[image: Akiban]
*Upcoming Webinar:*
SQLAlchemy Creator Mike Bayer on How and Why to Integrate Akiban and
SQLAlchemy
Hi guys,
I wanted to take a minute and invite you and the Python user group to our
next free webinar on SQLAchemy:
Presented by: Mike Bayer, Creator of SQLAchemy,Ori Herrnstadt,
Hi,
I'm really glad to announce you Nanpy 0.6, finally with Python3
support and a lot of bugfixing and
improvements!
http://pypi.python.org/pypi/nanpy/
We have issues with Leonardo boards, seems that they're unable to read
serial data.. my friend Fernando Molina is working on this issue,
anyway
On 13/11/12 22:36:47, Thomas Rachel wrote:
Am 12.11.2012 19:30 schrieb Hans Mulder:
This will break if there are spaces in the file name, or other
characters meaningful to the shell. If you change if to
xargsproc.append(test -f '%s/{}' md5sum '%s/{}'
Ian Kelly ian.g.ke...@gmail.com writes:
On Tue, Nov 13, 2012 at 11:05 PM, Kushal Kumaran
kushal.kumaran+pyt...@gmail.com wrote:
Or, you could just change the p1's stderr to an io.BytesIO instance.
Then call p2.communicate *first*.
This doesn't seem to work.
b = io.BytesIO()
p =
On 14/11/12 02:14:59, Mark Lawrence wrote:
On 14/11/2012 00:33, Ali Akhavan wrote:
I am trying to open a file in 'w' mode open('file', 'wb'). open() will
throw with IOError with errno 13 if the file is locked by another
application or if user does not have permission to open/write to the
Le mardi 13 novembre 2012 16:53:30 UTC+1, Mark Lawrence a écrit :
On 13/11/2012 13:21, wxjmfa...@gmail.com wrote:
Le mardi 13 novembre 2012 06:42:19 UTC+1, Steven D'Aprano a écrit :
On Tue, 13 Nov 2012 03:08:54 +, Mark Lawrence wrote:
* strings are now proper text strings
On 14/11/2012 08:55, Hans Mulder wrote:
On 14/11/12 02:14:59, Mark Lawrence wrote:
On 14/11/2012 00:33, Ali Akhavan wrote:
I am trying to open a file in 'w' mode open('file', 'wb'). open() will
throw with IOError with errno 13 if the file is locked by another
application or if user does not
Le mardi 13 novembre 2012 02:00:28 UTC+1, Cleuson Alves a écrit :
Hello, I need to solve an exercise follows, first calculate the inverse
matrix and then multiply the first matrix.
I await help.
Thank you.
follows the code below incomplete.
m = [[1,2,3],[4,5,6],[7,8,9]]
x =
On Wed, Nov 14, 2012 at 7:56 PM, wxjmfa...@gmail.com wrote:
I'am still fascinated by the mathematically absurd negative
logic used in and by the flexible string representation
(algorithm).
I am still fascinated that you persist in comparing a buggy old Python
against a bug-free new Python and
On 14.11.2012 01:41, Richard Baron Penman wrote:
I found the MD5 and SHA hashes slow to calculate.
Slow? For URLs? Are you kidding? How many URLs per second do you want to
calculate?
The builtin hash is fast but I was concerned about collisions. What
rate of collisions could I expect?
MD5
On 14/11/2012 00:33, Ali Akhavan wrote:
I am trying to open a file in 'w' mode open('file', 'wb'). open()
will throw with IOError with errno 13 if the file is locked by
another application or if user does not have permission to open/write
to the file.
What version of Python are you using?
Hi there!
Our team at IBM are exploring the possibility of implementing one of our
products using Python. I had a query in this regard.
As per IBM's policy, we list details of platforms that our product works on
- including the flavors of OS, the versions supported (and sometimes, even
the
thanks for perspective!
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Am 14.11.2012 10:51, schrieb Kiran N Mallekoppa:
1. Is this information available somewhere?
2. I was pointed to PEP-11, which documents the platforms that are not
supported. So, can we take that all active versions of Python (2.7.3 and
3.3, i believe) are supported on all the OS flavors that
On 14.11.2012 02:39, Roy Smith wrote:
The next step is to reduce the number of bits you are encoding. You
said in another post that 1 collision in 10 million hashes would be
tolerable. So you need:
math.log(10*1000*1000, 2)
23.25349666421154
24 bits worth of key.
Nope :-)
Base64
On 14/11/2012 00:33, Ali Akhavan wrote:
I am trying to open a file in 'w' mode open('file', 'wb'). open()
will throw with IOError with errno 13 if the file is locked by
another application or if user does not have permission to open/write
to the file.
How can I distinguish these two cases ?
2012/11/14 Kushal Kumaran kushal.kumaran+pyt...@gmail.com:
Well, well, I was wrong, clearly. I wonder if this is fixable.
--
regards,
kushal
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
But would it not be possible to use the pipe in memory in theory?
That would be way faster
On 14/11/12 11:02:45, Tim Golden wrote:
On 14/11/2012 00:33, Ali Akhavan wrote:
I am trying to open a file in 'w' mode open('file', 'wb'). open()
will throw with IOError with errno 13 if the file is locked by
another application or if user does not have permission to open/write
to the file.
On 14/11/2012 11:51, Hans Mulder wrote:
It would be nice if he could give specific error messages, e.g.
Can't write %s because it is locked by %s.
vs.
Can't write %s because you don't have write access.
I can't speak for Ali, but I'm always annoyed by error messages
listing
On 11/14/2012 06:29 AM, Johannes Bauer wrote:
snip
When doing these calculations, it's important to keep the birthday
paradox in mind (this is kind of counter-intuitive): The chance of a
collission raises tremendously when we're looking for *any* arbitrary
two hashes colliding within a
On 14.11.2012 13:33, Dave Angel wrote:
Te birthday paradox could have been important had the OP stated his goal
differently. What he said was:
Ideally I would want to avoid collisions altogether. But if that means
significant extra CPU time then 1 collision in 10 million hashes would be
On Wed, Nov 14, 2012 at 6:02 PM, ru...@yahoo.com wrote:
On 11/13/2012 11:02 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
To be more accurate: This is deprecated *by members of* this list. As
there is no commanding/controlling entity here, it's up to each
individual to make a decision - for instance, abusive
In article 50570de3$0$29981$c3e8da3$54964...@news.astraweb.com,
Steven D'Aprano steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info wrote:
On Mon, 17 Sep 2012 06:46:55 -0400, Dave Angel wrote:
On 09/16/2012 11:25 PM, alex23 wrote:
def readlines(f):
lines = []
while f is not empty:
In article mailman.3666.1352873042.27098.python-l...@python.org,
William Ray Wing w...@mac.com wrote:
On Nov 13, 2012, at 11:41 PM, Roy Smith r...@panix.com wrote:
In article mailman.3664.1352867713.27098.python-l...@python.org,
w...@mac.com wrote:
I need to time the operation of a
On Thu, Nov 15, 2012 at 1:22 AM, Roy Smith r...@panix.com wrote:
Oh, my. You're using DNS as a replacement for ping? Fair enough. In
that case, all you really care about is that you can connect to port 53
on the server...
import socket
import time
s = socket.socket()
t0 = time.time()
for this code m getting this error :
CODE :
def ComputeClasses(data):
radius = .5
points = []
for cy in xrange(0, data.height):
for cx in xrange(0, data.width):
if data[cy,cx] != (0.0,0.0,0.0):
centre = data[cy, cx]
On Thu, Nov 15, 2012 at 2:18 AM, inshu chauhan insidesh...@gmail.com wrote:
for this code m getting this error :
CODE :
def ComputeClasses(data):
if data[cy,cx] != (0.0,0.0,0.0):
centre = data[cy, cx]
...
dist = distance(centre,
On Nov 14, 2012, at 9:22 AM, Roy Smith r...@panix.com wrote:
In article mailman.3666.1352873042.27098.python-l...@python.org,
William Ray Wing w...@mac.com wrote:
On Nov 13, 2012, at 11:41 PM, Roy Smith r...@panix.com wrote:
In article mailman.3664.1352867713.27098.python-l...@python.org,
On Wed, Nov 14, 2012 at 10:18 AM, inshu chauhan insidesh...@gmail.comwrote:
for this code m getting this error :
CODE :
def ComputeClasses(data):
radius = .5
points = []
for cy in xrange(0, data.height):
for cx in xrange(0, data.width):
if data[cy,cx] !=
On 11/14/2012 10:56 AM, andrea crotti wrote:
Ok this is all very nice, but:
[andrea@andreacrotti tar_baller]$ time python2 test_pipe.py /dev/null
real 0m21.215s
user 0m0.750s
sys 0m1.703s
[andrea@andreacrotti tar_baller]$ time ls -lR /home/andrea | cat /dev/null
real 0m0.986s
2012/11/14 Dave Angel d...@davea.name:
On 11/14/2012 10:56 AM, andrea crotti wrote:
Ok this is all very nice, but:
[andrea@andreacrotti tar_baller]$ time python2 test_pipe.py /dev/null
real 0m21.215s
user 0m0.750s
sys 0m1.703s
[andrea@andreacrotti tar_baller]$ time ls -lR
Hi,
I have a question about Django. I easy_installed Django1.4 and psycopg2,
and python manage.py syncdb. And gave me a error; No module named
psycopg2.extensions. posgre9.1 is installed.
It works fine on my MAC but not my Windows. Does anyone know about
this issue
Hope to resolve this issue
I wrote:
Oh, my. You're using DNS as a replacement for ping? Fair enough. In
that case, all you really care about is that you can connect to port 53
on the server...
s = socket.socket()
s.connect(('8.8.8.8', 53))
In article mailman.3684.1352904008.27098.python-l...@python.org,
Chris
On 11/14/2012 11:16 AM, andrea crotti wrote:
2012/11/14 Dave Angel d...@davea.name:
On 11/14/2012 10:56 AM, andrea crotti wrote:
Ok this is all very nice, but:
[andrea@andreacrotti tar_baller]$ time python2 test_pipe.py /dev/null
real 0m21.215s
user 0m0.750s
sys 0m1.703s
I just found out that the attachment works fine
when I read the mail from the gmail website. Thunderbird
complains that the attachment is empty.
Thanks,
Toby
On 11/14/2012 09:51 AM, Tobiah wrote:
I've been sending an email blast out with smtplib and
it's been working fine. I'm attaching an
Hi Guys,
i found pycurl to execute python curl command but not sure how I can
execute the curl command using the pycurl.
curl -u admin:geoserver -v -XPUT -H 'Content-type: text/plain' -d
'file:/var/www/geo/shapefile/csvQshp/Quercus_iltisii.shp'
I am a newbie to py.test , Please let me know how to run the py.test in
PyScripter Editor. I have tried in the belwo way but it doesn't work.
import pytest
def func(x): return x + 1
def test_answer(): assert func(3) == 5
pytest.main()
below is the Exception that i get
Traceback (most
On 11/14/2012 06:35 AM, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Wed, Nov 14, 2012 at 6:02 PM, rurpy wrote:
On 11/13/2012 11:02 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
To be more accurate: This is deprecated *by members of* this list. As
there is no commanding/controlling entity here, it's up to each
individual to make a
On 2012-11-14 15:18, inshu chauhan wrote:
for this code m getting this error :
CODE :
def ComputeClasses(data):
radius = .5
points = []
for cy in xrange(0, data.height):
for cx in xrange(0, data.width):
if data[cy,cx] != (0.0,0.0,0.0):
Smaran Harihar smaran.hari...@gmail.com wrote:
i found pycurl to execute python curl command but not sure how I can
execute the curl command using the pycurl.
curl -u admin:geoserver -v -XPUT -H 'Content-type: text/plain' -d
'file:/var/www/geo/shapefile/csvQshp/Quercus_iltisii.shp'
On 11/14/2012 04:33 PM, Dave Angel wrote:
Well, as I said, I don't see how the particular timing has anything to
do with the rest of the thread. If you want to do an ls within a Python
program, go ahead. But if all you need can be done with ls itself, then
it'll be slower to launch python just
On 11/14/2012 03:43 PM, Andrea Crotti wrote:
SNIP
Anyway the only thing I wanted to understand is if using the pipes in
subprocess is exactly the same as doing
the Linux pipe, or not.
It's not the same thing, but you can usually assume it's close. Other
effects will probably dominate any
On Thu, Nov 15, 2012 at 3:20 AM, Roy Smith r...@panix.com wrote:
I wrote:
Oh, my. You're using DNS as a replacement for ping? Fair enough. In
that case, all you really care about is that you can connect to port 53
on the server...
s = socket.socket()
s.connect(('8.8.8.8', 53))
In
I'm trying to work out the best way to provide a description of some code
in a set of presentation slides which can be played backward and forward
through the bits that someone is trying to understand (rather than using a
screencast -- where you can never seem to rewind just the right amount ...).
On Wed, 14 Nov 2012 10:20:13 -0800, rurpy wrote:
On 11/14/2012 06:35 AM, Chris Angelico wrote:
[...]
I stand by what I said. Members, plural, of this list. I didn't say
all members of, ergo the word some is superfluous, yet not needful,
as Princess Ida put it.
Then you would have no
On Wednesday, November 14, 2012 4:07:53 PM UTC-7, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Wed, 14 Nov 2012 10:20:13 -0800, rurpy wrote:
[...]
As an aside, I've noticed that some those most vocal against GG have
also been very vocal about this group being inclusive.
I call bullshit. If you are going to
Steven, whilst I hold you in high regard, this post seems spurned by bias.
I would urge you to reconsider your *argument*, although your *position*
has merit.
On 14 November 2012 23:07, Steven D'Aprano
steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info wrote:
On Wed, 14 Nov 2012 10:20:13 -0800, rurpy
On 11/14/2012 1:35 AM, Amit Agrawal wrote:
my problem is, i want to access data in spreadsheet to python code manualy
My data is
1/1982 8:00:000
1/2/1982 8:00:000
1/3/1982 8:00:000
1/4/1982 8:00:000
1/5/1982 8:00:000.7885
1/6/1982 8:00:000
1/7/1982 8:00:000
1/8/1982 8:00:001.6127
You used
On Wed, 14 Nov 2012 23:07:53 +, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Wed, 14 Nov 2012 10:20:13 -0800, rurpy wrote:
[...]
[...]
As an aside, I've noticed that some those most vocal against GG have
also been very vocal about this group being inclusive.
I call bullshit. If you are going to accuse
On 11/13/2012 11:10 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Wed, Nov 14, 2012 at 2:31 PM, Caroline Hou joyhou2...@gmail.com wrote:
Thank you Dave and everybody here for your helpful comments!This place is
awesome! I found this group when I googled python-list. Seems like this is not
the usual way you
On 11/14/2012 2:02 AM, ru...@yahoo.com wrote:
On the other hand finding and configuring a newsreader
for someone whose never done it before, as you recommend,
is a major time consumer.
Use a mail/news program such as Thunderbird and the newsreader comes for
free. Setting up a gmane account
In article mailman.3700.1352930072.27098.python-l...@python.org,
Chris Angelico ros...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm slightly surprised that there's no way with the Python stdlib to
point a DNS query at a specific server
Me too, including the only slightly part. The normal high-level C
resolver
I brought a python book and i'm a beginner and I read and tried to do the
questions and I still get it wrong.
How to create a program that reads an uspecified number of integers, that
determines how many positive and negative values have been read, and computes
the total and average of the
On Thu, Nov 15, 2012 at 12:47 PM, su29090 129k...@gmail.com wrote:
I brought a python book and i'm a beginner and I read and tried to do the
questions and I still get it wrong.
Pick one of the questions, write as much of the code as you can, and
then post the specific difficulties you're
On Thu, Nov 15, 2012 at 12:49 PM, Roy Smith r...@panix.com wrote:
In article mailman.3700.1352930072.27098.python-l...@python.org,
Chris Angelico ros...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm slightly surprised that there's no way with the Python stdlib to
point a DNS query at a specific server
Me too,
In article mailman.3707.1352945064.27098.python-l...@python.org,
Chris Angelico ros...@gmail.com wrote:
Indeed. But Python boasts that the batteries are included, and given
the wealth of other networking facilities that are available, it is a
bit of a hole that you can't run DNS queries in
On Thu, Nov 15, 2012 at 1:10 PM, Roy Smith r...@panix.com wrote:
In article mailman.3707.1352945064.27098.python-l...@python.org,
Chris Angelico ros...@gmail.com wrote:
Indeed. But Python boasts that the batteries are included, and given
the wealth of other networking facilities that are
On 11/14/2012 09:21 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Thu, Nov 15, 2012 at 1:10 PM, Roy Smith r...@panix.com wrote:
In article mailman.3707.1352945064.27098.python-l...@python.org,
Chris Angelico ros...@gmail.com wrote:
Indeed. But Python boasts that the batteries are included, and given
the
Chris Angelico ros...@gmail.com writes:
On Thu, Nov 15, 2012 at 12:49 PM, Roy Smith r...@panix.com wrote:
In article mailman.3700.1352930072.27098.python-l...@python.org,
Chris Angelico ros...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm slightly surprised that there's no way with the Python stdlib to
point a DNS
In article mailman.3700.1352930072.27098.python-l...@python.org,
Chris Angelico ros...@gmail.com wrote:
On Thu, Nov 15, 2012 at 3:20 AM, Roy Smith r...@panix.com wrote:
My first thought to solve both of these is that it shouldn't be too
hard to hand-craft a minimal DNS query and send it over
a...@pythoncraft.com (Aahz) writes:
...
def readlines(f):
lines = []
while f is not empty:
line = f.readline()
if not line: break
if len(line) 2 and line[-2:] == '|\n':
lines.append(line)
yield
Tobiah t...@tobiah.org writes:
I just found out that the attachment works fine
when I read the mail from the gmail website. Thunderbird
complains that the attachment is empty.
The MIME standard (a set of RFCs) specifies how valid messages
with attachments should look like.
Fetch the mail
Mark Dickinson added the comment:
Certainly TypeError seems inappropriate here, and using ValueError for
conversions from NaN sounds good to me.
I'm not a big fan of the OverflowError for converting infinities to an integer:
nothing's actually overflowed here. I think that should have been
Changes by Mark Dickinson dicki...@gmail.com:
--
title: Exceptions raised by Fraction() from those raised by int() - Exceptions
raised by Fraction() different from those raised by int()
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
Serhiy Storchaka added the comment:
This issue affects only 3.3+ (see links above).
--
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue16157
___
___
Mark Dickinson added the comment:
The from_decimal method should be changed as well.
--
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue16469
___
Serhiy Storchaka added the comment:
As I understand, the new dict created on every call of function with keyword
arguments. This slow down every such call about 0.1 µsec. This is about
10% of int('42', base=16). In the sum, some programs can slow down to a few
percents.
Direct comparison
Changes by Serhiy Storchaka storch...@gmail.com:
--
nosy: +serhiy.storchaka
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue14373
___
___
Chris Jerdonek added the comment:
To simplify the discussion and for issue resolution purposes, I propose that
the discussion about large choices containers be divided into separate
discussions for (1) changes that should be applied to all maintenance releases
(i.e. bug fix changes), and (2)
Chris Jerdonek added the comment:
(1) changes that should be applied to all maintenance releases (i.e. bug fix
changes)
This should instead read, (1) changes that should be applied to all
maintenance releases (e.g. bug fix and/or documentation changes).
--
Yongzhi Pan added the comment:
I think metal means that the different ways set is repr'd in 2.7 and 3.
In 2.7:
In [9]: a = {x for x in 'abracadabra' if x not in 'abc'}
In [10]: repr(a)
Out[10]: set(['r', 'd'])
In 3.2:
In [6]: a = {x for x in 'abracadabra' if x not in 'abc'}
In [7]: repr(a)
Changes by Mark Dickinson dicki...@gmail.com:
--
assignee: - mark.dickinson
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue16469
___
___
Chris Jerdonek added the comment:
The code could simply use the str or repr of the choice object
It seems to me that this would result in less user-friendly behavior in many
cases. It would also require the end-user to understand Python (e.g. xrange
and dictionaries), which I don't think
Martin v. Löwis added the comment:
I talked to a bunch of people (n=7) here at the company where I also
give Python courses from time to time. I asked them two questions:
1. Is this behavior of FD what you would expect?
2. Given the current behavior of FD, what use cases do you see?
The
Martin v. Löwis added the comment:
Zitat von Tom Pohl rep...@bugs.python.org:
This is not: 1 // 0.1 = 9.0 because math.floor(1/0.1) is able to
come up with the result that is expected from an operator called
floor division.
You apparently assume that it is possible to give a definition
Mark Dickinson added the comment:
I believe that definining x//y as math.floor(x/y) is also confusing
in other cases (without being able to construct such cases right away).
In addition, defining x//y as math.floor(x / y) would break its connection with
%: a key invariant is that
(x //
Tom Pohl added the comment:
Mark, thanks for explaining the connection of // and %. Finally, I can see why
somebody would want to stick to the current behavior of FD.
It renders FD useless for all of my use cases, but there are simple
alternatives.
Thanks for your time,
Tom
--
New submission from Chris Jerdonek:
This issue is to upgrade Python's Sphinx from version 1.0 to 1.1.
I don't already see an issue for this, and I'm not sure what upgrading entails.
Personally, I'm interested in the enhanced indexing capabilities, e.g. the
see and seealso entry types, as well
Changes by Andrew Svetlov andrew.svet...@gmail.com:
--
nosy: +asvetlov
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue16469
___
___
Changes by Andrew Svetlov andrew.svet...@gmail.com:
--
nosy: +asvetlov
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue14373
___
___
Changes by Ezio Melotti ezio.melo...@gmail.com:
--
nosy: +eric.araujo, ezio.melotti, georg.brandl
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue16471
___
Antoine Pitrou added the comment:
As I understand, the new dict created on every call of function with
keyword arguments. This slow down every such call about 0.1 µsec.
This is about 10% of int('42', base=16).
Ok, but `int('42', base=16)` is about the fastest function call with
keyword
Roundup Robot added the comment:
New changeset afb476dc202f by Vinay Sajip in branch '3.3':
Issue #16378: Updated docstrings to reflect the defaults present in the code.
http://hg.python.org/cpython/rev/afb476dc202f
New changeset 6f0e49ed0589 by Vinay Sajip in branch 'default':
Closes #16378:
Serhiy Storchaka added the comment:
Ok, but `int('42', base=16)` is about the fastest function call with
keyword arguments one can think about :-)
Not as fast as a call without keywords, `int('42', 16)`. :-( But this is a
different issue.
--
___
R. David Murray added the comment:
I agree with Chris that using the repr in the general case would be a
regression in usability for the end user (and certainly not suitable for a
maintenance release).
Here is some brainstorming:
We could special case this via duck typing. If the object
Te-jé Rodgers added the comment:
Disregard the last...error on my part (so embarrassing!)
--
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue8400
___
Te-jé Rodgers added the comment:
It gets worse. Even though find_module works with the path separator,
load_module fails.
zi.find_module(lib\\ui)
zipimporter object dist/Test_Editor-1.0-py3.2.zip
zi.load_module(lib\\ui)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File stdin, line 1, in module
Serhiy Storchaka added the comment:
Here is a really simple patch. It speed up to 1.9x an empty dict creation
(still 1.6x slower than 3.2). Make your measurements of real-world programs.
--
keywords: +patch
stage: - patch review
Added file:
Václav Šmilauer added the comment:
Martin, I know it is not a proper fix. OTOH, Python is not the only project
which recommends its header be included as first.
I don't know if it is an issue for Python 3.x; will try to test that. This bug,
though, is clearly reported about Python 2.7, which
New submission from Václav Šmilauer:
Compiling an extension with --compiler=mingw32 with official python 2.7.3
distribution on Windows (64bit) leads to unusable result - crash on module load
(invalid access to memory).
The reasons is that Lib/distutils/cygwincompiler.py#l62 links the
Changes by Ralf Schmitt python-b...@systemexit.de:
--
nosy: +schmir
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue16472
___
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Python-bugs-list
Martin v. Löwis added the comment:
The description of OverflowError is that is is raised when the result of an
arithmetic operation is too large to be represented, so it doesn't actually
need to overflow. Still, I see that ∞ actually isn't too large to be
represented (and the documentation
Changes by Tim Golden m...@timgolden.me.uk:
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nosy: +gregory.p.smith
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Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue16458
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Python-bugs-list
Tim Golden added the comment:
On 13/11/2012 20:57, Karthk Rajagopalan wrote:
I added test case using perl and python since it was easy to
reproduce using perl socket module and show the issue happening with
python's subprocess.py. There is definitely an action required in
subprocess.py to
Karthk Rajagopalan added the comment:
Hi Tim,
Thanks for your reply.
Yes, DuplicateHandle(..) seem to fail if the handle is to a socket under XP
SP3.
Can you point me to the guidelines about submitting patch so I can merge my
change in main branch and upload it?
We build python from
Tim Golden added the comment:
Start here: http://docs.python.org/devguide/
In particular: http://docs.python.org/devguide/patch.html
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http://bugs.python.org/issue16458
Chris Jerdonek added the comment:
For the record, choices types implementing only __contains__ never worked in
any cases. (I should have said ArgumentParser.add_argument() raises a
ValueError in the above.)
So I wonder if we should classify this as an enhancement and simply document
the
Chris Jerdonek added the comment:
Martin, can you confirm that PyPI's behavior is as described in the patch?
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Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue16400
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Roundup Robot added the comment:
New changeset 399e59ad0a70 by Mark Dickinson in branch 'default':
Issue #16290: __complex__ must now always return an instance of complex.
http://hg.python.org/cpython/rev/399e59ad0a70
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Python
Changes by Mark Dickinson dicki...@gmail.com:
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resolution: - fixed
status: open - closed
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