2.7.egg/eggbasket/c
there is no such implementation in fedora you can su as a root .. i can
su from regular user to root with no problems
the problem come when i use the pexpect module
On Wed, 2011-10-05 at 14:47 +0200, Nizamov Shawkat wrote:
> 2011/10/5 Daniel <5960...@gmail.com>:
> > Hello,
> > For about week i am
Hi, (new to python and first message here \o/)
I was wondering something :
when you do : return value1, value2, value3
It returns a tuple.
So if I want to pass these value to a function, the function have to
look like :
def function(self,(value1, value2, value3)) #self because i'm working
with cl
Hi! does anyone know what's happening here http://code.google.com/p/httplib2/
? I get this:
"403. That’s an error.
Your client does not have permission to get URL /p/httplib2/ from this
server. That’s all we know."
It seems like the httplib2 googlecode project is preventing from
accessing the proje
On 2011-10-04, Derek Simkowiak wrote:
> If this is strictly for 2D pixel graphics, I recommend using PyGame
> (aka SDL). Why do you not think it's the way to go? It was built for
> this type of thing.
I only know PyGame because we did an exercise in recreating the old
breakout game and m
On Wed, Oct 5, 2011 at 11:57 PM, Roy Smith wrote:
> In article ,
> Chris Angelico wrote:
>
>> Definitely. There's always a right time to do the wrong thing, just as
>> much as there's a wrong time to do the right thing. Even the
>> much-maligned goto has its place.
>
> Not in python, it doesn't
In article ,
Chris Angelico wrote:
> Definitely. There's always a right time to do the wrong thing, just as
> much as there's a wrong time to do the right thing. Even the
> much-maligned goto has its place.
Not in python, it doesn't :-)
But, yes, I agree that in languages that support it, it c
Hello,
For about week i am experiencing a problem with pexpect that's why i
hope you can help me :).
Following is my code which tries to remove some files from the root dir
and the code works on linux debian and freebsd but with no success on
linux fedora .. any idea why this happen only in fedora
Hello guys,
I am migrating my application from python 1.5.2 to 2.7.1. One of the existing
code breaks. The getsockname method from socket object somehow returns me with
some number which I deem as junk, rather than the listening port as I would
have expected in the older python. Has anyone seen
Steven D'Aprano writes:
> import the module called 'math' into the current namespace and bind
> that module to the name 'math' in the current namespace
>
> bind the name 'x' in the current namespace to the return result of
> calling the attribute named 'sin' in the object currently bound to the
>
Hello,
For about week i am experiencing a problem with pexpect that's why i
hope you can help me :).
Following is my code which tries to remove some files from the root dir
and the code works on linux debian and freebsd but with no success on
linux fedora .. any idea why this happen only in fedora
Hello there,
In migrating my application from python 1.5.2 to 2.7.1, I encountered an issue
modules which utilizes _sha256 cannot be loaded. This includes hashlib, random
and tempfile.
I think this should be related to the build of my python 64-bit on HP11.31
using HP-UX compiler. I have tried
On Wed, Oct 5, 2011 at 12:22 PM, Alan Meyer wrote:
> Of course you'll need to be fair in evaluating the students comparisons.
> Some bright students are likely to come up with good reasons for using
> globals in some situations, and they might even be right. Or if they're not
> completely right,
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