I am pleased to announce release 2012.3 of SfePy.
Description
---
SfePy (simple finite elements in Python) is a software for solving
systems of coupled partial differential equations by the finite element
method. The code is based on NumPy and SciPy packages. It is distributed
under the
月忧茗 wrote:
HI, I have some test code:
def num(num):
def deco(func):
def wrap(*args, **kwargs):
inputed_num = num
return func(*args, **kwargs)
return wrap
return deco
@num(5)
def test(a):
return a + inputed_num
print
Hi,
I am looking for a Java Python developer at NYC NY for one of our direct
client. It is a 6 Months contract position. We need a person with
experience in developing trading applications and very good with Python
Development. If interested, please send me your resume to my email
address, ie
Thanks for answer, but that's not helping.
I'm making a little embedded system programming IDE so I need to run
.exe(windows only), make commands, perl python scripts etc(multiplatform).
I'm using subprocess.Popen for all of them and it works fine except that blank
console window and btw it
On 13/09/12 03:59, Jason Friedman wrote:
Or if Python 3.2 is an option, the concurrent.futures module would be
very well suited for this task.
Also available as an external download for Python 2.* ...
http://pypi.python.org/pypi/futures/
Matěj
--
MRAB wrote:
On 12/09/2012 19:04, Alister wrote:
On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 18:56:46 +0200, Jabba Laci wrote:
For example:
def install_java():
pass
def install_tomcat():
pass
Thanks for the answers. I decided to use numbers in the name of the
functions to facilitate function calls. Now
I'm in ubuntu10.04 and I decide to compile python2.7 from source myself to
build a GAE app.As a result,when I done with make command,it comes out with the
following warning:
Python build finished, but the necessary bits to build these modules were not
found:
_bsddb _sqlite3
On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 00:27:10 -0700 (PDT), janis.judvai...@gmail.com
wrote:
I'm making a little embedded system programming IDE so I need to
run .exe(windows only), make commands, perl python scripts
etc(multiplatform). I'm using subprocess.Popen for all of them and
it works fine except that
On 13 September 2012 10:22, Oscar Benjamin oscar.j.benja...@gmail.comwrote:
On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 00:27:10 -0700 (PDT), janis.judvai...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm making a little embedded system programming IDE so I need to
run .exe(windows only), make commands, perl python scripts
I noticed this and thought it looked interesting:
http://search.cpan.org/~dconway/Regexp-
Grammars-1.021/lib/Regexp/Grammars.pm#DESCRIPTION
I'm wondering if python has something equivalent?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Thursday, 13 September 2012 14:17:29 UTC+5:30, 钟驰宇 wrote:
I'm in ubuntu10.04 and I decide to compile python2.7 from source myself to
build a GAE app.As a result,when I done with make command,it comes out with
the following warning:
Python build finished, but the necessary bits to build
Am 13.09.2012 10:47, schrieb 钟驰宇:
I'm in ubuntu10.04 and I decide to compile python2.7 from source
[...] However when I run my GAE app,it comes out with no module
named _ssl and _sqlite3.
There are Debian-specific ways to ease this task that should work in
Ubuntu, too. First is apt-get
It looks like normal terminal to me, could You define normal?
Looks like it appears only when target script prints something, but it
shouldn't cus I'm using pipes on stdout and stderr.
If anyone is interested I'm using function doPopen from here:
I'm not sure if this is some Win32 update that was silently applied
by our netadmin, but when I simply import socket at the command
line, it's crashing (with the Do you want to send this information
to Microsoft debug/crash dialog).
It was working as of last night, and to the best of my
I am in a situation where I have a class Obj which contains many
attributes, and also contains logically another object of class
Dependent.
This dependent_object, however, also needs to access many fields of the
original class, so at the moment we did something like this:
class Dependent:
In article mailman.587.1347503376.27098.python-l...@python.org,
Terry Reedy tjre...@udel.edu wrote:
On 9/12/2012 8:58 PM, Roy Smith wrote:
The atexit docs (http://docs.python.org/library/atexit.html) are very
confusing. In one place they say, The order in which the functions are
called
On 09/13/12 07:42, Tim Chase wrote:
It was working as of last night, and to the best of my knowledge,
nothing was changed on the system. It took a while to track it
down, but it came from importing smtplib which in turn imports socket.
I've tried import socket and it crashes, but then tried
On 13/09/2012 13:42, Tim Chase wrote:
I'm not sure if this is some Win32 update that was silently applied
by our netadmin, but when I simply import socket at the command
line, it's crashing (with the Do you want to send this information
to Microsoft debug/crash dialog).
It was working as of
- Original Message -
I am in a situation where I have a class Obj which contains many
attributes, and also contains logically another object of class
Dependent.
This dependent_object, however, also needs to access many fields of
the
original class, so at the moment we did something
On 09/13/12 08:12, MRAB wrote:
I've just downloaded, installed and tested Python 2.4.4. No crash.
This is with Windows XP Pro (32-bit).
Could I get the MD5 of your $PYTHONDIR\DLLs\_socket.pyd to see if it
matches mine?
data = file('_socket.pyd', 'rb').read()
import md5
On 2012-09-13 14:35, Tim Chase wrote:
On 09/13/12 08:12, MRAB wrote:
I've just downloaded, installed and tested Python 2.4.4. No crash.
This is with Windows XP Pro (32-bit).
Could I get the MD5 of your $PYTHONDIR\DLLs\_socket.pyd to see if it
matches mine?
data = file('_socket.pyd',
On 09/13/12 08:51, MRAB wrote:
I get this:
Python 2.4.4 (#71, Oct 18 2006, 08:34:43) [MSC v.1310 32 bit (Intel)] on
win32
Type help, copyright, credits or license for more information.
data = file(r'C:\Python24\DLLs\_socket.pyd', 'rb').read()
import md5
md5.md5(data).hexdigest()
2012/9/13 Jean-Michel Pichavant jeanmic...@sequans.com:
Nothing shocking right here imo. It looks like a classic parent-child
implementation.
However it seems the relation between Obj and Dependent are 1-to-1. Since
Dependent need to access all Obj attributes, are you sure that Dependent
Howdy all,
What material should a team of programmers read before designing a
database model and export format for sending commerce transactions to a
business accounting system?
I'm especially not wanting ad hoc advice in this thread; this is surely
an old, complex problem with a lot of ground
Is there a version for SciPy/numpy available for Python 2.6? I could only
find a version for 2.7 on the SciPy site. A search on the Scipy mailing list
archive did not turn up anything. The link to the Scipy-user list signup
appeared to be broken.
--
Am 13.09.2012 14:51, schrieb andrea crotti:
I am in a situation where I have a class Obj which contains many
attributes, and also contains logically another object of class
Dependent.
This dependent_object, however, also needs to access many fields of the
original class, so at the moment we did
I have a subprocess.call which tries to download a data from a remote server
using HTAR. I put the call in a while loop, which tests to see if the download
was successful, and if not, loops back around up to five times, just in case my
internet connection has a hiccup.
Subprocess.call is
- Original Message -
2012/9/13 Jean-Michel Pichavant jeanmic...@sequans.com:
Nothing shocking right here imo. It looks like a classic
parent-child implementation.
However it seems the relation between Obj and Dependent are 1-to-1.
Since Dependent need to access all Obj
On 2012-09-13 16:04, garyr wrote:
Is there a version for SciPy/numpy available for Python 2.6? I could only
find a version for 2.7 on the SciPy site. A search on the Scipy mailing list
archive did not turn up anything. The link to the Scipy-user list signup
appeared to be broken.
There's numpy
On Fri, Sep 14, 2012 at 1:02 AM, Ben Finney ben+pyt...@benfinney.id.au wrote:
What I want is pointers to a putative “What every programmer needs to
know about storing commercial transactions for business accounting”
general guide.
Does that information already exist where I can point our team
- Original Message -
I have a subprocess.call which tries to download a data from a remote
server using HTAR. I put the call in a while loop, which tests to
see if the download was successful, and if not, loops back around up
to five times, just in case my internet connection has a
On 2012-09-13 16:17, paulsta...@gmail.com wrote:
I have a subprocess.call which tries to download a data from a remote server
using HTAR. I put the call in a while loop, which tests to see if the download
was successful, and if not, loops back around up to five times, just in case my
internet
How do I set the time in Python?
Also, is there any *direct* way to shift it?
Say, it's 09:00 now and Python makes it 11:30 *without* me having specified
11:30 but only given Python the 2h30m interval.
Note that any indirect methods may need complicated ways to keep
track of the milliseconds
On Fri, Sep 14, 2012 at 1:19 AM, Max read...@hushmail.com wrote:
Say, it's 09:00 now and Python makes it 11:30 *without* me having specified
11:30 but only given Python the 2h30m interval.
Could you cheat and change the timezone offset? :D
ChrisA
--
On 2012-09-13 16:34, Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
- Original Message -
I have a subprocess.call which tries to download a data from a remote
server using HTAR. I put the call in a while loop, which tests to
see if the download was successful, and if not, loops back around up
to five
In mailman.617.1347552022.27098.python-l...@python.org andrea crotti
andrea.crott...@gmail.com writes:
For my experience if I only see code in slides I tend not to believe
that it works somehow
Presumably you will have some credibility with your audience so they won't
just assume you're
On 9/13/2012 8:02 AM Ben Finney said...
Howdy all,
What material should a team of programmers read before designing a
database model and export format for sending commerce transactions to a
business accounting system?
The only standard I'm aware of is the EDI specification which I first
Am Thu, 13 Sep 2012 17:00:19 +0100 schrieb andrea crotti:
I have to give a couple of Python presentations in the next weeks, and
I'm still thinking what is the best approach.
My idea for an introductory presentation of python was to prepare some
code snippets (all valid python), show them in
On Thu, Sep 13, 2012 at 9:19 AM, Max read...@hushmail.com wrote:
How do I set the time in Python?
On what platform? I don't know of any libraries for this, so it would
be a matter of making the necessary system calls (which is all that a
library would do anyway).
Also, is there any *direct*
2012/9/13 William R. Wing (Bill Wing) w...@mac.com:
[byte]
Speaking from experience as both a presenter and an audience member, please
be sure that anything you demo interactively you include in your slide deck
(even if only as an addendum). I assume your audience will have access to
On Sep 13, 2012, at 12:00 PM, andrea crotti andrea.crott...@gmail.com wrote:
I have to give a couple of Python presentations in the next weeks, and
I'm still thinking what is the best approach.
In one presentation for example I will present decorators and context
managers, and my biggest
It possibly requires a shell=True, but without any code on any way to test,
we can not say.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
- Original Message -
I have to give a couple of Python presentations in the next weeks,
and
I'm still thinking what is the best approach.
In one presentation for example I will present decorators and context
managers, and my biggest doubt is how much I should show and explain
in
On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 10:23:22 +0200, Peter Otten wrote:
MRAB wrote:
On 12/09/2012 19:04, Alister wrote:
On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 18:56:46 +0200, Jabba Laci wrote:
For example:
def install_java():
pass
def install_tomcat():
pass
Thanks for the answers. I decided to use numbers in
tinn...@isbd.co.uk wrote:
I want to print a series of list elements some of which may not exist,
e.g. I have a line:-
print day, fld[1], balance, fld[2]
fld[2] doesn't always exist (fld is the result of a split) so the
print fails when it isn't set.
I know I could simply use an if
On 9/13/2012 11:19 AM, Max wrote:
How do I set the time in Python?
If you look up 'time' in the index of the current manual, it directs you
to the time module.
time.clock_settime(clk_id, time)
Set the time of the specified clock clk_id.
Availability: Unix.
New in version 3.3.
You did not
Also try to keep the presentation interactive by asking questions to
your audience (unless some of them are already participating), otherwise
people will be snoring or texting after 20 minutes.
That is a v good suggestion.
the best presentation I ever attended was one on using an emergency
I'm writing a simple library that communicates with a web service and am
wondering if there are any generally well regarded methods for batching
HTTP requests?
The problem with most web services is that they require a list of
sequential commands to be executed in a certain order to complete a
Thanks, guys.
MRAB-RedHat 6 64-bit, Python 2.6.5
JM-Here's the relevant stuff from my last try. I've also tried with
subprocess.call. Just now I tried shell=True, but it made no difference.
sticking a print(out) in there just prints a blank line in between each
iteration. It's not until the 5
On Thu, Sep 13, 2012 at 7:30 AM, Neal Becker ndbeck...@gmail.com wrote:
I noticed this and thought it looked interesting:
http://search.cpan.org/~dconway/Regexp-
Grammars-1.021/lib/Regexp/Grammars.pm#DESCRIPTION
I'm wondering if python has something equivalent?
If you mean regex, it's
On Thu, Sep 13, 2012 at 5:30 AM, Neal Becker ndbeck...@gmail.com wrote:
I noticed this and thought it looked interesting:
http://search.cpan.org/~dconway/Regexp-
Grammars-1.021/lib/Regexp/Grammars.pm#DESCRIPTION
I'm wondering if python has something equivalent?
The pyparsing module is a
mblume於 2012年9月14日星期五UTC+8上午12時26分17秒寫道:
Am Thu, 13 Sep 2012 17:00:19 +0100 schrieb andrea crotti:
I have to give a couple of Python presentations in the next weeks, and
I'm still thinking what is the best approach.
My idea for an introductory presentation of python was to
Terry Reedy tjreedy at udel.edu writes:
You did not specify *which* time to set, but ...
If you mean time.clock_shift(clk_id, shift_seconds), no.
time.clock_settime(clk_id, time.clock_gettime(clk_id) + delta_seconds)
I am talking about the system-wide clock on Debian.
What should I
Dwight Hutto wrote:
Why don' you just time it,eit lops through incrementing thmax input/
What? Without context I have no idea what this means.
Ramit
--
This email is confidential and subject to important disclaimers and
conditions including on offers for the purchase or sale of
securities,
On Thu, Sep 13, 2012 at 2:39 PM, Prasad, Ramit
ramit.pra...@jpmorgan.com wrote:
Dwight Hutto wrote:
Why don' you just time it,eit lops through incrementing thmax input/
What? Without context I have no idea what this means.
Ramit
Why don't you read the OP:
Let's assume you're testing two
On 13/09/2012 19:39, Prasad, Ramit wrote:
Dwight Hutto wrote:
Why don' you just time it,eit lops through incrementing thmax input/
What? Without context I have no idea what this means.
Ramit
You're wasting your time, I've been described as a jackass for having
the audacity to ask for
In article k1qhgn$me0$1...@dont-email.me,
Kevin Walzer k...@codebykevin.com wrote:
On 8/31/12 6:18 AM, Arnaud Delobelle wrote:
I'm very inexperienced with Tkinter (I've never used it before). All
I'm looking for is a workaround, i.e. a way to somehow suppress that
output.
What are you
On 13 September 2012 20:53, Mark Lawrence breamore...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
On 13/09/2012 19:39, Prasad, Ramit wrote:
Dwight Hutto wrote:
Why don' you just time it,eit lops through incrementing thmax input/
What? Without context I have no idea what this means.
You're wasting your time,
On 13 September 2012 13:33, janis.judvai...@gmail.com wrote:
It looks like normal terminal to me, could You define normal?
Looks like it appears only when target script prints something, but it
shouldn't cus I'm using pipes on stdout and stderr.
If anyone is interested I'm using function
On Thu, Sep 13, 2012 at 4:34 PM, Joshua Landau
joshua.landau...@gmail.com wrote:
On 13 September 2012 20:53, Mark Lawrence breamore...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
On 13/09/2012 19:39, Prasad, Ramit wrote:
Dwight Hutto wrote:
Why don' you just time it,eit lops through incrementing thmax input/
On 13/09/2012 21:34, Joshua Landau wrote:
On 13 September 2012 20:53, Mark Lawrence breamore...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
On 13/09/2012 19:39, Prasad, Ramit wrote:
Dwight Hutto wrote:
Why don' you just time it,eit lops through incrementing thmax input/
What? Without context I have no idea what
I've got a bunch of text in Portuguese and to transmit them, need to
have them in us-ascii (7-bit). I'd like to keep as much information
as possible, just stripping accents, cedillas, tildes, etc. So
serviço móvil becomes servico movil. Is there anything stock
that I've missed? I can do
On Thu, Sep 13, 2012 at 5:17 PM, Mark Lawrence breamore...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
On 13/09/2012 21:34, Joshua Landau wrote:
On 13 September 2012 20:53, Mark Lawrence breamore...@yahoo.co.uk
wrote:acci sequence
On 13/09/2012 19:39, Prasad, Ramit wrote:
Dwight Hutto wrote:
Why don' you just
2012/9/13 Tim Chase python.l...@tim.thechases.com:
I've got a bunch of text in Portuguese and to transmit them, need to
have them in us-ascii (7-bit). I'd like to keep as much information
as possible, just stripping accents, cedillas, tildes, etc. So
serviço móvil becomes servico movil. Is
Am 13.09.2012 23:26, schrieb Tim Chase:
I've got a bunch of text in Portuguese and to transmit them, need to
have them in us-ascii (7-bit). I'd like to keep as much information
as possible, just stripping accents, cedillas, tildes, etc. So
serviço móvil becomes servico movil. Is there
On 09/13/12 16:44, Vlastimil Brom wrote:
import unicodedata
unicodedata.normalize(NFD, userviço móvil).encode(ascii,
ignore).decode(ascii)
u'servico movil'
Works well for all the test-cases I threw at it. Thanks!
-tkc
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 13.09.2012 21:01, 8 Dihedral wrote:
def powerlist(x, n):
# n is a natural number
result=[]
y=1
for i in xrange(n):
result.append(y)
y*=x
return result # any object in the local function can be returned
def powerlist(x, n):
result=[1]
[sorry for the direct reply, Tim]
Tim Chase wrote:
I've got a bunch of text in Portuguese and to transmit them, need to
have them in us-ascii (7-bit). I'd like to keep as much information
as possible, just stripping accents, cedillas, tildes, etc. So
serviço móvil becomes servico movil. Is
On Fri, Sep 14, 2012 at 8:33 AM, Alexander Blinne n...@blinne.net wrote:
On 13.09.2012 21:01, 8 Dihedral wrote:
def powerlist(x, n):
# n is a natural number
result=[]
y=1
for i in xrange(n):
result.append(y)
y*=x
return result # any object in
What do you think work best in general?
I find typing during class (other than small REPL examples) time consuming and
error prone.
What works well for me is to create a slidy HTML presentation with asciidoc,
then I can include code snippets that can be also run from the command line.
On 09/13/2012 11:58 PM, Miki Tebeka wrote:
What do you think work best in general?
I find typing during class (other than small REPL examples) time consuming and
error prone.
What works well for me is to create a slidy HTML presentation with asciidoc,
then I can include code snippets that
Dwight Hutto wrote:
[snip]
On Wed, Sep 12, 2012 at 3:37 AM, Mark Lawrence breamore...@yahoo.co.uk
wrote:
[snip]
Others would be able to see this for themselves but
you insist on sending email without context. Please don't do this.
How are my emails without context? I'm referring the
On 9/13/2012 3:06 PM, readmax wrote:
Terry Reedy tjreedy at udel.edu writes:
You did not specify *which* time to set, but ...
If you mean time.clock_shift(clk_id, shift_seconds), no.
time.clock_settime(clk_id, time.clock_gettime(clk_id) + delta_seconds)
I am talking about the
Ramchandra Apte wrote:
On Wednesday, 12 September 2012 14:11:56 UTC+5:30, Ramchandra Apte wrote:
On Wednesday, 12 September 2012 14:04:56 UTC+5:30, alex23 wrote:
On 12 Sep, 16:31, Mark Lawrence breamore...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
Perhaps this will sway
On 9/13/2012 5:26 PM, Tim Chase wrote:
I've got a bunch of text in Portuguese and to transmit them, need to
have them in us-ascii (7-bit). I'd like to keep as much information
as possible,just stripping accents, cedillas, tildes, etc.
'keep as much information as possible' would mean an
On 13Sep2012 17:00, andrea crotti andrea.crott...@gmail.com wrote:
| I have to give a couple of Python presentations in the next weeks, and
| I'm still thinking what is the best approach.
|
| In one presentation for example I will present decorators and context
| managers, and my biggest doubt is
On 09/13/12 18:36, Terry Reedy wrote:
On 9/13/2012 5:26 PM, Tim Chase wrote:
I've got a bunch of text in Portuguese and to transmit them, need to
have them in us-ascii (7-bit). I'd like to keep as much information
as possible,just stripping accents, cedillas, tildes, etc.
'keep as much
I am somewhat new to python. I am still learning it. I am starting an app that
I ma not quite sure how to best implement it.
In the grand scheme, there will be 4 apps total. There will be a core shared
between them that allows them to easily talk to each other (ill explain) and
communicate
On Thu, Sep 13, 2012 at 7:26 PM, Prasad, Ramit
ramit.pra...@jpmorgan.com wrote:
Dwight Hutto wrote:
[snip]
On Wed, Sep 12, 2012 at 3:37 AM, Mark Lawrence breamore...@yahoo.co.uk
wrote:
[snip]
Others would be able to see this for themselves but
you insist on sending email without
On Thu, Sep 13, 2012 at 9:11 PM, Dwight Hutto dwightdhu...@gmail.com wrote:
On Thu, Sep 13, 2012 at 7:26 PM, Prasad, Ramit
ramit.pra...@jpmorgan.com wrote:
Dwight Hutto wrote:
[snip]
On Wed, Sep 12, 2012 at 3:37 AM, Mark Lawrence breamore...@yahoo.co.uk
wrote:
[snip]
Others would be
On Sep 14, 3:54 am, Jean-Michel Pichavant jeanmic...@sequans.com
wrote:
I don't like decorators, I think they're not worth the mental effort.
Because passing a function to a function is a huge cognitive burden?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Thursday, September 13, 2012 4:53:13 PM UTC-7, Tim Chase wrote:
On 09/13/12 18:36, Terry Reedy wrote:
On 9/13/2012 5:26 PM, Tim Chase wrote:
I've got a bunch of text in Portuguese and to transmit them, need to
have them in us-ascii (7-bit). I'd like to keep as much information
On Sep 13, 10:52 pm, andrea crotti andrea.crott...@gmail.com wrote:
I am in a situation where I have a class Obj which contains many
attributes, and also contains logically another object of class
Dependent.
But I'm not so sure it's a good idea, it's a bit smelly..
It's actually a well
On 13Sep2012 18:58, alex23 wuwe...@gmail.com wrote:
| On Sep 14, 3:54 am, Jean-Michel Pichavant jeanmic...@sequans.com
| wrote:
| I don't like decorators, I think they're not worth the mental effort.
|
| Because passing a function to a function is a huge cognitive burden?
It is for me when I'm
On 13Sep2012 19:34, Chicken McNuggets chic...@mcnuggets.com wrote:
| I'm writing a simple library that communicates with a web service and am
| wondering if there are any generally well regarded methods for batching
| HTTP requests?
|
| The problem with most web services is that they require a
On 09/13/12 21:09, Mark Tolonen wrote:
On Thursday, September 13, 2012 4:53:13 PM UTC-7, Tim Chase wrote:
Vlastimil's solution kept the characters but stripped them of their
accents/tildes/cedillas/etc, doing just what I wanted, all using the
stdlib. Hard to do better than that :-)
How
On Sep 14, 12:12 pm, Cameron Simpson c...@zip.com.au wrote:
On 13Sep2012 18:58, alex23 wuwe...@gmail.com wrote:
| On Sep 14, 3:54 am, Jean-Michel Pichavant jeanmic...@sequans.com| wrote:
| I don't like decorators, I think they're not worth the mental effort.
|
| Because passing a function to
On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 15:19:32 +, Max wrote:
How do I set the time in Python?
You don't. You ask the operating system to set the time. If you don't
have permission to change the time, which regular users shouldn't have
because it is a security threat, it will (rightly) fail. E.g.:
import
On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 17:06:23 -0400, Dwight Hutto wrote:
Then there is the problem of people saying you posted too much of the
context, or not inline with the OP, just at the end, or top posting.
The solution to you quoted too much unnecessary verbiage is not quote
nothing. It is quote only
On Sep 14, 5:37 am, Dwight Hutto dwightdhu...@gmail.com wrote:
Why don't take the time to read the OP, and ramit in your head?
Please, don't be a dick.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 16:26:07 -0500, Tim Chase wrote:
I've got a bunch of text in Portuguese and to transmit them, need to
have them in us-ascii (7-bit).
That could mean two things:
1) The receiver is incapable of dealing with Unicode in 2012, which is
frankly appalling, but what can I do
On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 21:34:52 -0500, Tim Chase wrote:
On 09/13/12 21:09, Mark Tolonen wrote:
On Thursday, September 13, 2012 4:53:13 PM UTC-7, Tim Chase wrote:
Vlastimil's solution kept the characters but stripped them of their
accents/tildes/cedillas/etc, doing just what I wanted, all using
On Fri, Sep 14, 2012 at 1:39 PM, Steven D'Aprano
steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info wrote:
You're assuming that people read your posts immediately after they read
the post you replied to. Always imagine that your reply will be read a
week after the post you replied to.
And a week is
On Thu, Sep 13, 2012 at 11:48 PM, alex23 wuwe...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sep 14, 5:37 am, Dwight Hutto dwightdhu...@gmail.com wrote:
Why don't take the time to read the OP, and ramit in your head?
Please, don't be a dick.
For telling him to ramit into his head that you should read the OP?
On Sep 14, 2:46 pm, Dwight Hutto dwightdhu...@gmail.com wrote:
For telling him to ramit into his head that you should read the OP?
Yes. I'm not sure if it was intentionally racist, but you come across
as a bit of a dwight supremacist.
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On Thu, Sep 13, 2012 at 11:36 AM, paulsta...@gmail.com wrote:
Thanks, guys.
MRAB-RedHat 6 64-bit, Python 2.6.5
In your Unix shell, what does the command:
type htar
output?
JM-Here's the relevant stuff from my last try.
If you could give a complete, self-contained example, it would
On Thu, Sep 13, 2012 at 8:17 AM, paulsta...@gmail.com wrote:
I have a subprocess.call
snip
But it doesn't work as intended.
snip
Should I just go back to os.system?
Did the os.system() version work?
As of recent Python versions, os.system() is itself implemented using
the `subprocess`
Hey, how are you?
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Best Regards,
David Hutto
CEO: http://www.hitwebdevelopment.com
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Wait, that was out of context.
Subject: Hi
On Fri, Sep 14, 2012 at 1:09 AM, genban tade tadegen...@gmail.com wrote:
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Hey, how are you?
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Best Regards,
David Hutto
CEO: http://www.hitwebdevelopment.com
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On Fri, Sep 14, 2012 at 12:54 AM, alex23 wuwe...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sep 14, 2:46 pm, Dwight Hutto dwightdhu...@gmail.com wrote:
For telling him to ramit into his head that you should read the OP?
Yes. I'm not sure if it was intentionally racist, but you come across
as a bit of a dwight
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