On Jan 31, 2010, at 23:05 , John Posner wrote:
Try commenting out this statement:
self.turtle.tracer(False)
That helps on Python 2.6.4.
interesting. It seems as if the tracer property is a global one:
In [1]:t1=Turtle()
In [2]:t1.tracer()
Out[2]:1
In [3]:t1.tracer(False)
In
Brian Blais wrote:
On Jan 31, 2010, at 23:05 , John Posner wrote:
Try commenting out this statement:
self.turtle.tracer(False)
That helps on Python 2.6.4.
interesting. It seems as if the tracer property is a global one:
Actually, the tracer method that does the work is part of the
On Mon, Feb 1, 2010 at 3:27 AM, Brian Blais bbl...@bryant.edu wro
I don't see where you've defined a Turtle class to instantiate sir.
Turtle is given in turtle.py. I should have subclassed it, but I was being
lazy. :)
thanks for the fast replies!
bb
No obvious need to
I don't see where you've defined a Turtle class to instantiate sir.
Perhaps rename Circle to Turtle and rewrite the circle-drawing expression as:
c=Turtle(randint(-350,350),randint(-250,250),10,red)
You are making progress with a wrapper class for the Standard Library turtle.
That's a
On Sun, Jan 31, 2010 at 8:07 PM, Vern Ceder vce...@canterburyschool.org wrote:
kirby urner wrote:
I don't see where you've defined a Turtle class to instantiate sir.
The Turtle class is part of the turtle library, so that's not an issue.
Hey, good point Vern, not firing on all cylinders