On Tue, Nov 8, 2011 at 4:09 PM, Lie Ryan wrote:
> IMO, Python has a much nicer choice of built-in data structure for data
> processing. Python has a much more mature object-orientation, e.g. I prefer
> writing l.append(x) rather than array_push(l, x). I think these qualities
> are what makes you t
Le 07/11/2011 19:01, JoeM a écrit :
Thanks guys, I was just looking for a one line solution instead of a
for loop if possible. Why do you consider
[x.remove(x[0]) for x in [a,b,c]]
cheating? It seems compact and elegant enough for me.
I have the feeling that it does not do what I expect it do
On Tue, Nov 8, 2011 at 5:29 PM, gene heskett wrote:
> Not on that file, but on the next pull it was, and works now. And on the
> first file, the blink compare disclosed I had some indentation wrong, and
> that there was a lowercase b in front of all the opening double quotes used
> that I didn't
On Tuesday, November 08, 2011 12:53:20 AM Cameron Simpson did opine:
> On 07Nov2011 15:00, gene heskett wrote:
> | On Monday, November 07, 2011 02:43:11 PM Dave Angel did opine:
> | > On 11/07/2011 11:40 AM, gene heskett wrote:
> | > > Down toward the bottom of the file, the tab indentations were
On Tue, 08 Nov 2011 15:17:14 +1100, Lie Ryan wrote:
> On 10/31/2011 11:01 PM, dhyams wrote:
>>
>> Thanks for all of the responses; everyone was exactly correct, and
>> obeying the binding rules for special methods did work in the example
>> above. Unfortunately, I only have read-only access to th
Dao is a a functional logic solver (similar to lambdaProlog, Curry)
written in python. The links related to dao are here:
pypi distribution and document: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/daot
code repository: https://github.com/chaosim/dao
dao groups on google: http://groups.google.com/group/daot,
d.
On 11/07/2011 05:04 PM, John Nagle wrote:
Realize that SQLite is not a high-performance multi-user database.
You use SQLite to store your browser preferences, not your customer
database.
I agree with SQLite is not multi-user; I disagree that SQLite is not a
high-performance database. In single
Dao is a a functional logic solver (similar to lambdaProlog, Curry)
written in python. The links related to dao are here:
pypi distribution and document: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/daot
code repository: https://github.com/chaosim/dao
dao groups on google: Group name: daot, Group home page:
http:/
On 11/08/2011 01:21 PM, Travis Parks wrote:
On Nov 7, 12:44 pm, John Gordon wrote:
In John Gordon writes:
In<415d875d-bc6d-4e69-bcf8-39754b450...@n18g2000vbv.googlegroups.com> Travis
Parks writes:
Which web frameworks have people here used and which have they found
to be: scalable, RAD
On 07Nov2011 15:00, gene heskett wrote:
| On Monday, November 07, 2011 02:43:11 PM Dave Angel did opine:
| > On 11/07/2011 11:40 AM, gene heskett wrote:
| > > Down toward the bottom of the file, the tab indentations were as high
| > > as 33 leading tabs per line. Each stanza of the data was tab
|
I got trouble about easy_install command.
My package:
README.rst
setup.py
foobar/
foobar/__init__.py
foobar/data/
foobar/data/template.py
In the above example, 'foobar/data/template.py' is just a
template data file (= not a python module file).
(notice that 'foobar/data/__init__.py'
On 10/31/2011 11:01 PM, dhyams wrote:
Thanks for all of the responses; everyone was exactly correct, and
obeying the binding rules for special methods did work in the example
above. Unfortunately, I only have read-only access to the class
itself (it was a VTK class wrapped with SWIG), so I had
On Nov 7, 12:44 pm, John Gordon wrote:
> In John Gordon writes:
>
> > In <415d875d-bc6d-4e69-bcf8-39754b450...@n18g2000vbv.googlegroups.com>
> > Travis Parks writes:
> > > Which web frameworks have people here used and which have they found
> > > to be: scalable, RAD compatible, performant, st
On Monday, November 07, 2011 07:34:05 PM Terry Reedy did opine:
> On 11/7/2011 11:30 AM, gene heskett wrote:
> > Perhaps winderz does not have 'pipe' files so the authors never got
> > caught out on this?
>
> Last I know, Windows not only had no pipe files but also no real
> in-memory pipes. Mayb
On 11/7/2011 11:30 AM, gene heskett wrote:
Perhaps winderz does not have 'pipe' files so the authors never got caught
out on this?
Last I know, Windows not only had no pipe files but also no real
in-memory pipes. Maybe one or both of those has changed.
--
Terry Jan Reedy
--
http://mail.pyt
On 11/7/2011 3:47 PM, Stefan Krah wrote:
Juan Declet-Barreto wrote:
Well, I am using Python 2.5 (and the IDLE shell) in Windows XP, which
ships with ESRI's ArcGIS. In addition, I am using some functions in the
arcgisscripting Python geoprocessing module for geographic information
systems (GIS)
On 11/7/2011 1:22 PM, John Gordon wrote:
In
JoeM writes:
Thanks guys, I was just looking for a one line solution instead of a
for loop if possible. Why do you consider
[x.remove(x[0]) for x in [a,b,c]]
cheating? It seems compact and elegant enough for me.
It looks like incomplete cod
See these all vs myAll tests:
%~> python all_test
0.5427970886230469
1.1579840183258057
3.3052260875701904
3.4992029666900635
3.303942918777466
1.7343430519104004
3.18320894241333
1.6191949844360352
In the first pair and the second pair, the pairs receive the same input.
The builtin all outper
On Mon, Nov 7, 2011 at 2:06 PM, Eleftherios Garyfallidis
wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Is it possible using ctypes to call C functions from a shared object
> containing double pointers e.g. int foo(float **i) and if yes how?
(Untested conjecture:)
import ctypes
# ...create ctypes_wrapped_foo...
the_float
Hello,
Is it possible using ctypes to call C functions from a shared object
containing double pointers e.g. int foo(float **i) and if yes how?
Best wishes,
Eleftherios
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Tue, Nov 8, 2011 at 8:46 AM, david vierra wrote:
> But, you didn't write an all() function. You wrote a more specialized
> allBoolean() function. I think this comparison is more fair to the
> builtin all():
So really, it's not "all() is slow" but "function calls are slow".
Maybe it'd be worth
On 07/11/11 21:49, Jakub Narebski wrote:
[snip]
But now I understand that you are just building tree objects, and
creating references to them (with implicit ordering given by names,
I guess). This is to be a start of further work, isn't it?
Yes, that's exactly the point, and my apologies if
The following message is a courtesy copy of an article
that has been posted to comp.text.tex as well.
Jonathan Fine writes:
> On 06/11/11 20:28, Jakub Narebski wrote:
>
> > Note that for gitPAN each "distribution" (usually but not always
> > corresponding to single Perl module) is in separate re
On Nov 7, 11:00 am, "OKB (not okblacke)"
wrote:
> What is the point of the all() function being a builtin if it's
> slower than writing a function to do the check myself?
>
But, you didn't write an all() function. You wrote a more specialized
allBoolean() function. I think this comparis
On Tue, Nov 8, 2011 at 6:43 AM, Juan Declet-Barreto
wrote:
>
> I have a script that traverses a file structure using os.walk and adds
> directory names to a list. It works for a small number of directories, but
> when I set it loose on a directory with thousands of dirs/subdirs, it crashes
> th
On Mon, Nov 7, 2011 at 1:00 PM, OKB (not okblacke)
wrote:
> What is the point of the all() function being a builtin if it's
> slower than writing a function to do the check myself?
Regardless of whether it's slower (which I expect someone will be
along to debunk or explain shortly), do yo
>Maybe Lbrtchx is one of the Sheldon Cooper's nicknames :o)
>
>JM
>
>PS : I have the feeling that my nerdy reference will fall flat...
Not completely ;)
Ramit
Ramit Prasad | JPMorgan Chase Investment Bank | Currencies Technology
712 Main Street | Houston, TX 77002
work phone: 713 - 216 - 5423
I noticed this (Python 2.6.5 on Windows XP):
>>> import random, timeit
>>> def myAll(x):
... for a in x:
... if a not in (True, False):
... return False
... return True
>>> x = [random.choice([True, False]) for a in xrange(0, 500)]
>>> timeit.timeit('myAll(x
On 11/07/2011 03:33 PM, Juan Declet-Barreto wrote:
Well, I am using Python 2.5 (and the IDLE shell) in Windows XP, which ships
with ESRI's ArcGIS. In addition, I am using some functions in the
arcgisscripting Python geoprocessing module for geographic information systems
(GIS) applications, wh
Juan Declet-Barreto wrote:
> Well, I am using Python 2.5 (and the IDLE shell) in Windows XP, which
> ships with ESRI's ArcGIS. In addition, I am using some functions in the
> arcgisscripting Python geoprocessing module for geographic information
> systems (GIS) applications, which can complicate t
Well, I am using Python 2.5 (and the IDLE shell) in Windows XP, which ships
with ESRI's ArcGIS. In addition, I am using some functions in the
arcgisscripting Python geoprocessing module for geographic information systems
(GIS) applications, which can complicate things. I am currently isolating
On 06/11/11 20:28, Jakub Narebski wrote:
Note that for gitPAN each "distribution" (usually but not always
corresponding to single Perl module) is in separate repository.
The dependencies are handled by CPAN / CPANPLUS / cpanm client
(i.e. during install).
Thank you for your interest, Jakub, an
On 11/07/2011 02:43 PM, Juan Declet-Barreto wrote:
Hi,
Can anyone provide links or basic info on memory management, variable
dereferencing, or the like? I have a script that traverses a file structure
using os.walk and adds directory names to a list. It works for a small number
of directorie
On 11/07/2011 01:01 PM, JoeM wrote:
Thanks guys, I was just looking for a one line solution instead of a
for loop if possible. Why do you consider
[x.remove(x[0]) for x in [a,b,c]]
cheating? It seems compact and elegant enough for me.
Cheers
Are you considering the possibility that two of th
On Monday, November 07, 2011 02:43:11 PM Dave Angel did opine:
> On 11/07/2011 11:40 AM, gene heskett wrote:
> > On Monday, November 07, 2011 11:30:45 AM Dave Angel did opine:
> > Back on the list..
> >
> >> On 11/07/2011 06:22 AM, gene heskett wrote:
> >>> On Monday, November 07, 2011 05:35:15 A
Hi,
Can anyone provide links or basic info on memory management, variable
dereferencing, or the like? I have a script that traverses a file structure
using os.walk and adds directory names to a list. It works for a small number
of directories, but when I set it loose on a directory with thousan
JoeM wrote:
Thanks guys, I was just looking for a one line solution instead of a
for loop if possible. Why do you consider
[x.remove(x[0]) for x in [a,b,c]]
cheating? It seems compact and elegant enough for me.
Cheers
This is a one liner, but since you asked something *pythonic*, John's
JoeM wrote:
> Thanks guys, I was just looking for a one line solution instead of a
> for loop if possible. Why do you consider
>
> [x.remove(x[0]) for x in [a,b,c]]
>
> cheating? It seems compact and elegant enough for me.
I think it's a misconception that you are avoiding the for-loop. You mov
In JoeM
writes:
> Thanks guys, I was just looking for a one line solution instead of a
> for loop if possible. Why do you consider
> [x.remove(x[0]) for x in [a,b,c]]
> cheating? It seems compact and elegant enough for me.
I wouldn't call it cheating, but that solution does a fair bit of
unn
On 11/07/2011 11:40 AM, gene heskett wrote:
On Monday, November 07, 2011 11:30:45 AM Dave Angel did opine:
Back on the list..
On 11/07/2011 06:22 AM, gene heskett wrote:
On Monday, November 07, 2011 05:35:15 AM Peter Otten did opine:
Are you talking about this one?
https://github.com/halste
Thanks guys, I was just looking for a one line solution instead of a
for loop if possible. Why do you consider
[x.remove(x[0]) for x in [a,b,c]]
cheating? It seems compact and elegant enough for me.
Cheers
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Le 07/11/2011 18:12, JoeM a écrit :
Howdy,
If I have a few lists like
a=[1,2,3,4,5]
b=["one", "two", "three", "four", "five"]
c=["cat", "dog", "parrot", "clam", "ferret"]
what is the most pythonic method of removing the first element from
all of the lists?
Do you want to remove the first ite
In John Gordon writes:
> In <415d875d-bc6d-4e69-bcf8-39754b450...@n18g2000vbv.googlegroups.com> Travis
> Parks writes:
> > Which web frameworks have people here used and which have they found
> > to be: scalable, RAD compatible, performant, stable and/or providing
> > good community support?
In JoeM
writes:
> a=[1,2,3,4,5]
> b=["one", "two", "three", "four", "five"]
> c=["cat", "dog", "parrot", "clam", "ferret"]
> what is the most pythonic method of removing the first element from
> all of the lists?
for arr in [a,b,c]:
arr.pop(0)
--
John Gordon A is for Amy
Howdy,
If I have a few lists like
a=[1,2,3,4,5]
b=["one", "two", "three", "four", "five"]
c=["cat", "dog", "parrot", "clam", "ferret"]
what is the most pythonic method of removing the first element from
all of the lists?
A list comprehension such as [arr[1:] for arr in a,b,c]
gives a single 2d
On Mon, 2011-11-07 at 08:22 +0100, Stefan Behnel wrote:
> Dan Stromberg, 06.11.2011 21:00:
> > Is there an opensource Python tool for creating RSS feeds, that doesn't
> > require large dependencies?
> > I found feedformatter.py on pypi, but it seems a little old, and its sole
> > automated test giv
On Sat, 2011-11-05 at 05:50 -0700, pacopyc wrote:
> Hi, I have a XML-RPC server python running on VM Windows (on Linux)
> and a XML-RPC client python on Linux. Server and client have different
> IP address. I'd like migrate server on wine. How can communicate
> server and client? IP address is diff
On Monday, November 07, 2011 11:30:45 AM Dave Angel did opine:
Back on the list..
> On 11/07/2011 06:22 AM, gene heskett wrote:
> > On Monday, November 07, 2011 05:35:15 AM Peter Otten did opine:
> >
> >
> >> Are you talking about this one?
> >>
> >> https://github.com/halsten/Duqu-detectors/blo
On Monday, November 07, 2011 10:38:32 AM Andreas Perstinger did opine:
> On 2011-11-07 12:22, gene heskett wrote:
> > On Monday, November 07, 2011 05:35:15 AM Peter Otten did opine:
> >> Are you talking about this one?
> >>
> >> https://github.com/halsten/Duqu-detectors/blob/master/DuquDriverP
In <415d875d-bc6d-4e69-bcf8-39754b450...@n18g2000vbv.googlegroups.com> Travis
Parks writes:
> Which web frameworks have people here used and which have they found
> to be: scalable, RAD compatible, performant, stable and/or providing
> good community support? I am really trying to get as much fe
Jaroslav Dobrek wrote:
> Hello,
>
> in Python3, I often have this problem: I want to do something with
> every line of a file. Like Python3, I presuppose that every line is
> encoded in utf-8. If this isn't the case, I would like Python3 to do
> something specific (like skipping the line, writing
On 11/07/2011 09:23 AM, Jaroslav Dobrek wrote:
Hello,
in Python3, I often have this problem: I want to do something with
every line of a file. Like Python3, I presuppose that every line is
encoded in utf-8. If this isn't the case, I would like Python3 to do
something specific (like skipping the
Hello,
in Python3, I often have this problem: I want to do something with
every line of a file. Like Python3, I presuppose that every line is
encoded in utf-8. If this isn't the case, I would like Python3 to do
something specific (like skipping the line, writing the line to
standard error, ...)
L
gene heskett wrote:
> On Monday, November 07, 2011 05:35:15 AM Peter Otten did opine:
>
>> gene heskett wrote:
>> > Greetings experts:
>> >
>> > I just dl'd the duqu driver finder script from a link to NSS on /.,
>> > and fixed enough of the tabs in it to make it run error-free. At
>> > least p
2011/11/7 Jean-Michel Pichavant :
> Gábor Farkas wrote:
>>
>> is there a way to setup log-handlers in a way that they log logs from
>> every logger, exept certain ones?
>>
>> i tried to create filters, but the log-record does not have access to
>> his logger, so i cannot filter based on it's "path"
Gábor Farkas wrote:
hi,
is there a way to setup log-handlers in a way that they log logs from
every logger, exept certain ones?
basically i want the handler to handle everything, except log-records
that were generated by loggers from "something.*"
can this be done?
i tried to create filters, b
On 11/07/2011 06:22 AM, gene heskett wrote:
On Monday, November 07, 2011 05:35:15 AM Peter Otten did opine:
Are you talking about this one?
https://github.com/halsten/Duqu-detectors/blob/master/DuquDriverPatterns
.py
Yes. My save as renamed it, still has about 30k of tabs in it. But I
pull
On 2011-11-07 12:22, gene heskett wrote:
On Monday, November 07, 2011 05:35:15 AM Peter Otten did opine:
Are you talking about this one?
https://github.com/halsten/Duqu-detectors/blob/master/DuquDriverPatterns
.py
Yes. My save as renamed it, still has about 30k of tabs in it. But I
pulle
hi,
is there a way to setup log-handlers in a way that they log logs from
every logger, exept certain ones?
basically i want the handler to handle everything, except log-records
that were generated by loggers from "something.*"
can this be done?
i tried to create filters, but the log-record does
On Monday, November 07, 2011 05:35:15 AM Peter Otten did opine:
> gene heskett wrote:
> > Greetings experts:
> >
> > I just dl'd the duqu driver finder script from a link to NSS on /.,
> > and fixed enough of the tabs in it to make it run error-free. At
> > least python isn't having a litter of
Kristen Aw wrote:
> I don't understand why I get this error. I'm trying to delete the existing
points, then redraw them after this bit of code to 'animate' my simulation.
>
> def update(self, point1, point2):
> # Deletes existing points
> if self.point1:
> self.w.dele
gene heskett wrote:
> Greetings experts:
>
> I just dl'd the duqu driver finder script from a link to NSS on /., and
> fixed enough of the tabs in it to make it run error-free. At least python
> isn't having a litter of cows over the indentation now.
>
> But it also runs instantly on linux.
>
Stefan Behnel, 07.11.2011 08:22:
Dan Stromberg, 06.11.2011 21:00:
Is there an opensource Python tool for creating RSS feeds, that doesn't
require large dependencies?
I found feedformatter.py on pypi, but it seems a little old, and its sole
automated test gives a traceback.
Is there a better st
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