Thanks for all your comments. It appears to me that there is a slight confusion
between types and classes then, plus other entities (protocols ?)
So my question is : is there a notion of type in python, like in other
languages (integers, booleans, floats, strings, characters (in c)) ? if so,
在 2013年1月7日星期一UTC+8上午7时40分06秒,Victor Stinner写道:
It looks like the following issue:
http://bugs.python.org/issue14094
Victor
Le 6 janv. 2013 07:59, iMath 22815...@qq.com a écrit :
os.path.realpath(path) bug on win7 ?
Temp.link is a Symbolic link
Its target location is
在 2012年12月24日星期一UTC+8上午8时34分47秒,iMath写道:
how to detect the character encoding in a web page ?
such as this page
http://python.org/
up to now , maybe chadet is the only way to let python automatically do it .
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Here are instructor's solutions manuals to the scientific textbooks in PDF
format. They cover solutions to all problems. If you need any, let me know its
title, edition and author.
If your title is not listed here don't worry because it is a list of some..
NOTE: This service is NOT free, and
在 2012年9月26日星期三UTC+8下午3时38分50秒,iMath写道:
I only know the dollar sign ($) will match a pattern from the
end of a string,but which method does it work with ,re.match() or re.search()
?
I thought re.match('h.$', 'hbxihi') will match ‘hi’ ,but it does not .so why ?
--
When i look at my output on my webpage, i can see this:
W\xe4denswil
but it have to be this:
Wädenswil
you know now what i can see exactly... im using django and they told me its a
python problem with utf-8. when i turn off debug, i cant see the page, it give
me an error 500.
the text Danke für
On Mon, 07 Jan 2013 00:53:26 -0800, chaouche yacine wrote:
Thanks for all your comments. It appears to me that there is a slight
confusion between types and classes then, plus other entities (protocols
?)
In Python 3, types and classes are synonyms. They mean the same thing.
In Python 2,
Greetings all;
Trying to collect all the dependencies of FreeCad-0.13, but it appears that
pycollada is behind some sort of a login/paywall on github. Is anyone here
familiar with how that works?
Thanks.
Cheers, Gene
--
There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
soap, ballot,
In other words: this approach for detecting outliers is nothing more than
a very rough, and very bad, heuristic, and should be avoided.
Heh, very true but the results will only be used for conversational purposes.
I am making an assumption that the data is normally distributed and I do expect
On Mon, 07 Jan 2013 01:45:58 -0800, iMath wrote:
在 2012年9月26日星期三UTC+8下午3时38分50秒,iMath写道:
I only know the dollar sign ($) will match a pattern from the
end of a string,but which method does it work with ,re.match() or
re.search() ?
I thought re.match('h.$', 'hbxihi') will match ‘hi’
Not really, on the staging server we are using the django/bottle webserver..
Anyway I was thinking that a great possible solution might be to set
up something like buildbot to:
- checkout all the needed branches
- run the various servers for all of them on different ports, where maybe the
On Sunday, January 6, 2013, Gene Heskett wrote:
Greetings all;
Trying to collect all the dependencies of FreeCad-0.13, but it appears that
pycollada is behind some sort of a login/paywall on github. Is anyone here
familiar with how that works?
Er, what? The repo seems freely browseable.
chaouche yacine yacinechaou...@yahoo.com wrote:
booleans
ints, floats, longs, complexes
strings, unicode strings
lists, tuples, dictionaries, dictionary views, sets, frozensets,
buffers, bytearrays, slices functions, methods, code
objects,modules,classes, instances, types, nulls (there is
what’s the difference between socket.send() andsocket.sendall() ?
It is so hard
for me to tell the difference
between them from the python doc
so what is the difference between them ?
and each one is suitable for which case ?--
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Gangnam Style in line for UK dictionary inclusion
http://adf.ly/2836760/news.yahoo.com/gangnam-style-line-uk-dictionary-inclusion-134517741.html
--
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In article mailman.175.1357492817.2939.python-l...@python.org,
marduk mar...@python.net wrote:
On Sun, Jan 6, 2013, at 11:43 AM, Franck Ditter wrote:
Hi !
I work on MacOS-X Lion and IDLE/Python 3.3.0
I can't get the treble key (U1D11E) !
\U1D11E
SyntaxError: (unicode error)
On Mon, Jan 7, 2013 at 11:57 PM, Franck Ditter nob...@nowhere.org wrote:
print('\U0001d11e')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File pyshell#1, line 1, in module
print('\U0001d11e')
UnicodeEncodeError: 'UCS-2' codec can't encode character '\U0001d11e'
in position 0: Non-BMP character
On 1/7/2013 7:57 AM, Franck Ditter wrote:
print('\U0001d11e')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File pyshell#1, line 1, in module
print('\U0001d11e')
UnicodeEncodeError: 'UCS-2' codec can't encode character '\U0001d11e'
in position 0: Non-BMP character not supported in Tk
The
Am 07.01.2013 11:35 schrieb iMath:
what’s the difference between socket.send() and socket.sendall() ?
It is so hard for me to tell the difference between them from the python doc
so what is the difference between them ?
and each one is suitable for which case ?
The docs are your friend.
On Monday, January 7, 2013 12:50:00 PM UTC, Constantine wrote:
Gangnam Style in line for UK dictionary inclusion
http://adf.ly/2836760/news.yahoo.com/gangnam-style-line-uk-dictionary-inclusion-134517741.html
And this has to do with python how?
--
On 01/07/2013 08:22 AM, GadgetSteve wrote:
On Monday, January 7, 2013 12:50:00 PM UTC, Constantine wrote:
Trying to get control:
http://AboutToTrashYou.invalid/2892929384736760/news.yahoo.com/Whatever-you-like-it-wont44work134517741.html
And this has to do with python how?
When
So I guess if one *really* wanted to compare C variables to Python
variables, you could say that all python variables are of type void*
except Python does all mallocs/frees and the casting for you.
--
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On 01/07/2013 09:32 AM, marduk wrote:
So I guess if one *really* wanted to compare C variables to Python
variables, you could say that all python variables are of type void*
except Python does all mallocs/frees and the casting for you.
A better analogy would be to C++, and all names would be
On Tue, Jan 8, 2013 at 1:45 AM, Dave Angel d...@davea.name wrote:
On 01/07/2013 09:32 AM, marduk wrote:
So I guess if one *really* wanted to compare C variables to Python
variables, you could say that all python variables are of type void*
except Python does all mallocs/frees and the casting
On 7 January 2013 05:11, Steven D'Aprano
steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info wrote:
On Mon, 07 Jan 2013 02:29:27 +, Oscar Benjamin wrote:
On 7 January 2013 01:46, Steven D'Aprano
steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info wrote:
On Sun, 06 Jan 2013 19:44:08 +, Joseph L. Casale wrote:
I'm
On Mon, 07 Jan 2013 18:35:20 +0800, iMath wrote:
p class=MsoNormalttspan lang=EN-US style=font-size: 12pt;
color: white; background-color: rgb(68, 110, 248); background-position:
initial initial; background-repeat: initial initial; what’s the
difference between socket/span/span lang=EN-US
On 07/01/2013 15:20, Oscar Benjamin wrote:
On 7 January 2013 05:11, Steven D'Aprano
steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info wrote:
On Mon, 07 Jan 2013 02:29:27 +, Oscar Benjamin wrote:
On 7 January 2013 01:46, Steven D'Aprano
steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info wrote:
On Sun, 06 Jan 2013
Can someone provide an example why one would want to override __getattr__
and __getattribute__ in a class?
--
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On Tue, Jan 8, 2013 at 2:28 AM, Steven D'Aprano
steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info wrote:
I
once was on a maths mailing list for about three years before I
realised that the most prolific and helpful person there was as
blind as a bat.
And that, I think, is what s/he would have most
I just came across Vigil, an extension to python for serious software
engineers, at https://github.com/munificent/vigil and thought everybody
in this group would be interested (sorry if it has been announced
before).
From README:
| Vigil is a very safe programming language, and an entry in the
On Tue, Jan 8, 2013 at 3:01 AM, Alain Ketterlin
al...@dpt-info.u-strasbg.fr wrote:
I just came across Vigil, an extension to python for serious software
engineers, at https://github.com/munificent/vigil and thought everybody
in this group would be interested (sorry if it has been announced
ok after another round of reparations, my update works again and it updates the
fuel meter, but i still can't get the view of the spaceship to rotate, for now
only the direction the spaceship accelerates when pressing up changes after a
rotation, but the spaceship itself keeps pointing up. This
Den 06/01/13 16.12, chaouche yacine skrev:
I'm not confident this would run on gedit. It works on a python
interpreter if you have a file named data.txt in the same directory
containing your sample data.
It surely has to do with how gedit works then, because the $ sign
isn't used in python,
On Mon, Jan 7, 2013, at 10:54 AM, Rodrick Brown wrote:
Can someone provide an example why one would want to override __getattr__
and __getattribute__ in a class?
They're good for cases when you want to provide an attribute-like
quality but you don't know the attribute in advance.
For
Le 07/01/13 17:22, jeltedepr...@hotmail.com a écrit :
ok after another round of reparations, my update works again and it updates
the fuel meter, but i still can't get the view of the spaceship to rotate,
for now only the direction the spaceship accelerates when pressing up
changes after a
download wxpython but whenever I try to use it I get this I’m a beginner in
python pls I need help.
Traceback (most recent call last):
File C:/Python27/wxp.py, line 1, in module
import wx
File C:\Python27\lib\site-packages\wx-2.8-msw-unicode\wx\__init__.py, line
45, in module
from
Kurt Hansen wrote:
To convert tab-separated text lines into a HTML-table:
As you apparently didn't receive answers that worked for you I tried to
get what you want to work and test it in Gedit. Here's the result:
$
lines = $GEDIT_SELECTED_TEXT.split(\n);
output = 'table\\n';
max_columns =
On Mon, 07 Jan 2013 15:20:57 +, Oscar Benjamin wrote:
There are sometimes good reasons to get a line of best fit by eye. In
particular if your data contains clusters that are hard to separate,
sometimes it's useful to just pick out roughly where you think a line
through a subset of the
Dear python team,I never used python before and installed it today the first time, so I have no idea what to do about this failure: ./python -m test -v test_urlwithfrag== CPython 3.3.0 (default, Jan 4 2013, 23:08:00) [GCC 4.6.3]== Linux-3.2.0-35-generic-pae-i686-with-debian-wheezy-sid
For the Minneapolis/St. Paul area of Minnesota, there is a technical community
portal at http://tech.mn/. You'll see that this portal has links to user
groups, networking events, jobs, etc. No, I didn't start this thread to tout
this site.
MY QUESTION: What are the local technical community
I'm looking for a Junior level Django job (telecommute)
About me:
- less than year of experience with Python/Django
- Intermediate knowledge of Python/Django
- Experience with Linux
- Experience with Django ORM
- Passion for developing high-quality software and Python language
- I am able to
On Tue, Jan 8, 2013 at 10:35 AM, kwakukwat...@gmail.com wrote:
download wxpython but whenever I try to use it I get this I’m a beginner in
python pls I need help.
ImportError: DLL load failed: %1 is not a valid Win32 application.
Did you download the 64-bit version on a 32-bit system?
Chris
On Tue, Jan 8, 2013 at 4:58 AM, Steven D'Aprano
steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info wrote:
Anyone can fool themselves into placing a line through a subset of non-
linear data. Or, sadly more often, *deliberately* cherry picking fake
clusters in order to fool others. Here is a real world
I have solutions manuals to all problems and exercises in these textbooks. To
get one in an electronic format contact me at: kalvinmanual(at)gmail(dot)com
and let me know its title, author and edition. Please this service is NOT free.
INSTRUCTOR SOLUTIONS MANUAL :: Linear Algebra and Its
Hi,
I'm trying to compare two logfiles in Python.
One logfile will have lines recording the message being sent:
05:00:06 Message sent - Value A: 5.6, Value B: 6.2, Value C: 9.9
the other logfile has line recording the message being received
05:00:09 Message received - Value A: 5.6,
On 7 January 2013 17:58, Steven D'Aprano
steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info wrote:
On Mon, 07 Jan 2013 15:20:57 +, Oscar Benjamin wrote:
There are sometimes good reasons to get a line of best fit by eye. In
particular if your data contains clusters that are hard to separate,
sometimes
On 7 January 2013 22:10, Victor Hooi victorh...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
I'm trying to compare two logfiles in Python.
One logfile will have lines recording the message being sent:
05:00:06 Message sent - Value A: 5.6, Value B: 6.2, Value C: 9.9
the other logfile has line recording the
On Mon, Jan 7, 2013 at 12:37 PM, Chris Angelico ros...@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, Jan 8, 2013 at 10:35 AM, kwakukwat...@gmail.com wrote:
download wxpython but whenever I try to use it I get this I’m a beginner in
python pls I need help.
ImportError: DLL load failed: %1 is not a valid Win32
On 7-1-2013 19:26, Elli Lola wrote:
I never used python before and installed it today the first time, so I have
no idea what
to do about this failure:
$ ./python -m test -v test_urlwithfrag
[..snip..]
ImportError: No module named 'test.test_urlwithfrag'
1 test failed:
Hi Oscar,
Thanks for the quick reply =).
I'm trying to understand your code properly, and it seems like for each line in
logfile1, we loop through all of logfile2?
The idea was that it would remember it's position in logfile2 as well - since
we can assume that the loglines are in
On 7 January 2013 23:41, Victor Hooi victorh...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Oscar,
Thanks for the quick reply =).
I'm trying to understand your code properly, and it seems like for each line
in logfile1, we loop through all of logfile2?
No we don't. It iterates once through both files but keeps a
Hello,
How to *quickly* calculate large numbers. For example
(10**25) * (2**50)
11258999068426240L
Regards.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
It would be better to give me some examples .thanks in advance !
P.S. which module or lib are needed ?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 8 January 2013 00:44, Nac Temha nacctte...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello,
How to quickly calculate large numbers. For example
(10**25) * (2**50)
11258999068426240L
I just tested that line in the interpreter and it ran so quickly it
seemed instantaneous (maybe my computer
I have solutions manuals to all problems and exercises in these textbooks. To
get one in an electronic format contact me at: kalvinmanual(at)gmail(dot)com
and let me know its title, author and edition. Please this service is NOT free.
INSTRUCTOR SOLUTIONS MANUAL :: Calculus 8th Edition by
Ok, so now I tried python3.3-dbg but I don't think the pyqt
modules are compiled for 3.3 and that may be preventing
the import there.
Those extension modules would need to be compiled for
an exactly matching python interpreter, right?
For Windows visual C compiler, that is true. I do not
Hi,
Python newbie here again - this is probably a quick one. What's the difference
between the lines I've numbered 1. and 2. below, which produce the following
results:
Results:
1. [ANG, BAR, BPK, CTN, QGH, QHD, KXX]
2. ['ANG', 'BAR', 'BPK', 'CTN', 'QGH', 'QHD', 'KXX']
Code:
I think I can answer my own question on reflection the first one is
actually a string I think? I was confused by the square brackets around the
placeholder %s.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 01/07/13 18:44, Nac Temha wrote:
How to *quickly* calculate large numbers. For example
(10**25) * (2**50)
11258999068426240L
that's how...just do the math. For any other sort of answer, you'd
have to clarify your question. On my laptop, that operation came
back
On Tue, Jan 8, 2013 at 12:00 PM, andydtay...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
Python newbie here again - this is probably a quick one. What's the
difference between the lines I've numbered 1. and 2. below, which produce the
following results:
1. print stn_fields = '[%s]' % ', '.join(map(str,
On Tue, Jan 8, 2013 at 12:06 PM, andydtay...@gmail.com wrote:
I think I can answer my own question on reflection the first one is
actually a string I think? I was confused by the square brackets around the
placeholder %s.
That's correct. Your first line is putting square brackets
Thanks for reply. I wonder how quickly calculate big numbers. Can you
explain me as theoretical? Because this numbers overflow size of integer
and double.
On Tue, Jan 8, 2013 at 3:08 AM, Tim Chase python.l...@tim.thechases.comwrote:
On 01/07/13 18:44, Nac Temha wrote:
How to *quickly*
In article 700d2bd9-e1df-4d38-81c7-77029a36c...@googlegroups.com,
andydtay...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
Python newbie here again - this is probably a quick one. What's the
difference between the lines I've numbered 1. and 2. below, which produce the
following results:
Results:
1. [ANG,
On 01/07/2013 08:00 PM, andydtay...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
Python newbie here again - this is probably a quick one. What's the
difference between the lines I've numbered 1. and 2. below, which produce the
following results:
Results:
1. [ANG, BAR, BPK, CTN, QGH, QHD, KXX]
2. ['ANG',
On Mon, 07 Jan 2013 22:32:54 +, Oscar Benjamin wrote:
An example: Earlier today I was looking at some experimental data. A
simple model of the process underlying the experiment suggests that two
variables x and y will vary in direct proportion to one another and the
data broadly reflects
On Tue, 8 Jan 2013, Nac Temha wrote:
Hello,
How to *quickly* calculate large numbers. For example
(10**25) * (2**50)
11258999068426240L
Um, Karatsuba multiplication?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karatsuba_algorithm
Or see what GMP folks are doing:
On 01/07/2013 07:44 PM, Nac Temha wrote:
Hello,
How to *quickly* calculate large numbers. For example
(10**25) * (2**50)
11258999068426240L
Since all of the terms are const, you could just use
print 11258999068426240L
Or if you have some
On 01/07/2013 08:22 PM, Nac Temha wrote:
Thanks for reply. I wonder how quickly calculate big numbers. Can you
explain me as theoretical? Because this numbers overflow size of integer
and double.
Please don't top-post. It makes the context totally out of order.
Python automatically promotes
In article mailman.252.1357608154.2939.python-l...@python.org,
Nac Temha nacctte...@gmail.com wrote:
Thanks for reply. I wonder how quickly calculate big numbers. Can you
explain me as theoretical? Because this numbers overflow size of integer
and double.
Now, that's a good question. The
On Tue, 08 Jan 2013 06:43:46 +1100, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Tue, Jan 8, 2013 at 4:58 AM, Steven D'Aprano
steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info wrote:
Anyone can fool themselves into placing a line through a subset of non-
linear data. Or, sadly more often, *deliberately* cherry picking fake
(forwarding the private reply to the group)
On 01/07/2013 09:03 PM, Nac Temha wrote:
Thanks. I using version 2.7 .I want to understand how to handling big
number. Just want to know logic. Without going into further details but I
want to learn logic of this issue. How to keep datas in python?
Thanks, I think I'm clear now.
I guess (map(str, stn_list)) was all about how to make a string starting with
integers. I picked that up and began using it without realising it was over
catering for a list already containing strings, and join(stn_list) was really
all I required.
Repr and Eval
On Tue, Jan 8, 2013 at 1:21 PM, andydtay...@gmail.com wrote:
Repr and Eval I think I get. Eval certainly. That's a familiar concept, and
one I hope to use tomorrow to feed a line to psycopg2.
I hope not. Why do you need eval? It's extremely dangerous.
Chances are there's a better way to do
On December 28th, an unknown attacker used a previously unknown remote
code exploit on http://wiki.python.org/. The attacker was able to get
shell access as the moin user, but no other services were affected.
Some time later, the attacker deleted all files owned by the moin
user, including all
for example ,if I want to download this file ,how to implement the download
functionality by python ?
http://down.51voa.com/201208/se-ed-foreign-students-friends-16aug12.mp3
as for download speed ,of course ,the fast ,the better ,so how to implement it
?
It would be better to show me an
How to get the selected text of the webpage in chrome through python ?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 07Jan2013 20:19, iMath redstone-c...@163.com wrote:
| for example ,if I want to download this file ,how to implement the download
functionality by python ?
|
| http://down.51voa.com/201208/se-ed-foreign-students-friends-16aug12.mp3
|
| as for download speed ,of course ,the fast ,the better
On Mon, Jan 7, 2013 at 11:19 PM, iMath redstone-c...@163.com wrote:
for example ,if I want to download this file ,how to implement the
download functionality by python ?
http://down.51voa.com/201208/se-ed-foreign-students-friends-16aug12.mp3
as for download speed ,of course ,the fast ,the
In article mailman.259.1357620254.2939.python-l...@python.org,
Cameron Simpson c...@zip.com.au wrote:
On 07Jan2013 20:19, iMath redstone-c...@163.com wrote:
| for example ,if I want to download this file ,how to implement the download
| functionality by python ?
|
|
The language reference says:
...the choice whether one object [of built-in type] is considered
smaller or larger than another one is made arbitrarily...
but that seems to be Python 2 behavior; Python 3 apparently raises a
TypeError. Does the documentation need updating?
Thanks,
Kelvin
--
On 01/08/2013 12:28 AM, Kelvin Li wrote:
The language reference says:
...the choice whether one object [of built-in type] is considered
smaller or larger than another one is made arbitrarily...
When quoting some online source, please give a reference link. It took
me a while to find the
On Tue, Jan 8, 2013 at 1:06 PM, Steven D'Aprano
steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info wrote:
given that weather patterns have been known to follow cycles at least
that long.
That is not a given. Weather patterns don't last for thirty years.
Perhaps you are talking about climate patterns?
Yes,
When quoting some online source, please give a reference link. It took
me a while to find the following page with your quote in it:
http://docs.python.org/3.3/reference/expressions.html
http://docs.python.org/3.3/reference/expressions.htm
in section 6.9 Comparisons
Sorry about that.
Mark Dickinson added the comment:
Given the responses so far, I suggest closing this as rejected.
--
nosy: +mark.dickinson
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue9685
___
Benno Leslie added the comment:
In a similar manner the bininstall target relies on $(LIBPC), but does not
create that.
This makes me consider if the libainstall target should be installing
pkg-config sciprt at all (and whether bininstall should be installing the .pc
files).
It is hard for
Christian Heimes added the comment:
I'm not too worried about the slightly increased memory usage. For example one
of our largest application instances consumes about 8 GB memory right now. It
has just about 22k tuples in gc.get_objects(). An additional Py_hash_t in
tuple's struct would
Ned Deily added the comment:
You need to be careful when using a Python with --enable-shared to ensure that
the correct dynamic libraries are being used at execution time. Normally,
after a make, you use make install to install the Python executable and the
shared library into the configured
Charles-François Natali added the comment:
Also notice the need for a third constant, SELECT_CONNECT. For details see
the class WindowsPollPollster in the Tulip code.
I'll trust Richard on all Windows matter, so if you need a
SELECT_CONNECT constant, I'll expose one.
However, two Tulip
Ned Deily added the comment:
Thanks for your suggestion. However, the issue you've created is too wide in
scope to be actionable. As you note, just because the string /usr/local
appears in a file within the Python source distribution does not indicate a
problem. Many of the cites are in
Georg Brandl added the comment:
Still, actual benefits in some kind of benchmark will be needed to show that
this is not a premature optimization.
--
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue9685
Charles-François Natali added the comment:
The second test runs fine on Linux, and from a cursory look, I don't
see how it could fail (the socket should be reported as write ready
upon ECONNREFUSED).
Hum, thinking about it, I wonder is OS-X doesn't report POLLPRI or
some other esoteric event
Serhiy Storchaka added the comment:
Here are patches for all four Python versions. They fixes possible usage of the
followed non-initialized global variables: free_list, numfree, interned,
unicode_empty, static_strings, unicode_latin1, bloom_linebreak,
unicode_default_encoding.
--
Changes by Serhiy Storchaka storch...@gmail.com:
--
stage: commit review - patch review
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue10156
___
New submission from Chris Jerdonek:
Starting in 3.2, the logging module no longer outputs the following message
when logging and no handlers are configured for the root logger:
log = logging.getLogger()
log.error('test')
'No handlers could be found for logger root'
However, I can't
Changes by STINNER Victor victor.stin...@gmail.com:
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title: Atomic open + close-and-exec - Add x mode to open(): close-and-exec
(O_CLOEXEC) / O_NOINHERIT
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Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue16850
STINNER Victor added the comment:
Oh, my patch doesn't check fcntl() error code.
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Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue16850
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Isaac (.ike) Levy added the comment:
Ned, absolutely correct, thank you!
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Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue16883
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Nick Coghlan added the comment:
To clarify the vague allusion in my last comment, Ron's suggestion was along
the lines of creating a dis.Bytecode object that encapsulated everything the
dis module can figure out about a piece of compiled code.
That would mean exposing the kind of info
Isaac (.ike) Levy added the comment:
Hi Ned,
Thanks. Your logic is rational here, I'll close it, and open another if I can
carve out time to attack this with an appropriate patch for setup.py - to
attempt resolution of the 3rd party library build issues.
However, off the top of your head if
Changes by Isaac (.ike) Levy ike.l...@axialmarket.com:
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resolution: wont fix - duplicate
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Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue16882
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