ohlfsen writes:
> Hello.
>
> Hoping that someone can shed some light on a tiny challenge of mine.
>
> Through ctypes I'm calling a c DLL which requires me to implement a callback
> in Python/ctypes.
>
> The signature of the callback is something like
>
> void foo(int NoOfElements, char Elements[
Qi writes:
> Hi guys,
>
> Is there any known memory leak problems, when embed Python 2.7.3
> in C++?
> I Googled but only found some old posts.
>
> I tried to only call Py_Initialize() and Py_Finalize(), nothing else
> between those functions, Valgrind still reports memory leaks
> on Ubuntu?
>
>
Andrea Crotti writes:
> On 03/19/2012 12:59 PM, Andrea Crotti wrote:
>> I seemed to remember that type validation and type conversion worked
>> out of the box, but now
>> I can't get it working anymore.
>>
>> Shouldn't this simple example actually fail the parsing (instead it
>> parses perfectly
Andrea Crotti writes:
> When I publish something on Pypi, is there a way to make it fetch the
> list of dependencies needed by my project automatically?
>
> It would be nice to have it in the Pypi page, without having to look
> at the actual code..
> Any other possible solution?
I don't understa
John Nagle writes:
> I think that somewhere in "suds", they subclass the "unicode" type.
> That's almost too cute.
>
> The proper test is
>
> isinstance(s,unicode)
Woot, you finally discovered polymorphism - congratulations!
Diez
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Back9 writes:
> Hi,
> I'm trying to set up a http server to handle a single POST request.
> That POST request is to upload a huge file and the server is supposed
> to handle it with the just POST request.
> With my python sample code, multiple post requests are working well,
> but that is not my
gervaz writes:
> On 3 Gen, 22:17, Adam Skutt wrote:
>> On Jan 3, 4:06 pm, Jean-Paul Calderone
>> wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> > > Multiple processes, ok, but then regarding processes' interruption
>> > > there will be the same problems pointed out by using threads?
>>
>> > No. Processes can be terminate
Gerry Reno writes:
> On 01/03/2011 03:13 PM, Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
>>
>> A fun hack. Have you bothered to compare it to the PyPy javascript
>> backend - perfomance-wise, that is?
>>
>> Diez
>>
>
> I don't think that exists anymore. Didn
azakai writes:
> Hello, I hope this will be interesting to people here: CPython running
> on the web,
>
> http://syntensity.com/static/python.html
>
> That isn't a new implementation of Python, but rather CPython 2.7.1,
> compiled from C to JavaScript using Emscripten and LLVM. For more
> details
gervaz writes:
> On 31 Dic 2010, 23:25, Alice Bevan–McGregor
> wrote:
>> On 2010-12-31 10:28:26 -0800, John Nagle said:
>>
>> > Even worse, sending control-C to a multi-thread program
>> > is unreliable in CPython. See "http://blip.tv/file/2232410";
>> > for why. It's painful.
>>
>> AFIK, that
crow writes:
> Hi, I'm writing a test tool to simulate Web browser. Is there anyway
> to run JavaScript in python? Thanks in advance.
Not really. Yes, you can invoke spidermonkey. But the crucial point
about running JS is not executing JS, it's about having the *DOM* of the
browser available. Wh
erikj writes:
> If my understanding is correct, the sys.prefix variable holds the root
> directory python uses to find related files, and eg its site-packages.
>
> the value of sys.prefix is specified at compile time.
>
> it seems that on windows, when I build/install python at one location,
> an
Adrian Casey writes:
> I have a PyQt4 multi-threaded application which accesses many hosts
> concurrently via ssh. I would like each thread to have access to a
> database so that it can look up details about the particular system it
> is connected to.
>
> The easy way is to have each thread crea
Eric Frederich writes:
> I have a proprietary software PropSoft that I need to extend.
> They support extensions written in C that can link against PropLib to
> interact with the system.
>
> I have a Python C module that wraps a couple PropLib functions that I
> call PyProp.
>>From an interactive
Grigory Petrov writes:
> Hello.
>
> I have a DLL that allocates memory and returns it. Function in DLL is like
> this:
>
> void Foo( unsigned char** ppMem, int* pSize )
> {
> * pSize = 4;
> * ppMem = malloc( * pSize );
> for( int i = 0; i < * pSize; i ++ ) (* pMem)[ i ] = i;
> }
>
> Also,
Martin Caum writes:
> I am attempting to open a window on mouse activity which works, but
> the window fails to stay open.
> I set it to terminate when the escape key is pressed even when the
> program is not currently selected. This works fine. Originally I had
> it create the window only with a
Artur Siekielski writes:
> On Nov 15, 1:03 am, de...@web.de (Diez B. Roggisch) wrote:
>> You don't say what data you share, and if all of it is needed for each
>> child. So it's hard to suggest optimizations.
>
> Here is an example of such a problem I'm de
Artur Siekielski writes:
> Hi.
> I'm using CPython 2.7 and Linux. In order to make parallel
> computations on a large list of objects I want to use multiple
> processes (by using multiprocessing module). In the first step I fill
> the list with objects and then I fork() my worker processes that d
Zeynel writes:
> It's about a week now I've been trying to convert a datetime object to
> seconds since epoch; the object is set to current time by class Rep()
> in Google App Engine:
>
> class Rep(db.Model):
> ...
> mCOUNT = db.IntegerProperty()
> mDATE0 = db.DateTimeProperty(auto_no
Beliavsky writes:
> After installing numpy, scipy, and matplotlib for python 2.6 and
> running the code from http://www.scipy.org/Cookbook/OptimizationDemo1
> (stored as xoptimize.py) in a directory with other python codes, I got
> the error messages
>
> C:\python\code\mycode>python xoptimize.py
alex23 writes:
> Tracubik wrote:
>> why the integer value doesn't change while the list value do?
>
> http://effbot.org/pyfaq/why-are-default-values-shared-between-objects.htm
Not the issue here.
The reason the OP sees a difference that there is only one way to pass
parameters in python. Ther
macm writes:
> Hi Folks
>
> How find all childrens values of a nested dictionary, fast!
There is no faster than O(n) here.
>
a = {'a' : {'b' :{'/' :[1,2,3,4], 'ba' :{'/' :[41,42,44]} ,'bc'
:{'/':[51,52,54], 'bcd' :{'/':[68,69,66]}}},'c' :{'/' :[5,6,7,8]}}, 'ab' :
{'/' :[12,13,1
hackingKK writes:
> On Sunday 31 October 2010 01:58 PM, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
>> In message, hackingKK
>> wrote:
>>
>>
>>> I want to know if there is a way to have the ElementTree module write to
>>> an xml file with line breaks?
>>>
>> Why does it matter? The XML files you generat
alain walter writes:
> Hello,
> I have many difficulties to manipulate xml routines. I'm working with
> python 2.4.4 and I cannot change to a more recent one, then I use dom
> package, why not.
> In the following code, I'm trying unsuccessfully to remove a
> particular node. It seems to me that i
Nikola Skoric writes:
> Hi everybody,
>
> I need to downcast an object, and I've read repeatedly that if you
> need to downcast, you did something wrong in the design phase. So,
> instead of asking how do you downcast in python, let me explain my
> situation.
>
> I have a 2-pass parser. 1st pass
amfr...@web.de writes:
> Hi,
>
> i have a program that have to execute linux commands. I do it like this:
>
> retcode = Popen(["xterm", "-e", command],stdin=PIPE, stdout=PIPE,
> stderr=PIPE)
>
> I have to use xterm because some commands need further input from the
> user after they are executed.
>
nakisa writes:
> hello , I have started python last week,so maybe my question is a bit
> stupid.
> I got this error in my simple python code while trying to load data
> into the code. I have added this libaraies
> from pylab import *
> from scipy import *
> import matplotlib.mlab as mlab
> from n
alex23 writes:
> On Oct 15, 5:53 am, de...@web.de (Diez B. Roggisch) wrote:
>> For example Ableton Live, an audio sequencer.
>
> I _have_ Live and I didn't realise this :O Thanks!
Well, it's not a feature for end-users, it's used internally for some
midi controll
Kingsley Turner writes:
> Hi,
>
> I'm using GCC as a pre-processor for a C-like language (EDDL) to
> handle all the includes, macros, etc. producing a single source file
> for another compiler. My python code massages the inputs (which
> arrive in a .zip file), then calls GCC.
>
> I have a prob
Tony writes:
> hi,
>
> is the python/c api extensively used? and what world-famous software
> use it? thanks!
It is, for a lot of extensions for python, and a lot of embedding python
into a software. For example Ableton Live, an audio sequencer. Arc GIS
has it, and the Eve Online. Many more do,
Martin Landa writes:
> Hi,
>
> is there a way how to send command from python script to the shell
> (known id) from which the python script has been called? More
> precisely, the goal is to exit running bash (on Linux) or cmd (on
> Windows) directly from wxPython application, currently user needs
jimgardener writes:
> hi
> I have some demo python code hosted on a public host that uses
> subversion..and I want to modify one of the files using a patch file
> handed to me by another person..How do I do this?Generally I checkout
> the code and make the change and then commit again..I have ne
John Nagle writes:
> On 10/11/2010 1:45 AM, sankalp srivastava wrote:
>>
>> I am having difficulty in easy_installing
>> I use a proxy server and strange errors , like it can't fetch the
>> package is showing up .
>> the package is pyspeech ...please help me :(
>>
>> I don't know if the proxy s
Gregory Ewing writes:
> Philip Semanchuk wrote:
>
>> Hi Greg,
>> Are you talking about compiling Python itself or extensions?
>
> I've managed to get Python itself compiled as 32 bit,
> and that also seems to take care of extensions built
> using 'python setup.py ...'.
>
> I'm mainly concerned ab
sankalp srivastava writes:
> I am having difficulty in easy_installing
> I use a proxy server and strange errors , like it can't fetch the
> package is showing up .
> the package is pyspeech ...please help me :(
>
> I don't know if the proxy server is causing the problems , in linux i
> would ha
tinauser writes:
> On Oct 11, 6:49 pm, Chris Rebert wrote:
>> On Mon, Oct 11, 2010 at 6:16 AM, tinauser wrote:
>> > hi there,
>> > i need to embed python GUI in a c++ code. I've seen that,while on
>> > windows running GUI is no problem, in mac i need to use pythonw
>> > instead python.
>> > the
Johny writes:
> On Oct 9, 5:17 pm, Tim Harig wrote:
>> On 2010-10-09, Johny wrote:
>>
>> > Is it possible to control any webbrowser from Python ? For example to
>> > issue http POST and GET command
>>
>> The most reliable way to interact with a webserver is through the urllib
>> and httplib mo
harryos writes:
> On Oct 9, 4:52 pm, Peter Otten <__pete...@web.de> wrote:
>
>>
>> You might get more/better answers if you tell us more about the context of
>> the problem and add some details that may be relevant.
>>
>> Peter
>
> I am trying to determine if a wep page is updated by x number of
harryos writes:
> hi
> I am trying to write a DataGrabber which reads some data from given
> url..I made DataGrabber as a Thread and want to wait for some interval
> of time in case there is a network failure that prevents read().
> I am not very sure how to implement this
>
> class DataGrabber(
Lawrence D'Oliveiro writes:
> In message <87d3rorf2f....@web.de>, Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
>
>> Lawrence D'Oliveiro writes:
>>
>>> What exactly is the point of a BOM in a UTF-8-encoded file?
>>
>> It's a marker like the "coding:
kj writes:
> In <87pqvmp611@web.de> de...@web.de (Diez B. Roggisch) writes:
>
>>I tried codesearch first. Not satisfied after 30 seconds with the
>>results, I did the most straight forward thing - I downloaded and
>>un-packed the python source... and took a look
kj writes:
> In de...@web.de (Diez B. Roggisch) writes:
>
>>kj writes:
>
>>> The short version of this question is: where can I find the algorithm
>>> used by the tuple class's __hash__ method?
>
>>Surprisingly, in the source:
>
>>http:
Chris Withers writes:
> Hi All,
>
> Is it just me or does the mailing of just about every single
> python-based project mailing list with a 90% form email advertising a
> conference that only has one python track *and* clashes with PyCon
> feel just a bit like spam?
>
> I know it's enough to put
hackingKK writes:
> Hello all.
> I need to create an xml file.
> I am using dom.minidom module.
> It works fine as long as the xml tree is created.
> But I get the import error for dom.ext.
> I searched through the python docs but can't find a solution.
> I am pritty sure that there is way to wri
TP writes:
> Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
>
>> Back to your example: your solution is perfectly fine, although a bit
>> costly and more error-prone if you happen to forget to create a copy.
>> A safer alternative for these cases is using tuples, because they are
>> immut
Seebs writes:
> On 2010-10-06, Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
>> With an impressive amount of technological experience under his belt. So
>> I'm a bit aghast to see him struggle with this rather simple
>> problem. Thus my question...
>
> It does seem a bit odd.
>
&
Seebs writes:
> On 2010-10-06, Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
>> writes:
>>> plz can u convert this cpp file into python i need that badly as soon as
>>> possible... I am new to python. I just wanna learn it
>
>> For such an aspiring student of the art of
Martin Gregorie writes:
> On Wed, 06 Oct 2010 09:02:21 -0700, geekbuntu wrote:
>
>> in general, what are things i would want to 'watch for/guard against' in
>> a file upload situation?
>>
>> i have my file upload working (in the self-made framework @ work without
>> any concession for multipart
Seebs writes:
> On 2010-10-06, Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
>> Seebs writes:
>>> On 2010-10-06, geekbuntu wrote:
>>>> in general, what are things i would want to 'watch for/guard against'
>>>> in a file upload situation?
>
>>> This q
TP writes:
> Hi,
>
> I have a function f that calls itself recursively. It has a list as second
> argument, with default argument equal to None (and not [], as indicated at:
> http://www.ferg.org/projects/python_gotchas.html#contents_item_6 )
>
> This is the outline of my function:
>
> def f ( a
kj writes:
> The short version of this question is: where can I find the algorithm
> used by the tuple class's __hash__ method?
Surprisingly, in the source:
http://google.com/codesearch/p?hl=de#-2BKs-LW4I0/trunk/python/src/Objects/tupleobject.c&q=python%20tuplehash&sa=N&cd=1&ct=rc
> Now, for t
Seebs writes:
> On 2010-10-06, geekbuntu wrote:
>> in general, what are things i would want to 'watch for/guard against'
>> in a file upload situation?
>
> This question has virtually nothing to do with Python, which means you
> may not get very good answers.
In contrast to "comp.super.web.expe
writes:
> plz can u convert this cpp file into python i need that badly as soon as
> possible... I am new to python. I just wanna learn it
For such an aspiring student of the art of computer programming, I have
the strange feeling of lack-of-effort-showing here. Do I have to lose my
faith i
Nikola Skoric writes:
> I have a superclass Element and a subclass Family. All Family.__init__() does
> is run Element.__init__() and self.__parse(). For some reason it seems like
> self.__parse() isn't run. Here is the code:
> http://github.com/dijxtra/simplepyged/blob/8d5a6d59268f6760352783cc
Dirk Nachbar writes:
> How can I direct all print to a log file, eg some functions have their
> own print and I cannot put a f.write() in front of it.
you can replace sys.stdout with something that performs logging.
class MyWriter(object):
def __init__(self, old_stream):
self.o
Lawrence D'Oliveiro writes:
> In message
> <2752e2e4-76fe-475a-a476-e5458bbfd...@z30g2000prg.googlegroups.com>, TheOne
> wrote:
>
>> Anyway, it would be great if I could make my eclipse/pydev to
>> understand the BOM character and suppress the lexical error msg.
>
> What exactly is the point of
Pascal Polleunus writes:
> On 05/10/10 00:11, Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
>> Pascal Polleunus writes:
>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> I've problems to install psycopg2 in a virtualenv on Ubuntu 10.04.
>>>
>>>
>>> My problem is also
TheOne writes:
> On Oct 4, 9:26 pm, de...@web.de (Diez B. Roggisch) wrote:
>> TheOne writes:
>> > Hi.
>>
>> > I installed eclipse/pydev today.
>> > I created a pydev project and added python source files with utf-8
>> > BOM.
>> > E
Lawrence D'Oliveiro writes:
> In message
> , TheOne
> wrote:
>
>> I want the source files to have BOM character.
>
> What exactly is the point of a BOM in a UTF-8-encoded file?
It's a MS-specific thing that makes a file identifieable as
UTF-8-encoded under windows. The name BOM is obviously BS,
Kruptein writes:
> Hey, I released the 0.2.1 version of my text-editor written for linux
> in python using the wxPython toolkit.
>
> I would like to know whether it is good/bad and what could be changed/
> added
>
> this version added
> -syntax-highlighting for 78 languages
> -Tab completion in
Pascal Polleunus writes:
> Hi,
>
> I've problems to install psycopg2 in a virtualenv on Ubuntu 10.04.
>
>
> My problem is also explained on stackoverflow:
> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/3847536/installing-psycopg2-in-virtualenv-ubuntu-10-04-python-2-5
>
>
> I tried different things explaine
TheOne writes:
> Hi.
>
> I installed eclipse/pydev today.
> I created a pydev project and added python source files with utf-8
> BOM.
> Eclipse/Pydev reports lexical error :
> Lexical error at line 1, column 1. Encountered: "\ufeff" (65279),
> after : ""
>
> I want the source files to have BOM
tekion writes:
> On Oct 3, 2:09 pm, de...@web.de (Diez B. Roggisch) wrote:
>> tekion writes:
>> > On Oct 2, 5:32 am, de...@web.de (Diez B. Roggisch) wrote:
>> >> tekion writes:
>> >> > All,
>> >> > I have the following xml tag:
&g
TerryP writes:
> On Oct 4, 4:12 am, Kushal Kumaran
> wrote:
>> Is virtualenv what you need?
>>
>> http://pypi.python.org/pypi/virtualenv
>>
>> >
>>
>> --
>> regards,
>> kushal
>
>
> Not quite. It basically amounts to a UNIX version of xcopy'ing an
> existing Python installation.
>
> ... insta
tekion writes:
> On Oct 2, 5:32 am, de...@web.de (Diez B. Roggisch) wrote:
>> tekion writes:
>> > All,
>> > I have the following xml tag:
>> >
>> >
>> > httpRequest
>> > HTTP://cmd.wma.ibm.com:80/
>>
"Mailing List" writes:
> Was including a input check on a function argument which is expecting a
> datetime.date. When running unittest no exception was raised when a
> datetime.datetime instance was used as argument. Some playing with the
> console lead to this:
>
import datetime
>
dt1
Chris Rebert writes:
> On Fri, Oct 1, 2010 at 11:13 PM, wrote:
>> Hello, i control the problem of the data what is uploaded by the POST
>> method, in the web if the file is a text theres no problem
>> but the trouble comes when it's an enconded file as a Picture or other what
>> the when the sy
tekion writes:
> All,
> I have the following xml tag:
>
>
> httpRequest
> HTTP://cmd.wma.ibm.com:80/
> GET
> 200
>
>
>
> I am interested in:
>httpRequest
> HTTP://cmd.wma.ibm.com:80/
> GET
> 200
> as well as the upper layer tag. How do I ge
_chunked':
>> > [Thu Sep 30 13:35:07 2010] [error] '0',
>> > [Thu Sep 30 13:35:07 2010] [error] 'mod_wsgi.listener_host':
>> > [Thu Sep 30 13:35:07 2010] [error] '',
>> > [Thu Sep 30 13:35:07 2010] [error] 'mod_wsgi.listene
hid...@gmail.com writes:
> Hello list, i had seriously troubles with the connection between a form and
> the
> wsgi, i' ve made an application on Python3 and was running perfectly but when
> i
> try to use the to pass the data this can't be see on the server, so
> what
> is your recommendation
Tracubik writes:
> Hi!
> It seem that the new version of gnome 3.0 will dismiss pygtk support.
>
> link:
>
> [1] http://live.gnome.org/TwoPointNinetyone/ (search killing pygtk)
>
> [2] http://live.gnome.org/GnomeGoals/PythonIntrospectionPorting
>
>
> i'm studying pygtk right now, am i wasting
Brendan Miller writes:
> 2010/9/29 Lawrence D'Oliveiro :
>> In message , Brendan
>> Miller wrote:
>>
>>> It seems that characters not in the ascii subset of UTF-8 are
>>> discarded by c_char_p during the conversion ...
>>
>> Not a chance.
>>
>>> ... or at least they don't print out when I go to p
Hidura writes:
> I am working on a web project written on Py3k and using mod_wsgi on
> the Apache that have to recibes the request client via a xml structure
> and i am facing a lot of troubles with the upload files mainly because
> i can' t see where they are, so i' ve decide to write my own web
Nick Donohue writes:
> I came across this code just now:
>
> def time_me(function):
> def wrap(*arg):
> start = time.time()
> r = function(*arg)
> end = time.time()
> print "%s (%0.3f ms)" %(function.func_name, (end-start)*1000)
> return wrap
>
> @time_me
> def some_function(s
King writes:
> Hi,
>
> After reading couple of docs and articles, I have implemented a simple
> test package with nested modules.
> When running "main.py", everything is working fine. Some of my sub-
> modules has some small test routines for debug purpose.
> It's because I am using relative pack
Thomas Jollans writes:
> On Thursday 23 September 2010, it occurred to loial to exclaim:
>> How can I check whether a file is being written to by another process
>> before I access it?
>>
>> Platform is unix.
>
> As such, you can't. But you can lock the file using the functions in the
> fcntl
vineet daniel writes:
> On Sep 21, 9:47 pm, de...@web.de (Diez B. Roggisch) wrote:
>> vineet daniel writes:
>> > Hi
>>
>> > I have succesfully created daemon with python script and as next step
>> > I am trying to give input to that python script daemo
Ned Deily writes:
> In article <87zkvbytnk@web.de>, de...@web.de (Diez B. Roggisch)
> wrote:
>> The point is that the distro doesn't care about the python eco
>> system. Which is what I care about, and a lot of people who want to ship
>> software.
>
&g
David Cournapeau writes:
>>
>> I don't deny them their experience. Do you deny the experience of other
>> people with *other* needs? As I already said: I don't propose to ditch
>> the package management. I'm all fine with a distro that carefully
>> selects it's packages and dependencies.
>
> In y
vineet daniel writes:
> Hi
>
> I have succesfully created daemon with python script and as next step
> I am trying to give input to that python script daemon from Apache
> Logshere I have got stuck and I have even checked IRC python
> channel for solution. Apache is able to call the file but
Antoine Pitrou writes:
> On Tue, 21 Sep 2010 17:59:27 +0200
> de...@web.de (Diez B. Roggisch) wrote:
>>
>> The problems explained are simply outdated and crippled python
>> versions.
>>
>> And to me, a python version installed that has not the
>&g
David Cournapeau writes:
> On Tue, Sep 21, 2010 at 10:23 PM, Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
>> Ant writes:
>>
>>> Hi all,
>>>
>>> I've just seen this: http://sheddingbikes.com/posts/1285063820.html
>>>
>>> Whatever you think of Zed
Ant writes:
> Hi all,
>
> I've just seen this: http://sheddingbikes.com/posts/1285063820.html
>
> Whatever you think of Zed Shaw (author of the Mongrel Ruby server and
> relatively recent Python convert), he has a very good point in this. I
> run Fedora 12 on my home computers, and find it far to
David Cournapeau writes:
> On Mon, Sep 20, 2010 at 3:08 PM, Ralf Haring wrote:
>>
>> After running into the error "Setup script exited with error: Unable
>> to find vcvarsall.bat" when trying to use easy_install / setuptools a
>> little digging showed that the MS compiler files in distutils only
Glazner writes:
> On Sep 20, 6:03 pm, de...@web.de (Diez B. Roggisch) wrote:
>> Glazner writes:
>> > Hi,
>>
>> > I'm will be writing a distributed program with parallel python and i
>> > would like to if there are any good monitoring utilities for
rudikk00 writes:
> I remember perl has a match function =~/H/ --> which searches if there
> is "H" pattern in line. Is there a reasonable analog of it in python?
It's called a regular expression, which can be matched or searched in a
string. Take a look at the module "re" in python.
http://d
Glazner writes:
> Hi,
>
> I'm will be writing a distributed program with parallel python and i
> would like to if there are any good monitoring utilities for python.
> I would like each remote server to post messages and to see the
> messages in a web-broweser or such.
>
> I googled python monito
Ian Hobson writes:
> Hi all,
>
> I have hit a problem and I don't know enough about python to diagnose
> things further. Trying to use couchDB from Python. This script:-
>
> # coding=utf8
> import couchdb
> from couchdb.client import Server
> server = Server()
> dbName = 'python-tests'
> try:
>
Douglas writes:
> Hi, can anyone direct a relative newbie to the best source of info?
> I am writing my own backup app in Python 2.5.2 (all my company will
> allow me to use) using IDLE.
> I intend to run this app daily via the Task Scheduler to back up a
> mission-critical spreadsheet that only
lallous writes:
> How can I keep the class private and have the following work:
>
> [code]
> class __internal_class(object):
> @staticmethod
> def meth1(s):
> print "meth1:", s
>
> @staticmethod
> def meth2(s):
> print "meth2:",
> __internal_class.meth1(s)
narke writes:
> On 2010-09-12, Glazner wrote:
>> On Sep 12, 5:10 am, narke wrote:
>>> My simple tool writing in python get bigger and bigger and I think I'd
>>> better split my code into several files. But, unlike what in some other
>>> languages, there is no way to compile these several files
narke writes:
> My simple tool writing in python get bigger and bigger and I think I'd
> better split my code into several files. But, unlike what in some other
> languages, there is no way to compile these several files into a single
> executable. Before I splitting my simple tool program, I ju
Bob writes:
> Hi All,
> I have another question about formatted input. Suppose I am reading a
> text file, and that I want it to be something like this
>
> word11 = num11, word12 = num12, word13 = num13 etc...
> word21 = num21, word22 = num12, word23 = num23 etc...
> etc...
>
> where wordx1 belon
Brian D writes:
> In an HTML page that I'm scraping using urllib2, a \xc2\xa0
> bytestring appears.
>
> The page's charset = utf-8, and the Chrome browser I'm using displays
> the characters as a space.
>
> The page requires authentication:
> https://www.nolaready.info/myalertlog.php
>
> When I
Monte Milanuk wrote:
> On 6/13/10 8:00 AM, Joel Goldstick wrote:
>
> > Why not go the other direction. Use python to do your processing,
> > and
> > send the results to excel. There are python modules that read and
> > write
> > excel files.
>
> Well... partly because Excel is not exactly cross-
new2Cocos wrote:
> Hi everyone,
>
> I posted this in the cocos2d and pyglet discussion group, I thought
> I'll get a response right away since my problem is quite general but I
> got no response. I hope you will help me!!! this is the original post
>
> http://groups.google.com/group/cocos-discu
kj wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
> I need to create a class solely for the purpose of encapsulating
> a large number of disparate data items. At the moment I have no
> plans for any methods for this class other than the bazillion
> accessors required to access these various instance variables.
> (In c
Am 08.03.10 01:18, schrieb Paweł Banyś:
Hello,
I have already read about Python and multiprocessing which allows using
many processors. The idea is to split a program into separate tasks and
run each of them on a separate processor. However I want to run a Python
program doing a single simple ta
Am 04.03.10 06:23, schrieb yamamoto:
Hi,
I tried to make a simple script with SUD library for caching torrent
files. it doenst work!
[versions]
suds: 0.4, python: 2.6.4
[code]
from suds.client import Client
import base64
path = 'sample.torrent'
doc = open(path, 'rb').read()
encoded_doc = base6
Am 02.03.10 21:41, schrieb mk:
Jerry Hill wrote:
Just import subprocess at the top of your module. If subprocess
hasn't been imported yet, it will be imported when your module is
loaded. If it's already been imported, your module will use the
cached version that's already been imported.
In othe
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