andrea crotti added the comment:
It has been a long time but if it's still useful sure.
I can see some tests have been added in commit
863b1e4d0e95036bca4e97c1b8b2ca72c19790fb
but if these are still relevant I'm happy to go ahead.
--
___
Python
2014-02-04 wxjmfa...@gmail.com:
Le mardi 4 février 2014 15:39:54 UTC+1, Jerry Hill a écrit :
Useless and really ugly.
I think this whole discussion is rather useless instead, why do you
care since you're not going to use this tool anyway?
--
2014-02-03 wxjmfa...@gmail.com:
generator slides review and Python doc
I do not know what tool is used to produce such
slides.
When the mouse is over a a text like a title (H* ... \H* ???)
the text get transformed and a colored eol is appearing.
Example with the slide #3:
Even numbers
2014-02-03 Terry Reedy tjre...@udel.edu:
On 2/2/2014 5:40 AM, andrea crotti wrote:
In general, use assert (== AssertionError) to check program logic (should
never raise). Remember that assert can be optimized away. Use other
exceptions to check user behavior. So I believe that ValueError
2014-02-02 Terry Reedy tjre...@udel.edu:
On 2/1/2014 9:12 AM, andrea crotti wrote:
Comments:
The use is assert in the first slide seem bad in a couple of different
respects.
Why is it bad? It's probably not necessary but since we ask for a
range it might be good to check if the range
2014-02-01 Miki Tebeka miki.teb...@gmail.com:
My 2 cents:
slide 4:
[i*2 for i in range(10)]
Well this is not correct in theory because the end should be the max
number, not the number of elements.
So it should be
[i*2 for i in range(10/2)] which might be fine but it's not really
more clear
The slides are updated now
2014-02-02 andrea crotti andrea.crott...@gmail.com:
2014-02-01 Miki Tebeka miki.teb...@gmail.com:
My 2 cents:
slide 4:
[i*2 for i in range(10)]
Well this is not correct in theory because the end should be the max
number, not the number of elements.
So
in which explain things, to tell a clear story in a way
2014-02-02 andrea crotti andrea.crott...@gmail.com:
The slides are updated now
2014-02-02 andrea crotti andrea.crott...@gmail.com:
2014-02-01 Miki Tebeka miki.teb...@gmail.com:
My 2 cents:
slide 4:
[i*2 for i in range(10)]
Well
Thanks everyone for your feedback.
The talk I think went well, maybe I was too fast because I only used 21 minutes.
From the audience feedback, there were some questions about my Buggy
code example, so yes probably it's not a good example since it's too
artificial.
I'll have to find something
I'm giving a talk tomorrow @Fosdem about generators/iterators/iterables..
The slides are here (forgive the strange Chinese characters):
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/3183120/talks/generators/index.html#3
and the code I'm using is:
2014/1/21 CM cmpyt...@gmail.com:
I've been learning and using Python for a number of years now but never
really go particularly disciplined about all good coding practices. I've
definitely learned *some*, but I'm hoping this year to take a good step up in
terms of refactoring,
2013/8/6 Chris Down ch...@chrisdown.name:
On 2013-08-06 18:38, andrea crotti wrote:
I would really like to do the following:
from lxml import etree as ET
from lxml.builder import E
url = http://something?x=10y=20;
l = E.link(url)
ET.tostring(l) - linkhttp://something?x=10y=20/link
I would really like to do the following:
from lxml import etree as ET
from lxml.builder import E
url = http://something?x=10y=20;
l = E.link(url)
ET.tostring(l) - linkhttp://something?x=10y=20/link
However the lxml tostring always quotes the , I can't find a way to
tell it to avoid quoting it.
Using a CouchDB server we have a different database object potentially for
every request.
We already set that db in the request object to make it easy to pass it
around form our django app, however it would be nice if I could set it once
in the API and automatically fetch it from there.
Django makes your life a lot easier in many ways, but you still need some
time to learn it.
The task you're trying it's not trivial though, depending on your
experience it might take a while with any library/framework..
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
2013/6/18 Wolfgang Maier wolfgang.ma...@biologie.uni-freiburg.de
andrea crotti andrea.crotti.0 at gmail.com writes:
Using a CouchDB server we have a different database object potentially
for
every request.
We already set that db in the request object to make it easy to pass
2013/6/18 Terry Reedy tjre...@udel.edu
On 6/18/2013 5:47 AM, andrea crotti wrote:
Using a CouchDB server we have a different database object potentially
for every request.
We already set that db in the request object to make it easy to pass it
around form our django app, however it would
On 05/29/2013 06:46 PM, Croepha wrote:
Is there anything like this in the standard library?
class AnyFactory(object):
def __init__(self, anything):
self.product = anything
def __call__(self):
return self.product
def __repr__(self):
return %s.%s(%r) % (self.__class__.__module__,
We use github and we work on many different branches at the same time.
The problem is that we have 5 repos now, and for each repo we might
have the same branches on all of them.
Now we use pip and install requirements such as:
git+ssh://g...@github.com/repo.git@dev
Now the problem is that the
Well I think since we are using django anyway (and bottle on the API side)
I'm not sure why we would use flask forms for this..
Anyway the main question is probably, is it worth to try to define a DSL or
not?
The problem I see is that we have a lot and very complex requirements,
trying to define
We are re-designing a part of our codebase, which should in short be
able to generate forms with custom fields.
We use django for the frontend and bottle for the backend (using CouchDB
as database), and at the moment we simply plug extra fields on normal
django forms.
This is not really
I have some classes that have shared behaviours, for example in our
scenario an object can be visited, where something that is visitable
would have some behaviour like
--8---cut here---start-8---
class Visitable(Mixin):
FIELDS = {
'visits': [],
2013/4/3 Steven D'Aprano steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info
[snip]
So, if you think of Visitable as a gadget that can be strapped onto
your MyObj as a component, then composition is probably a better design.
But if you think of Visitable as a mere collection of behaviour and
state, then a
2013/2/26 Ian Kelly ian.g.ke...@gmail.com:
On Tue, Feb 26, 2013 at 9:27 AM, andrea crotti
andrea.crott...@gmail.com wrote:
So I was trying to use groupby (which I used in the past), but I
noticed a very strange thing if using list on
the result:
As stated in the docs:
The returned group
a production server like Apache, your problem
is actually not Python related.
If you want to run your applications on different ports, take a look on e.g.
Apaches virtual host configurations.
http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/vhosts/examples.html
Am 03.01.2013 17:35, schrieb Andrea Crotti:
I'm working
I'm working on a quite complex web app that uses django and bottle
(bottle for the API which is also restful).
Before I came they started to use a staging server to be able to try out
things properly before they get published, but now we would like to have
the possibility to see multiple
Yes I wanted to avoid to do something too complex, anyway I'll just
comment it well and add a link to the original code..
But this is now failing to me:
def daemonize(stdin='/dev/null', stdout='/dev/null', stderr='/dev/null'):
# Perform first fork.
try:
pid = os.fork()
if
Ah sure that makes sense!
But actually why do I need to move away from the current directory of
the parent process?
In my case it's actually useful to be in the same directory, so maybe
I can skip that part,
or otherwise I need another chdir after..
--
2012/12/11 peter pjmak...@gmail.com:
On 12/11/2012 10:25 AM, andrea crotti wrote:
Ah sure that makes sense!
But actually why do I need to move away from the current directory of
the parent process?
In my case it's actually useful to be in the same directory, so maybe
I can skip that part
2012/12/11 Jean-Michel Pichavant jeanmic...@sequans.com:
- Original Message -
So I implemented a simple decorator to run a function in a forked
process, as below.
It works well but the problem is that the childs end up as zombies on
one machine, while strangely
I can't reproduce the
2012/12/11 Dennis Lee Bieber wlfr...@ix.netcom.com:
On Tue, 11 Dec 2012 10:34:23 -0300, peter pjmak...@gmail.com declaimed
the following in gmane.comp.python.general:
stderrfile = '%s/error.log' % os.getcwd()
stdoutfile = '%s/out.log' % os.getcwd()
Ouch...
stdoutfile =
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
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 /home
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
2012/11/7 Oscar Benjamin oscar.j.benja...@gmail.com:
Correct. But if you read the rest of Alexander's post you'll find a
suggestion that would work in this case and that can guarantee to give
files of the desired size.
You just need to define your own class that implements a write()
method
2012/11/8 andrea crotti andrea.crott...@gmail.com:
Yes yes I saw the answer, but now I was thinking that what I need is
simply this:
tar czpvf - /path/to/archive | split -d -b 100M - tardisk
since it should run only on Linux it's probably way easier, my script
will then only need
On 11/07/2012 08:32 PM, Roy Smith wrote:
In article 509ab0fa$0$6636$9b4e6...@newsspool2.arcor-online.net,
Alexander Blinne n...@blinne.net wrote:
I don't know the best way to find the current size, I only have a
general remark.
This solution is not so good if you have to impose a hard limit
2012/11/5 Peter Otten __pete...@web.de:
I sometimes do something like this:
$ cat xopen.py
import re
import sys
from contextlib import contextmanager
@contextmanager
def xopen(file=None, mode=r):
if hasattr(file, read):
yield file
elif file == -:
if w in mode:
Seeing the wonderful lazy val in Scala I thought that I should try to
get the following also in Python.
The problem is that I often have this pattern in my code:
class Sample:
def __init__(self):
self._var = None
@property
def var(self):
if self._var is None:
2012/10/30 alex23 wuwe...@gmail.com:
On Oct 30, 2:33 am, Johannes Bauer dfnsonfsdu...@gmx.de wrote:
I'm currently looking for a good solution to the following problem: I
have two classes A and B, which interact with each other and which
interact with the user. Instances of B are always created
2012/10/29 Jean-Michel Pichavant jeanmic...@sequans.com:
return NumWrapper(self.number + 1)
still returns a(nother) mutable object.
So what's the point of all this ?
JM
Well sure but it doesn't modify the first object, just creates a new
one. There are in general good reasons to do
2012/10/29 andrea crotti andrea.crott...@gmail.com:
Well sure but it doesn't modify the first object, just creates a new
one. There are in general good reasons to do that, for example I can
then compose things nicely:
num.increment().increment()
or I can parallelize operations safely
2012/10/29 Jean-Michel Pichavant jeanmic...@sequans.com:
In an OOP language num.increment() is expected to modify the object in place.
So I think you're right when you say that functional languages technics do
not necessarily apply to Python, because they don't.
I would add that what
2012/10/29 Chris Angelico ros...@gmail.com:
On Tue, Oct 30, 2012 at 2:55 AM, Paul Rubin no.email@nospam.invalid wrote:
andrea crotti andrea.crott...@gmail.com writes:
and we want to change its state incrementing the number ...
the immutability purists would instead suggest to do
2012/10/29 Johannes Bauer dfnsonfsdu...@gmx.de:
Hi there,
I'm currently looking for a good solution to the following problem: I
have two classes A and B, which interact with each other and which
interact with the user. Instances of B are always created by A.
Now I want A to call some
2012/10/25 Steven D'Aprano steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info:
On Wed, 24 Oct 2012 13:51:30 +0100, andrea crotti wrote:
So I would like to be able to ask for confirmation when I receive a C-c,
and continue if the answer is N/n.
I don't think there is any way to do this directly.
Without
So I would like to be able to ask for confirmation when I receive a C-c,
and continue if the answer is N/n.
I'm already using an exception handler set with sys.excepthook, but I
can't make it work with the confirm_exit, because it's going to quit in
any case..
A possible solution would be to do
2012/10/19 Michele Simionato michele.simion...@gmail.com:
Yesterday I released a new version of the decorator module. It should run
under Python 2.4, 2.5, 2.6, 2.7, 3.0, 3.1, 3.2, 3.3. I did not have the will
to install on my machine 8 different versions of Python, so I just tested it
with
2012/10/18 Oscar Benjamin oscar.j.benja...@gmail.com:
The lock is cooperative. It does not prevent the file from being
opened or overwritten. It only prevents any other process from
obtaining the lock. Here you open the file with mode 'w' which
truncates the file instantly (without checking
2012/10/18 Grant Edwards invalid@invalid.invalid:
On 2012-10-18, andrea crotti andrea.crott...@gmail.com wrote:
File locks under Unix have historically been advisory. That means
that programs have to _choose_ to pay attention to them. Most
programs do not.
Linux does support mandatory
2012/10/18 Oscar Benjamin oscar.j.benja...@gmail.com:
Why not come up with a test that actually shows you if it works? Here
are two suggestions:
1) Use time.sleep() so that you know how long the lock is held for.
2) Write different data into the file from each process and see what
you end
2012/10/10 Jean-Michel Pichavant jeanmic...@sequans.com:
Well, the C++ code will end up running on a MIPS on a SOC, unfortunately,
python is not an option here.
The xml to C++ makes a lot of sense, because only a small part of the code is
generated that way (everything related to log fatal
On 10/09/2012 05:00 PM, Jean-Michel Pichavant wrote:
Greetings,
I'm trying to generate C++ code from an XML file. I'd like to use a template
engine, which imo produce something readable and maintainable.
My google search about this subject has been quite unsuccessful, I've been
redirected to
2012/9/25 tejas.tank@gmail.com:
On Thursday, 23 December 2004 03:33:36 UTC+5:30, (unknown) wrote:
Anyone know which is faster? I'm a PHP programmer but considering
getting into Python ... did searches on Google but didn't turn much up
on this.
Thanks!
Stephen
Here some helpful
For anyone interested, I already moved the slides on github
(https://github.com/AndreaCrotti/pyconuk2012_slides)
and for example the decorator slides will be generated from this:
https://raw.github.com/AndreaCrotti/pyconuk2012_slides/master/deco_context/deco.rst
Notice the literalinclude with
On 09/23/2012 07:31 PM, jimbo1qaz wrote:
spots[y][x]=mark fails with a 'str' object does not support item assignment
error,even though:
a=[[a]]
a[0][0]=b
and:
a=[[a]]
a[0][0]=100
both work.
Spots is a nested list created as a copy of another list.
But
a = a
a[0] = 'c'
fails for the
2012/9/18 Dennis Lee Bieber wlfr...@ix.netcom.com:
Unless you have a really massive result set from that ls, that
command probably ran so fast that it is blocked waiting for someone to
read the PIPE.
I tried also with ls -lR / and that definitively takes a while to run,
when I do
2012/9/19 Hans Mulder han...@xs4all.nl:
Yes: using top is an observation problem.
Top, as the name suggests, shows only the most active processes.
Sure but ls -lR / is a very active process if you try to run it..
Anyway as written below I don't need this anymore.
It's quite possible that
2012/9/19 Trent Nelson tr...@snakebite.org:
FWIW, I gave a presentation on decorators to the New York Python
User Group back in 2008. Relevant blog post:
http://blogs.onresolve.com/?p=48
There's a link to the PowerPoint presentation I used in the first
paragraph.
I have a similar problem, something which I've never quite understood
about subprocess...
Suppose I do this:
proc = subprocess.Popen(['ls', '-lR'], stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
now I created a process, which has a PID, but it's not running apparently...
It only seems to run
I think one very nice and simple example of how decorators can be used is this:
def memoize(f, cache={}, *args, **kwargs):
def _memoize(*args, **kwargs):
key = (args, str(kwargs))
if not key in cache:
cache[key] = f(*args, **kwargs)
return cache[key]
2012/9/14 Chris Angelico ros...@gmail.com:
Trouble is, you're starting with a pretty poor algorithm. It's easy to
improve on what's poor. Memoization can still help, but I would start
with a better algorithm, such as:
def fib(n):
if n=1: return 1
a,b=1,1
for i in
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:
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
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 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
On 09/10/2012 07:29 PM, jayden.s...@gmail.com wrote
Have you ever used py2exe? After converting the python codes to executable,
does it save the time of interpreting the script language? Thank a lot!
Py2exe normally never speeds up anything, simply because it doesn't
convert to executable,
2012/8/20 kj no.em...@please.post:
In roy-ca6d77.17031119082...@news.panix.com Roy Smith r...@panix.com
writes This means that no library code can ever count on, for example,
being able to reliably find the path to the file that contains the
definition of __main__. That's a weakness, IMO.
2012/8/20 Roy Smith r...@panix.com:
In article k0tf8g$adc$1...@news.albasani.net,
Walter Hurry walterhu...@lavabit.com wrote:
It is difficult to think of a sensible use for os.chdir, IMHO.
It is true that you can mostly avoid chdir() by building absolute
pathnames, but it's often more
2012/8/16 Jean-Michel Pichavant jeanmic...@sequans.com:
SVN allows to define external dependencies, where one repository will
actually checkout another one at a specific version. If SVN does it, I guess
any decent SCM also provide such feature.
Assuming our project is named 'common', and you
2012/8/16 Pervez Mulla mullaper...@gmail.com:
Hey Steven ,
Thank you for your response,
I will in detail now about my project,
Actually the project entire backend in PERL language , Am using Django
framework for my front end .
I have written code for signup page in python , which is
2012/8/16 andrea crotti andrea.crott...@gmail.com:
Unfortunately I think you guess wrong
http://forums.perforce.com/index.php?/topic/553-perforce-svnexternals-equivalent/
Anyway with views and similar things is not that hard to implement the
same thing..
I'm very happy to say that I
2012/8/14 Cameron Simpson c...@zip.com.au:
Having just skimmed this thread, one thing I haven't quite seen suggested is
this:
Really do make a third utilities project, and treat the project and
deploy as separate notions. So to actually run/deploy project A's code
you'd have a short script
Also looking at logilab-common I thought that it would be great if we
could actually make this common library even open source, and use it
as one of the other many external libraries.
Since Python code is definitively not the the core business of this
company I might even convince them, but the
2012/8/13 Rob Day robert@merton.oxon.org:
I'd just create a module - called shared_utils.py or similar - and import
that in both projects. It might be a bit messy if there's no 'unifying
theme' to the module - but surely it'd be a lot less messy than your
TempDirectory class, and anyone
2012/8/14 Jean-Michel Pichavant jeanmic...@sequans.com:
I can think of logilab-common (http://www.logilab.org/848/)
Having a company-wide python module properly distributed is one to achieve
your goal. Without distributing your module to the public, there's a way to
have a pypi-like server
I am in the situation where I am working on different projects that
might potentially share a lot of code.
I started to work on project A, then switched completely to project B
and in the transiction I copied over a lot of code with the
corresponding tests, and I started to modify it.
Now it's
2012/8/1 Steven D'Aprano steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info:
When you start using threads, you have to expect these sorts of
intermittent bugs unless you are very careful.
My guess is that you have a bug where two threads read from the same file
at the same time. Since each read shares
2012/8/2 Laszlo Nagy gand...@shopzeus.com:
Your example did not share the file object between threads. Here an example
that does that:
class OpenAndRead(threading.Thread):
def run(self):
global fz
fz.read(100)
if __name__ == '__main__':
fz =
2012/8/2 andrea crotti andrea.crott...@gmail.com:
Ok sure that makes sense, but then this explanation is maybe not right
anymore, because I'm quite sure that the file object is *not* shared
between threads, everything happens inside a thread..
I managed to get some errors doing
2012/8/1 Laszlo Nagy gand...@shopzeus.com:
I was just surprised that it worked better than I expected even
without Pipes and Queues, but now I understand why..
Anyway now I would like to be able to detach subprocesses to avoid the
nasty code reloading that I was talking about in another
2012/8/1 Laszlo Nagy gand...@shopzeus.com:
On thing is sure: os.fork() doesn't work under Microsoft Windows. Under
Unix, I'm not sure if os.fork() can be mixed with
multiprocessing.Process.start(). I could not find official documentation on
that. This must be tested on your actual platform.
We're having some really obscure problems with gzip.
There is a program running with python2.7 on a 2.6.18-128.el5xen (red
hat I think) kernel.
Now this program does the following:
if filename == 'out2.txt':
out2 = open('out2.txt')
elif filename == 'out2.txt.gz'
out2 =
2012/8/1 Laszlo Nagy gand...@shopzeus.com:
On 2012-08-01 12:39, andrea crotti wrote:
We're having some really obscure problems with gzip.
There is a program running with python2.7 on a 2.6.18-128.el5xen (red
hat I think) kernel.
Now this program does the following:
if filename == 'out2.txt
Full traceback:
Exception in thread Thread-8:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File /user/sim/python/lib/python2.7/threading.py, line 530, in
__bootstrap_inner
self.run()
File /user/sim/tests/llif/AutoTester/src/AutoTester2.py, line 67, in run
self.processJobData(jobData, logger)
2012/8/1 Roy Smith r...@panix.com:
In article mailman.2809.1343809166.4697.python-l...@python.org,
Laszlo Nagy gand...@shopzeus.com wrote:
Yes, I think that is correct. Instead of detaching a child process, you
can create independent processes and use other frameworks for IPC. For
example,
2012/8/1 Laszlo Nagy gand...@shopzeus.com:
there seems to be no clear pattern and just randmoly fails. The file
is also just open for read from this program,
so in theory no way that it can be corrupted.
Yes, there is. Gzip stores CRC for compressed *blocks*. So if the file is
not
2012/8/1 Laszlo Nagy gand...@shopzeus.com:
So detaching the child process will not make IPC stop working. But exiting
from the original parent process will. (And why else would you detach the
child?)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Well it makes perfect sense if it
2012/8/1 Steven D'Aprano steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info:
On Wed, 01 Aug 2012 14:01:45 +0100, andrea crotti wrote:
Full traceback:
Exception in thread Thread-8:
DANGER DANGER DANGER WILL ROBINSON!!!
Why didn't you say that there were threads involved? That puts a
completely
2012/8/1 Laszlo Nagy gand...@shopzeus.com:
Thanks a lot, that makes a lot of sense.. I haven't given this detail
before because I didn't write this code, and I forgot that there were
threads involved completely, I'm just trying to help to fix this bug.
Your explanation makes a lot of sense,
def procs():
mp = MyProcess()
# with the join we are actually waiting for the end of the running time
mp.add([1,2,3])
mp.start()
mp.add([2,3,4])
mp.join()
print(mp)
I think I got it now, if I already just mix the start before another
add, inside the
2012/7/31 Laszlo Nagy gand...@shopzeus.com:
I think I got it now, if I already just mix the start before another add,
inside the Process.run it won't see the new data that has been added after
the start. So this way is perfectly safe only until the process is launched,
if it's running I need
2012/7/30 maniandra...@gmail.com:
I created py2c ( http://code.google.com/p/py2c )- an open source Python to
C/C++ translator!
py2c is looking for developers!
To join create a posting in the py2c-discuss Google Group or email me!
Thanks
PS:I hope this is the appropiate group for this
I have some complex input to parse (with regexps), and I would like to
create nice objects directy from them.
The re module doesn't of course try to conver to any type, so I was
playing around to see if it's worth do something as below, where I
assign a constructor to every regexp and build an
2012/7/25 andrea crotti andrea.crott...@gmail.com:
I would also like to avoid this in general, but we have many
subprocesses to launch and some of them might take weeks, so we need
to have a process which is always running, because there is never a
point in time where we can just say let's
2012/7/23 Chris Angelico ros...@gmail.com:
That would probably be correct. However, I still think you may be
fighting against the language instead of playing to its strengths.
I've never fiddled with sys.modules like that, but I know some have,
without problem.
ChrisA
--
I have some long running processes that do very long simulations which
at the end need to write things on a database.
At the moment sometimes there are network problems and we end up with
half the data on the database.
The half-data problem is probably solved easily with sessions and
sqlalchemy
2012/7/25 Jack tdl...@gmail.com
Since you know the content of what the sql code is, why not just build
the sql file(s) needed and store them so that in case of a burp you can
just execute the code file. If you don't know the exact sql code, dump
it to a file as the statements are
2012/7/20 Chris Angelico ros...@gmail.com:
On Thu, Jul 19, 2012 at 8:15 PM, andrea crotti
andrea.crott...@gmail.com wrote:
We need to be able to reload code on a live system. This live system
has a daemon process always running but it runs many subprocesses with
multiprocessing
We need to be able to reload code on a live system. This live system
has a daemon process always running but it runs many subprocesses with
multiprocessing, and the subprocesses might have a short life...
Now I found a way to reload the code successfully, as you can see from
this testcase:
def
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