In a message of Tue, 10 Nov 2015 11:23:21 +0100, Laura Creighton writes:
>Their is no demand for 'yes/no answers' -- you can typically vote for
s/Their/There/
...
>the whole thing way, way, way to heavy-weight for most purposes.
s/to/too/
also s/heavy-weight/heavyweight/ depending on where in t
In a message of Mon, 09 Nov 2015 23:09:50 -0800, zljubi...@gmail.com writes:
>> If what you really need is a voting application, you can look at
>> https://github.com/mdipierro/evote which the PSF uses for its elections.
>
>It is not a voting application (I will have more than yes/no answers).
>I
> If what you really need is a voting application, you can look at
> https://github.com/mdipierro/evote which the PSF uses for its elections.
It is not a voting application (I will have more than yes/no answers).
I just want to keep an example simple.
Anyway, I will look into voting application
In a message of Mon, 09 Nov 2015 13:45:32 -0800, zljubi...@gmail.com writes:
>> I'm assuming this is a website. If so, why not use a form with a checkbox?
>
>One of ideas is to put two url's in the email, one for yes and the other one
>for no.
>
>I am also thinking about reading/parsing the reply
On 2015-11-09 13:53, zljubi...@gmail.com wrote:
> > You have a couple options that occur to me:
> >
> > 1) set up an SMTP server somewhere (or use the existing one you're
> > receiving this email at in the event you're getting it as mail
> > rather than reading it via NNTP or a web interface) to r
Ian Kelly :
> I wouldn't suggest trying to set up an SMTP server without a strong
> reason, however. These things are surprisingly tricky to configure so
> that your server doesn't get used for spam forwarding, and if you
> don't play nicely with the SMTP community then you'll find your domain
> a
On Tue, Nov 10, 2015 at 9:30 AM, Ian Kelly wrote:
> I wouldn't suggest trying to set up an SMTP server without a strong
> reason, however. These things are surprisingly tricky to configure so
> that your server doesn't get used for spam forwarding, and if you
> don't play nicely with the SMTP comm
On Mon, Nov 9, 2015 at 11:15 AM, Tim Chase
wrote:
> On 2015-11-09 08:12, zljubi...@gmail.com wrote:
>> I know how to send an email, but I would like to be able to receive
>> a reply and act accordingly. Mail reply should contain yes/no
>> answer.
>
> You have a couple options that occur to me:
>
>
On Mon, 09 Nov 2015 13:53:24 -0800, zljubisic wrote:
>> You have a couple options that occur to me:
>>
>> 1) set up an SMTP server somewhere (or use the existing one you're
>> receiving this email at in the event you're getting it as mail rather
>> than reading it via NNTP or a web interface) to
> You have a couple options that occur to me:
>
> 1) set up an SMTP server somewhere (or use the existing one you're
> receiving this email at in the event you're getting it as mail
> rather than reading it via NNTP or a web interface) to receive the
> mail, then create a Python script to poll tha
> I'm assuming this is a website. If so, why not use a form with a checkbox?
One of ideas is to put two url's in the email, one for yes and the other one
for no.
I am also thinking about reading/parsing the reply mail.
Regards.
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 2015-11-09 08:12, zljubi...@gmail.com wrote:
> I know how to send an email, but I would like to be able to receive
> a reply and act accordingly. Mail reply should contain yes/no
> answer.
You have a couple options that occur to me:
1) set up an SMTP server somewhere (or use the existing one y
On Mon, Nov 9, 2015 at 11:12 AM, wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I know how to send an email, but I would like to be able to receive a
> reply and act accordingly.
> Mail reply should contain yes/no answer.
>
> I don't know whether email is appropriate for such function.
> Maybe better idea would be to have lin
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