In article mailman.1341.1269989861.23598.python-l...@python.org,
Justin Park h...@rice.edu wrote:
The real problem is this. When I started working on the package,
somehow all of indentations were made by space-bars instead of using
tabs. But when I am implementing my own on top of it, I still
Aahz wrote:
In article mailman.1341.1269989861.23598.python-l...@python.org,
Justin Park h...@rice.edu wrote:
The real problem is this. When I started working on the package,
somehow all of indentations were made by space-bars instead of using
tabs. But when I am implementing my own on
2010/4/12 Ricardo Aráoz ricar...@gmail.com:
Because .
... Guido says so: http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/
--
Cheers,
Simon B.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Sometimes when I am working on an already generated package,
the python shell cannot perceive the presence of an attribute that I
implemented on top of what was there.
Is there a way to have it perceive newly created attributes?
Thanks,
Justin.
--
Sorry, my mistake.
The real problem is this.
When I started working on the package, somehow all of indentations were
made by space-bars instead of using tabs.
But when I am implementing my own on top of it, I still use tabs to make
indentations.
This is causing a problem.
I have to either
Justin Park wrote:
Sorry, my mistake.
The real problem is this.
When I started working on the package, somehow all of indentations were
made by space-bars instead of using tabs.
But when I am implementing my own on top of it, I still use tabs to make
indentations.
This is causing a