Peter Otten wrote:
and now typing e. g.
> pym os.path
> in the address bar immediately brings up that module's documentation.
>
> Peter
Nice one! Thanks.
S
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Joal Heagney wrote:
> If you're using KDE, you can set a bookmark in konqueror to the
> documentation and it'll bring it up in the bookmark toolbar. Only hassle
> is when you update python and the docs, you have to edit the bookmark.
Or you can bookmark a symlink to the documentation and bookmark
Edward Diener wrote:
Thomas Rast wrote:
Edward Diener <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
It is a pity the Python Linux binary installations do not
create folders on the desktop or in the Gnome menu system with links
to the Python to the documentation and a readme telling me what
executables were installe
Thomas Rast wrote:
> Edward Diener <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> It is a pity the Python Linux binary installations do not
>> create folders on the desktop or in the Gnome menu system with links
>> to the Python to the documentation and a readme telling me what
>> executables were installed.
>
>
Edward Diener <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> It is a pity the Python Linux binary installations do not
> create folders on the desktop or in the Gnome menu system with links
> to the Python to the documentation and a readme telling me what
> executables were installed.
Imagine they did, and the ot
Jim Benson wrote:
On Sat, 2 Apr 2005, Edward Diener wrote:
What is the name of the IDLE program on Linux and where is it installed
in a normal Linux distribution ? I have installed all the Python 2.3.5
RPMs on my Fedora 3 system but I have no idea where they are installed
or what IDLE is called
On Sat, 2 Apr 2005, Edward Diener wrote:
> What is the name of the IDLE program on Linux and where is it installed
> in a normal Linux distribution ? I have installed all the Python 2.3.5
> RPMs on my Fedora 3 system but I have no idea where they are installed
> or what IDLE is called. I lloked
What is the name of the IDLE program on Linux and where is it installed
in a normal Linux distribution ? I have installed all the Python 2.3.5
RPMs on my Fedora 3 system but I have no idea where they are installed
or what IDLE is called. I lloked in the Python web pages to try to find
a list of