Lee Harr miss...@hotmail.com writes:
I am having a great time watching videos from PyCon. Thanks to
everyone who presented, and to those who did such a great job
putting the videos up at: http://pycon.blip.tv/
My trouble is that, although most of the videos play perfectly,
there are a few
pp parul.pande...@gmail.com writes:
On Jan 9, 1:47 am, Jason Scheirer jason.schei...@gmail.com wrote:
On Jan 9, 12:30 am, pp parul.pande...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi All,
How do I add a line to an existing file. This should append to the
existing data in the excel file, which was saved
Phillip B Oldham phillip.old...@gmail.com writes:
We often find we need to do manipulations like the above without
changing the order of the original list, and languages like JS allow
this. We can't work out how to do this in python though, other than
duplicating the list, sorting, reversing,
Gabriel Genellina wrote:
I think you got in trouble with something and you're trying to avoid it
again - but perhaps this is not the right way. Could you provide some
example?
I have been using scipy for some time now, but in the beginning I made
a few mistakes with copying by reference. The
Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch wrote:
In [EMAIL PROTECTED], Niels L
Ellegaard wrote:
I have been using scipy for some time now, but in the beginning I made
a few mistakes with copying by reference.
But copying by reference is the way Python works. Python never copies
objects unless you
Is there a module that allows me to find errors that occur due to copy
by reference? I am looking for something like the following:
import mydebug
mydebug.checkcopybyreference = True
a=2
b=[a]
a=4
Traceback (most recent call last):
File stdin, line 1, in ?
CopyByReferenceError: Variable b
Jon Harrop wrote:
So I'm keen to learn what Python programmers would want/expect from F# and
OCaml.
I think this discussion becoming is a little misguided.
The real strength of scipy is the elegant notation rather than speed.
Being raised with Matlab I find scipy nicely familiar, and its fast
Filip Wasilewski wrote:
As far as the speed comparison is concerned I totally agree that NumPy
can easily outperform Matlab in most cases. Of course one can use
compiled low-level extensions to speed up specific computations in
Matlab, but it's a lot easier and/or cheaper to find very good
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
More information can be found on our web site at
http://mgltools.scripps.edu
I had some trouble finding the license of the code on the webpage, but
it looks like the software is free for non-commercial use. Could I
convince you to make the license more visible? Please
I just started learning python and I have been wondering. Is there a
short pythonic way to find the element, x, of a list, mylist, that
maximizes an expression f(x).
In other words I am looking for a short version of the following:
pair=[mylist[0],f(mylist[0])]
for x in mylist[1:]:
if f(x)
Can someone suggest a package that allows me to write a data file for
xmgr.
So far I have found some packages that allow me to start an
interactive xmgrace session from python, but I would rather have a
package that write a text file.
I realize that xmgr can read text-files, and that the format
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