Hi,
I have been using ctype.cdll to load a library, but I am unable to
figure out how to load multiple libraries that depends on each other.
E.g. I have two libraries A.so and B.so. A.so has some undefined
references, and those symbols are defined in B.so.
When I try to load ctypes.cdll.LoadLibra
The code is attached below. Basically I am taking a substring of
variable m, and using "buffer" instead of slicing.
However, the application of int on that buffer start correctly from
the offset, but it scans all the way to the end, instead of stopping
at the length of the buffer.
It works howeve
On Mar 31, 1:52 pm, Mike Driscoll <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> What about creating a setup.py and using the distutils command to
> build rpms or tarballs?
>
> http://docs.python.org/dist/built-dist.html
>
> Mike
My quick look: The link you sent is under the header "Distributing
Python Modules".
On Mar 31, 11:00 am, xkenneth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Yeah, this is what I'm talking about:
>
> > def __eq__(self, other) :
> > try :
> > return <>
> > except AttributeError:
> > return False
>
> That seems a bit nasty to me.
One thing about python (IMO); you can't just say this
On Mar 31, 11:45 am, John Henry <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Not sure. I use it on windows.
>
> > I haven't looked at pyinstall.. Is it for linux?
>
> It appears so - according tohttp://www.pyinstaller.org/
Thanks! It does show support for Linux. The documentation says it
works for python until
On Mar 31, 10:37 am, John Henry <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mar 31, 10:24 am, Amit Gupta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Hi
>
> > I am looking for a some tool that can convert python scripts to
> > executable on Linux.
>
> > I found f
On Mar 31, 10:23 am, xkenneth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> class A:
> def __eq__(self,other):
> return self.a == other.a and self.b == other.b
>
> class B:
> def __eq__(self,other):
> return self.a == other.a and self.c == other.c
>
> Thanks!
>
> Regards,
> Kenneth Mille
Hi
I am looking for a some tool that can convert python scripts to
executable on Linux.
I found freeeze.py as the only option so far. Couple of queries on
freeze:
1. Have anyone used the freeze utility and any experiences to share
from that?
2. Is there any enterprise-level exe-builder for pytho
On Feb 20, 8:51 pm, Miki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello Amit,
>
>
>
> > python testname.py : the unitests runs as usual and I get the
> > following results:
> > --
> > Ran 2 tests in 0.024s
>
> > OK
> >
> "CL(?P[a-z]+)XY(?:AB)[aeiou]+(?PCD(?P..)\?EF)"
>
> Good luck.
>
> --
> Steven
This is what I did in the end (in principle). Thanks.
A
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Hi
I have a unitest file: If I do
python testname.py : the unitests runs as usual and I get the
following results:
--
Ran 2 tests in 0.024s
OK
However, if I d
Before I read the message: I screwed up.
Let me write again
>> x = re.compile("CL(?P[a-z]+)")
# group name "name1" is attached to the match of lowercase string of
alphabet
# Now I have a dictionary saying {"name1", "iamgood"}
# I would like a function, that takes x and my dictionary and return
"C
Hi
I wonder if python has a function to pack things back into regexp,
that has group names.
e.g:
exp = ([a-z]+)
compiledexp = re.compile(exp)
Now, I have a dictionary "mytable = {"a" : "myname"}
Is there a way in re module, or elsewhere, where I can have it match
the contents from dictionary to
Python'ites
Is there an environment variable or some settings, that python can use
to know the directory name for dumping .pyc files.
Not a hard-requirement, I just don't like pyc files alongwith py files
in my work area.
Thanks
A
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http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Feb 7, 10:38 am, Amit Gupta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Python'ites
>
> I searched around "google" to find the answer to this question, but I
> can't:
>
> I have a named regexp : x = re.compile("(?P[a-z]+)")
>
> What I want is an
On Feb 7, 12:28 am, grflanagan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Feb 6, 11:07 pm, Amit Gupta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Hi
>
> > How do I get user defined attributes of a class? e.g
>
> > Class A(object) :
> > self.x = 1
> > ---
Python'ites
I searched around "google" to find the answer to this question, but I
can't:
I have a named regexp : x = re.compile("(?P[a-z]+)")
What I want is an iterator, that can return me both the "groupname"
and the matched string, e.g:
m = x.search("aa")
Somehow, I want to get
{"me" : "aa"
On Feb 6, 5:33 pm, Ben Finney <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Amit Gupta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > Need a python trick, if it exists:
>
> > I have a file that stores key, value in following format
> > --
> > "v1" : "k1",
> > &
Need a python trick, if it exists:
I have a file that stores key, value in following format
--
"v1" : "k1",
"v2" : "k2"
--
Is there a way to directly load this file as dictionary in python. I
could do (foreach line in file, split by ":" and then do dictionary
insert). Wondering, if some python bu
On Feb 6, 2:55 pm, "Diez B. Roggisch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Amit Gupta schrieb:
>
>
>
> > On Feb 6, 2:15 pm, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >> On Wed, 06 Feb 2008 14:07:23 -0800, Amit Gupta wrote:
> &
On Feb 6, 2:15 pm, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wed, 06 Feb 2008 14:07:23 -0800, Amit Gupta wrote:
> > Class A(object) :
> > self.x = 1
>
> This is not valid Python code.
>
> > I want something like:
> > for u
Hi
How do I get user defined attributes of a class? e.g
Class A(object) :
self.x = 1
--
I want something like:
for userattrib in A.getAllUserAttribute() :
print userattrib
My question is, is there a builtin function, called
getAllUserAttributes?
Thanks
--
http://mail.p
On Dec 3, 11:10 am, Amit Gupta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> Thanks Frank. But again, this results into stack-track when the
> exception is caught. On the other hand, I would like the debug-trace
> just before throwing the exception. As a case, I might be debugging
> co
On Dec 1, 11:14 pm, Frank Millman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> See this post from less than a week ago.
>
> http://tinyurl.com/2zyr7u
>
> I think that the message from Diez B. Roggisch has what you are
> looking for.
>
> Frank Millman
Thanks Frank. But again, this results into stack-track when the
Py'ites
I am using pdb to check my code, and I would like to put a statement
like equivalent of "C++gdb>catch throw".
Basically, I would like debugger to start as soon as an exception is
thrown. How may I do it?
Thanks
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