Hi, I need help with coding assignments (python to be exact) in school. I am
willing to pay for your attention by the hour. Please email me at
aifa...@protonmail.com if you’re interested. Please only reach out if you’re
not a beginner. Trying to avoid the blind being led by the blind. Thanks!
--
On Mon, Jul 20, 2015 at 3:16 PM, Michael Torrie wrote:
> On 07/19/2015 06:21 PM, Rick Johnson wrote:
>> On Sunday, July 19, 2015 at 6:07:14 PM UTC-5, craig...@gmail.com wrote:
>>> def main():
>>> name= input('Enter your full name: ')
>>> split=name.split()
>>> Full_name=split[2],split[
On 07/19/2015 06:21 PM, Rick Johnson wrote:
> On Sunday, July 19, 2015 at 6:07:14 PM UTC-5, craig...@gmail.com wrote:
>> def main():
>> name= input('Enter your full name: ')
>> split=name.split()
>> Full_name=split[2],split[0], split[1]
>> print(Full_name[2],',', Full_name[0], Full
On Sunday, July 19, 2015 at 6:07:14 PM UTC-5, craig...@gmail.com wrote:
> def main():
> name= input('Enter your full name: ')
> split=name.split()
> Full_name=split[2],split[0], split[1]
> print(Full_name[2],',', Full_name[0], Full_name[1])
>
> main()
Sorry, but this code is
On 07/19/2015 05:06 PM, craig.si...@gmail.com wrote:
> def main(): name= input('Enter your full name: ')
> split=name.split()
> Full_name=split[2],split[0], split[1]
> print(Full_name[2],',', Full_name[0], Full_name[1])
>
> main()
>
> Sorry it took so long to get back to you guys an
On Thursday, July 16, 2015 at 9:16:01 PM UTC-5, craig...@gmail.com wrote:
> I need help writing a homework program.
>
> I'll write it, but I can't figure out how to incorporate what I have read in
> the book to work in code.
>
> The assignment wants us to take a users first, middle and last nam
On 2015-07-19 01:59, Denis McMahon wrote:
On Sat, 18 Jul 2015 12:35:10 +0200, Sibylle Koczian wrote:
Am 18.07.2015 um 02:40 schrieb Denis McMahon:
Having a list of words, get a copy of the list in reverse order. See
the reversed function (and maybe the list function).
That won't really he
On 07/18/2015 03:44 PM, Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
> The new units (HP28, 48, 49, 50, etc.) no longer use the 4-register
> stack; the stack is whatever is available in memory. As a result, the Roll
> instructions now need an argument for how many stack entries are in play.
>
> The HP50g
On Sat, 18 Jul 2015 12:35:10 +0200, Sibylle Koczian wrote:
> Am 18.07.2015 um 02:40 schrieb Denis McMahon:
>> Having a list of words, get a copy of the list in reverse order. See
>> the reversed function (and maybe the list function).
> That won't really help, because the desired order is, with
On 2015-07-18 19:28, William Ray Wing wrote:
On Jul 18, 2015, at 1:34 PM, Mark Lawrence wrote:
[byte]
What is an {HP calculator} roll operation?
The original Hewlett Packard “Scientific” calculators (HP-35, 45, 65, etc) that
used Polish notation (operand, operand, operation; with no
> On Jul 18, 2015, at 1:34 PM, Mark Lawrence wrote:
>
>
[byte]
> What is an {HP calculator} roll operation?
>
The original Hewlett Packard “Scientific” calculators (HP-35, 45, 65, etc) that
used Polish notation (operand, operand, operation; with no “=“ sign) had a
stack. That stack itsel
On 18/07/2015 20:10, Joel Goldstick wrote:
On Sat, Jul 18, 2015 at 2:51 PM, mm0fmf via Python-list
wrote:
On 18/07/2015 18:34, Mark Lawrence wrote:
What is an {HP calculator} roll operation?
HP calculators were proper in that they used RPN entry.
i.e. 2 enter 2 + would show 4 instead of
On Sat, Jul 18, 2015 at 2:51 PM, mm0fmf via Python-list
wrote:
> On 18/07/2015 18:34, Mark Lawrence wrote:
>>
>>
>> What is an {HP calculator} roll operation?
>
>
> HP calculators were proper in that they used RPN entry.
>
> i.e. 2 enter 2 + would show 4 instead of 2 + 2 =
>
> Gawd it's so long bu
On 18/07/2015 18:34, Mark Lawrence wrote:
What is an {HP calculator} roll operation?
HP calculators were proper in that they used RPN entry.
i.e. 2 enter 2 + would show 4 instead of 2 + 2 =
Gawd it's so long but ISTR there were 3 stack registers and the display.
So you could press
1 enter
On 18/07/2015 17:18, Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
On Sat, 18 Jul 2015 14:16:11 +0200, Laura Creighton
declaimed the following:
You don't have to index them. You can unpack them into a tuple
of first, middle, last
Laura (who is trying not to do somebody's homework for them, since
I'm not the per
AM
To: Sibylle Koczian
Cc: python-list@python.org; l...@openend.se
Subject: Re: Need assistance
You don't have to index them. You can unpack them into a tuple of first,
middle, last
Laura (who is trying not to do somebody's homework for them, since I'm not
the person who
You don't have to index them. You can unpack them into a tuple
of first, middle, last
Laura (who is trying not to do somebody's homework for them, since
I'm not the person who needs to learn this).
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Am 18.07.2015 um 02:40 schrieb Denis McMahon:
On Thu, 16 Jul 2015 19:15:38 -0700, craig.sirna wrote:
The assignment wants us to take a users first, middle and last name in a
single input ( name=('enter your full name: )).
Then we must display the full name rearranged in Last, First Middle
orde
On Thu, 16 Jul 2015 19:15:38 -0700, craig.sirna wrote:
> The assignment wants us to take a users first, middle and last name in a
> single input ( name=('enter your full name: )).
>
> Then we must display the full name rearranged in Last, First Middle
> order.
To generate a list of words from a
On 17/07/2015 17:40, Rob Gaddi wrote:
On Thu, 16 Jul 2015 19:15:38 -0700, craig.sirna wrote:
I need help writing a homework program.
I'll write it, but I can't figure out how to incorporate what I have
read in the book to work in code.
The assignment wants us to take a users first, middle and
Hi, Rob,
On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 12:40 PM, Rob Gaddi
wrote:
> On Thu, 16 Jul 2015 19:15:38 -0700, craig.sirna wrote:
>
>> I need help writing a homework program.
>>
>> I'll write it, but I can't figure out how to incorporate what I have
>> read in the book to work in code.
>>
>> The assignment w
On Thu, 16 Jul 2015 19:15:38 -0700, craig.sirna wrote:
> I need help writing a homework program.
>
> I'll write it, but I can't figure out how to incorporate what I have
> read in the book to work in code.
>
> The assignment wants us to take a users first, middle and last name in a
> single inpu
Hi Craig:
-Original Message-
From: Python-list
[mailto:python-list-bounces+joseph.lee22590=gmail@python.org] On Behalf
Of craig.si...@gmail.com
Sent: Thursday, July 16, 2015 8:01 PM
To: python-list@python.org
Subject: Re: Need assistance
>I am in bed, on my phone, gotta be up i
I am in bed, on my phone, gotta be up in 4 hours for work. I will get back
with you guys tomorrow after I take care of my Math class stuff. I need to step
away from this for a day lol.
Worst part...this is the C assignment and it's driving me crazy.
I do recall the list fuction. But isn't it
On 07/16/2015 08:44 PM, Joseph Lee wrote:
> Hi Michael,
> I have talked to this guy offlist (basically you gave him the answer
> (smiles)).
> Cheers,
> Joseph
Sounds good. I had hoped to merely point him in the right way, and that
he would put things together. I hope this is indeed the case.
--
-list@python.org
Subject: Re: Need assistance
On 07/16/2015 08:15 PM, craig.si...@gmail.com wrote:
> I need help writing a homework program.
>
> I'll write it, but I can't figure out how to incorporate what I have
> read in the book to work in code.
Can you post the code
On 07/16/2015 08:15 PM, craig.si...@gmail.com wrote:
> I need help writing a homework program.
>
> I'll write it, but I can't figure out how to incorporate what I have
> read in the book to work in code.
Can you post the code that you are currently working with?
> The assignment wants us to take
I need help writing a homework program.
I'll write it, but I can't figure out how to incorporate what I have read in
the book to work in code.
The assignment wants us to take a users first, middle and last name in a single
input ( name=('enter your full name: )).
Then we must display the full
Are you writing a command line interpreter (even if a partial one)? If so take
a look at : http://docs.python.org/library/cmd.html
Ramit
Ramit Prasad | JPMorgan Chase Investment Bank | Currencies Technology
712 Main Street | Houston, TX 77002
work phone: 713 - 216 - 5423
This communication
On 13/05/2011 06:22, vijay swaminathan wrote:
Hi Tim.,
Thanks.. This works as I had expected.
are there any documentation for the subprocess.call method? I tried
going through the python doc but could not narrow down.
http://docs.python.org/library/subprocess.html?highlight=subprocess%20call#
Hi Tim.,
Thanks.. This works as I had expected.
are there any documentation for the subprocess.call method? I tried going
through the python doc but could not narrow down. I just wanted to know how
do I pass an arguement after invoking the command prompt?
Any thoughts on this pls?
On Thu, May
vijay swaminathan wrote:
> I have already done that. But for some reason my response went
> as a new thread. Attaching the code again.
JFYI: Please DO NOT post attachments in a non-binary newsgroup
or to a mailing list (are there binary ones at all?) again. TIA.
--
PointedEars
Bitte keine Kop
On 12/05/2011 11:29, vijay swaminathan wrote:
<... snippet from code ...>
print 'Invoking Command Promptt..'
#subprocess.call(["start", "/DC:\\PerfLocal_PAL",
"scripts_to_execute.bat"], shell=True)
subprocess.call(["start", "C:\\windows\\system32\\cmd.exe"],
shell
Hi Tim,
I have already done that. But for some reason my response went as a new
thread. Attaching the code again.
On Thu, May 12, 2011 at 3:38 PM, Tim Golden wrote:
> On 12/05/2011 10:45, vijay swaminathan wrote:
>
>>
>> I tried using that as well.
>> The problem is, the thread becomes dead as s
On 12/05/2011 10:45, vijay swaminathan wrote:
I tried using that as well.
The problem is, the thread becomes dead as soon as it executes the
invocation of command prompt.
Can you post the code you're using, please?
This should be simple so maybe you've misunderstood
something in the threading
vijay swaminathan writes:
> Hi All,
>
> I'm new bie to python thread programming and would like to assistance
> on the attached code.
>
> In this, I'm calling a thread to invoke a command prompt and would
> like to print the "Thread as alive" as long as the command prompt is
> opened and would li
I tried using that as well.
The problem is, the thread becomes dead as soon as it executes the
invocation of command prompt.
I want the thread to be alive till I go and manually close the command
prompt.
-Vijay Swaminathan.
On Thu, May 12, 2011 at 2:46 PM, Andrea Crotti wrote:
> vijay swaminat
Hi All,
I'm new bie to python thread programming and would like to assistance on the
attached code.
In this, I'm calling a thread to invoke a command prompt and would like to
print the "Thread as alive" as long as the command prompt is opened and
would like to print "Thread is Dead" only when the
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