Hi Steven!!! Thanks so much for the pro help, I really do appreciate it. :)
On Thu, Dec 13, 2012 at 4:53 PM, Steven D'Aprano
steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info wrote:
Indentation is important. Please don't remove it. I've added it back in
below:
Yikes! Sorry about that. I won't do that again
On Wed, Dec 12, 2012 at 7:49 PM, Micky Hulse mickyhulse.li...@gmail.com wrote:
I hope you don't mind that this question involves Django... I'm just
looking to improve my core Python skills (so, generic Python examples
would be cool).
Just experimenting:
https://gist.github.com/4279705
I
On Thu, 13 Dec 2012 16:20:51 -0800, Micky Hulse wrote:
Learning things here...
In my mixin class (a version I wrote for Django) I had this (indentation
removed for better list readability):
Indentation is important. Please don't remove it. I've added it back in
below:
class
Dear Python Santa gurus, ;D
I have this Django mixin:
https://github.com/registerguard/django-ad-manager/blob/8628bfe70f6ca68cb7b0373cee7da52613c7531a/ad_manager/mixins.py
...which is used to override render_to_response() so I can output a
JSON response (the above code is pretty much straight
Am 05.12.2012 21:24, schrieb Owatch:
Thanks a TON for your answer thought, this is exactly what I really hoped for.
The problem for me is that I don't actually know anything about writing a
function that opens a network socket, and connects to that plugin und asks
it for the
information
Re
On Monday, December 3, 2012 4:19:51 PM UTC+2, Alexander Blinne wrote:
Hello,
by having a quick look at their website i found a plugin for CoreTemp
which acts as a server and can be asked for status information of the
cpu. Now your task is really simple: write a little function or
On Sunday, December 2, 2012 11:44:05 PM UTC+2, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Sun, 02 Dec 2012 12:33:58 -0800, Owatch wrote:
Sorry, but I was redirected here via a thread on another forum
concerning where to find help for Python. (Python-forums.org not working
for me)
I wanted
Hello,
by having a quick look at their website i found a plugin for CoreTemp
which acts as a server and can be asked for status information of the
cpu. Now your task is really simple: write a little function or class
that opens a network socket, connects to that plugin und asks it for the
Sorry, but I was redirected here via a thread on another forum concerning where
to find help for Python. (Python-forums.org not working for me)
I wanted to ask if there was any way I could write a simple Python Temperature
program. Where essentially it somehow (Now sure how, I'm a noob
On Sun, 02 Dec 2012 12:33:58 -0800, Owatch wrote:
Sorry, but I was redirected here via a thread on another forum
concerning where to find help for Python. (Python-forums.org not working
for me)
I wanted to ask if there was any way I could write a simple Python
Temperature program. Where
Hi Fellow Pythoners,
I'm trying to collect table data from an authenticated webpage (Tool) to
which I have access.
I will have the required data after 'click'ing a submit button on the tool
homepage.
When I inspect the submit button i see
form action=/Tool/index.do method=POST
Thus the
Hi Fellow Pythoners,
I'm trying to collect table data from an authenticated webpage (Tool) to
which I have access.
I will have the required data after 'click'ing a submit button on the tool
homepage.
When I inspect the submit button i see
form action=/Tool/index.do method=POST
Thus the tool's
Hi All,
I'm new to Python, and trying to get python 3.2 installed on Centos 5.6. When I
run 'make test', I receive several errors. The readme states that you can
generally ignore messages about skipped tests, but as you can see below, some
of the tests failed and a number were 'unexpected
On 4/19/2011 10:55 AM, Rob McGillivray wrote:
I'm new to Python, and trying to get python 3.2 installed on Centos
5.6. When I run 'make test', I receive several errors.
Welcome to Python.
Newbie lesson 1: write an informative subject line that will catch the
attention of people who can
: Tuesday, April 19, 2011 12:59 PM
To: python-list@python.org
Subject: 3.2 test failures on Centos 5.6 (was Re: Noob Question)
On 4/19/2011 10:55 AM, Rob McGillivray wrote:
I'm new to Python, and trying to get python 3.2 installed on Centos
5.6. When I run 'make test', I receive several errors
On 4/19/2011 1:33 PM, Rob McGillivray wrote:
I am trying to install from an RPM downloaded from python.org.
That puzzles me. For *nix, I do not see .rpm, just tarballs, on
http://python.org/download/releases/3.2/
--
Terry Jan Reedy
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Tue, Apr 19, 2011 at 7:55 AM, Rob McGillivray
r...@motornostixusa.com wrote:
Hi All,
I'm new to Python, and trying to get python 3.2 installed on Centos 5.6. When
I run 'make test', I receive several errors. The readme states that you can
generally ignore messages about skipped tests,
Yes, Dan is right, it looked for the sources, and you have only binaries on
your system. Look in your distribution repositories for the *-devel or alike
for the 5 that failed and try again.
2011/4/19 Dan Stromberg drsali...@gmail.com
On Tue, Apr 19, 2011 at 7:55 AM, Rob McGillivray
Franck Ditter fra...@ditter.org writes:
Pardon my noobness (?) but why is there a 2.x and 3.x development
teams working concurrently in Python ?
Well, Python 2.7 is the last major 2.x release, only bugfixes are done
for it, like the 2.7.1 release. Actual developement is in the 3.x
branch now.
Pardon my noobness (?) but why is there a 2.x and 3.x development
teams working concurrently in Python ? I hardly saw that in other
languages. Which one should I choose to start with, to cope with
the future ? Isn't 3.x supposed to extend 2.y ?
This situation is very strange...
Thanks for your
On Sun, Nov 14, 2010 at 1:03 AM, Franck Ditter fra...@ditter.org wrote:
Pardon my noobness (?) but why is there a 2.x and 3.x development
teams working concurrently in Python ? I hardly saw that in other
languages.
You haven't heard of the infamous Perl 6?
Which one should I choose to start
On Sun, Nov 14, 2010 at 1:03 AM, Franck Ditter fra...@ditter.org wrote:
Pardon my noobness (?) but why is there a 2.x and 3.x development
teams working concurrently in Python ? I hardly saw that in other
languages. Which one should I choose to start with, to cope with
the future ? Isn't 3.x
Hello?
I'm currently installed Ubuntu 8.10. I'm not a Linux person, so I
don't know a lot about it. The reason I installed Ubuntu is just for
EMAN (http://blake.bcm.tmc.edu/eman/). EMAN 1.8 software requires
Python 2.4 not 2.5 which comes with Ubuntu 8.10.
I installed Python 2.4 by typing sudo
nanoe...@gmail.com a écrit :
Hello?
Hi.
Ok, first, this is mostly OT here - your question should have gone to
either the project's maintainer or any Ubuntu forum /
mailing-list/whatever.
OT
I'm currently installed Ubuntu 8.10. I'm not a Linux person, so I
don't know a lot about it. The
[following up late]
In article 2b3c916e-6908-4b12-933f-8f7bfa86c...@i20g2000prf.googlegroups.com,
Russ P. russ.paie...@gmail.com wrote:
Fair enough, but for code that is not intended for general public
usage (i.e., most code) so-called camelCase is every bit as good if
not better than using
On Sat, 17 Jan 2009 06:09:29 -0800, Aahz wrote:
You are missing the point: suppose you write a useful library in your
air traffic management application, maybe one that does a good job of
handling user input. If you have done a proper job of abstracting it
from your application as a whole,
2009/1/3 Russ P. russ.paie...@gmail.com:
So unless you think the standard library will someday include code for
air traffic management, I'll stick with camelCase, and I'll thank you
for not making an issue of it.
Another late comment, sorry, but as an air traffic management safety
consultant,
Anyone have something to say about the userio stuff?
(If you're going to post something about my coding style, I invite you
to do something infinitely more useful:
write crapToPep8.py {or is it crap_to_pep8?} to satisfy your sick
fetish for consistency.)
--
Gabriel Genellina gagsl-...@yahoo.com.ar writes:
En Mon, 05 Jan 2009 02:03:26 -0200, Roy Smith r...@panix.com escribió:
The other day, I came upon this gem. It's a bit of perl embedded in a
Makefile; this makes it even more gnarly because all the $'s get
doubled to
hide them from make:
En Mon, 05 Jan 2009 02:03:26 -0200, Roy Smith r...@panix.com escribió:
The other day, I came upon this gem. It's a bit of perl embedded in a
Makefile; this makes it even more gnarly because all the $'s get doubled
to
hide them from make:
define absmondir
$(shell perl -e ' \
My gmail did that. FYI, it wasn't intentional.
А-Б-В-Г-Д-Е-Ё-Ж-З-И-Й-К-Л-М-Н-О-П-Р-С-Т-У-Ф-Х-Ц-Ч-Ш-Щ-Ъ-Ы-Ь-Э-Ю-Я
а-б-в-г-д-е-ё-ж-з-и-й-к-л-м-н-о-п-р-с-т-у-ф-х-ц-ч-ш-щ-ъ-ы-ь-э-ю-я
Paula Poundstone - I don't have a bank account because I don't know my
mother's maiden name.
On Sun, Jan 4, 2009 at
On Jan 3, 6:41 pm, Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-
cybersource.com.au wrote:
The OP comes from a Perl background, which AFAIK allows you to concat
numbers to strings and add strings to numbers. That's probably the (mis)
feature he was hoping Python had.
That's correct -- and that's been one
In article
cc87ebf5-5ce1-4fb5-bb2d-cd4bc2426...@q36g2000vbn.googlegroups.com,
sprad jsp...@gmail.com wrote:
On Jan 3, 6:41 pm, Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-
cybersource.com.au wrote:
The OP comes from a Perl background, which AFAIK allows you to concat
numbers to strings and add
On Mon, Jan 5, 2009 at 1:47 PM, sprad jsp...@gmail.com wrote:
On Jan 3, 6:41 pm, Steven D'Aprano st...@remove-this-
cybersource.com.au wrote:
The OP comes from a Perl background, which AFAIK allows you to concat
numbers to strings and add strings to numbers. That's probably the (mis)
feature
sprad a écrit :
I've done a good bit of Perl, but I'm new to Python.
I find myself doing a lot of typecasting (or whatever this thing I'm
about to show you is called),
Actually, it's just plain object instanciation.
and I'm wondering if it's normal, or if
I'm missing an important idiom.
On Jan 2, 10:50 pm, Ben Finney bignose+hates-s...@benfinney.id.au
wrote:
s0s...@gmail.com writes:
On Jan 2, 7:20 pm, Ben Finney bignose+hates-s...@benfinney.id.au
wrote:
They don't need to be creative; they merely need to conform with
the naming scheme as laid out in the PEP.
If it's
for each his own.
Any more word on userio?
On Sat, Jan 3, 2009 at 6:14 PM, Russ P. russ.paie...@gmail.com wrote:
On Jan 2, 10:50 pm, Ben Finney
bignose+hates-s...@benfinney.id.aubignose%2bhates-s...@benfinney.id.au
wrote:
s0s...@gmail.com writes:
On Jan 2, 7:20 pm, Ben Finney
Any more word on userio?
None yet, I'm afraid. Should've started a different thread for it -
but it's stuck here (in obscurity) forever xd.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Sat, 03 Jan 2009 20:35:25 +, alex goretoy wrote:
for each his own.
Please don't top-post.
Please don't quote the ENTIRE body of text (PLUS doubling it by including
a completely useless HTML version) just to add a trivial comment. Trim
the text you are replying to.
Any more word on
On Sat, 03 Jan 2009 16:19:58 +0100, Bruno Desthuilliers wrote:
But indeed, you obviously cannot add strings with numerics nor
concatenate numerics with strings. This would make no sense.
The OP comes from a Perl background, which AFAIK allows you to concat
numbers to strings and add strings
I've done a good bit of Perl, but I'm new to Python.
I find myself doing a lot of typecasting (or whatever this thing I'm
about to show you is called), and I'm wondering if it's normal, or if
I'm missing an important idiom.
For example:
bet = raw_input(Enter your bet)
if int(bet) == 0:
#
On Fri, Jan 2, 2009 at 4:15 PM, sprad jsp...@gmail.com wrote:
I've done a good bit of Perl, but I'm new to Python.
I find myself doing a lot of typecasting (or whatever this thing I'm
about to show you is called), and I'm wondering if it's normal, or if
I'm missing an important idiom.
For
sprad schrieb:
I've done a good bit of Perl, but I'm new to Python.
I find myself doing a lot of typecasting (or whatever this thing I'm
about to show you is called), and I'm wondering if it's normal, or if
I'm missing an important idiom.
It is normal, although below you make things
You can use the built-in string formatting options and operations.
2.5: http://www.python.org/doc/2.5.2/lib/typesseq-strings.html
2.6: http://docs.python.org/library/string.html
In essence, you can do:
print You still have $%i remaining %(money)
On Jan 2, 2:15 pm, sprad jsp...@gmail.com wrote:
You might better do
bet = int(raw_input(Enter your bet))
because then you don't need to later on convert bet again and again.
This is all fine until you give it to an end-user.
This is what I picture:
$ ./script.py
Enter your bet: $10
.. or perhaps ten, all, or a jillion other tainted
On Fri, 2 Jan 2009 14:36:04 -0800 (PST) vk vmi...@gmail.com wrote:
There needs to be a user_io or sanitize module in the standard
library to take care of this stuff.
[snip example]
Great idea! +1
... but there isn't, as far as I know.
Well, get to it, then. ;)
/W
--
My real email
There needs to be a user_io or sanitize module in the standard
library to take care of this stuff.
[snip]
+1
You are sooo right. You know, it is easy to forget about such things
after you learn a language, i have written my own input logic, but i
remember my __init__ days with python now and
vk vmi...@gmail.com writes:
There needs to be a user_io or sanitize module in the standard
library to take care of this stuff.
Like:
import userio
logic = userio.userio()
number = logic.getNumeric(blah: ) # will offer the user a re-do in
case of bad input
number =
If there were, I would expect it to conform with PEP 8 (get those ugly
camelCase names outta there :-)
haha, please forgive me.
I'll try and think of some more creative names.
atm, I've got a chem final to study for.
I'll probably post something resembling useful code tomorrow morning.
until
On Fri, 2 Jan 2009 16:16:10 -0800 (PST) vk vmi...@gmail.com wrote:
If there were, I would expect it to conform with PEP 8 (get those
ugly camelCase names outta there :-)
haha, please forgive me.
I'll try and think of some more creative names.
FYI: The names themselves aren't he problem
On Jan 2, 6:26 pm, Andreas Waldenburger geekm...@usenot.de wrote:
On Fri, 2 Jan 2009 16:16:10 -0800 (PST) vk vmi...@gmail.com wrote:
If there were, I would expect it to conform with PEP 8 (get those
ugly camelCase names outta there :-)
haha, please forgive me.
I'll try and think of
On Fri, 2 Jan 2009 16:44:11 -0800 (PST) r rt8...@gmail.com wrote:
On Jan 2, 6:26 pm, Andreas Waldenburger geekm...@usenot.de wrote:
On Fri, 2 Jan 2009 16:16:10 -0800 (PST) vk vmi...@gmail.com wrote:
If there were, I would expect it to conform with PEP 8 (get
those ugly camelCase
On Jan 3, 11:16 am, vk vmi...@gmail.com wrote:
If there were, I would expect it to conform with PEP 8 (get those ugly
camelCase names outta there :-)
haha, please forgive me.
I'll try and think of some more creative names.
atm, I've got a chem final to study for.
I'll probably post
vk vmi...@gmail.com writes:
If there were, I would expect it to conform with PEP 8 (get those
ugly camelCase names outta there :-)
haha, please forgive me.
I'll try and think of some more creative names.
They don't need to be creative; they merely need to conform with the
naming scheme
Ben Finney wrote:
vk vmi...@gmail.com writes:
If there were, I would expect it to conform with PEP 8 (get those
ugly camelCase names outta there :-)
haha, please forgive me.
I'll try and think of some more creative names.
They don't need to be creative; they merely need to conform with
On Jan 2, 7:20 pm, Ben Finney bignose+hates-s...@benfinney.id.au
wrote:
vk vmi...@gmail.com writes:
If there were, I would expect it to conform with PEP 8 (get those
ugly camelCase names outta there :-)
haha, please forgive me.
I'll try and think of some more creative names.
They
On Jan 2, 6:57 pm, Andreas Waldenburger geekm...@usenot.de wrote:
[snip]
You even assumed that distinction in your example:
'hello world.title()
[snip]
sorry, here is TitleCase.py_b2
py 'hello world'.title().replace(' ', '')
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Fri, 02 Jan 2009 21:02:19 -0500, Steve Holden wrote:
Ben Finney wrote:
vk vmi...@gmail.com writes:
If there were, I would expect it to conform with PEP 8 (get those
ugly camelCase names outta there :-)
haha, please forgive me.
I'll try and think of some more creative names.
They
On Jan 2, 6:15 pm, s0s...@gmail.com wrote:
On Jan 2, 7:20 pm, Ben Finney bignose+hates-s...@benfinney.id.au
wrote:
vk vmi...@gmail.com writes:
If there were, I would expect it to conform with PEP 8 (get those
ugly camelCase names outta there :-)
haha, please forgive me.
I'll
etc etc ... IOW consider not biting off more than you can chew.
It's possible that I am, but where's the fun without the risk?
Good thinking in your post though!
I will add get_date at some point, and I've modified get_numeric
already.
All-right, the moment you've all been waiting for:
s0s...@gmail.com writes:
On Jan 2, 7:20 pm, Ben Finney bignose+hates-s...@benfinney.id.au
wrote:
They don't need to be creative; they merely need to conform with
the naming scheme as laid out in the PEP.
If it's something to be included in the standard library, I agree
(just for
Unless you explicitly *never* intend sharing your code with *anyone*,
it's best to code all your Python code in accordance with PEP 8 anyway.
Well said. Let's bury the puppy already.
Anyone have something to say about the userio stuff?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
hello friends,
i have a python library(rdflib) that i am using in some project using
Google App Engine. I have developed everything using this on my local
machine and things work fine. But in my final deployment, i have to
use it in source code form rather than in library form. If i remove
the
On 6 juin, 19:36, रवींदर ठाकुर (ravinder thakur)
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
hello friends,
i have a python library(rdflib) that i am using in some project using
Google App Engine. I have developed everything using this on my local
machine and things work fine. But in my final deployment, i have
On Jan 7, 12:09 am, GHZ [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Had the same issue. What you want is: reload()
Thanks :)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Tinkering with Python I find myself often writing scripts and then
experimenting with the interactive interpreter, which is really a cool
way to learn a language. However, when, after loading a module with
import module
or
from module import *
and using it, I make a change to the module file,
Had the same issue. What you want is: reload()
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
CarlP a écrit :
How do I run a Python script.
usually, it's:
$ python /path/to/somescript.py arg1 argN
on a command line prompt.
I have one that gmail loader needs to
run on my email box. Here's the script
http://www.marklyon.org/gmail/cleanmbox.py
I can't seem to find what I need to
How do I run a Python script. I have one that gmail loader needs to
run on my email box. Here's the script
http://www.marklyon.org/gmail/cleanmbox.py
I can't seem to find what I need to run it. I installed python, run
the interpreter and the script , but all it will do is say invalid
syntax.
On Jun 28, 12:17 pm, CarlP [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
How do I run a Python script. I have one that gmail loader needs to
run on my email box. Here's the script
http://www.marklyon.org/gmail/cleanmbox.py
I can't seem to find what I need to run it. I installed python, run
the interpreter and
I installed python, run the interpreter and the script...
Are you trying to run the script from the interpreter? You _can_ run
scripts from the interpreter, but it isn't as simple as typing the
name of the script. To me, that is what it sounds like you are trying
to do. I don't know what
On 23 Sty, 10:59, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello everyone!
I have a piece of code that looks like this:
if len(BuildList) 0:
print The script found %d game directories: % len(BuildList)
print
num = 0
for i in BuildList:
print str(num) ++ i
num =
Hello everyone!
I have a piece of code that looks like this:
if len(BuildList) 0:
print The script found %d game directories: % len(BuildList)
print
num = 0
for i in BuildList:
print str(num) ++ i
num = num + 1
print
print Select a build number
I have a piece of code that looks like this:
if len(BuildList) 0:
print The script found %d game directories: % len(BuildList)
print
num = 0
for i in BuildList:
print str(num) ++ i
num = num + 1
print
print Select a build number from 0 to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
print Select a build number from 0 to + str(len(BuildList) - 1)
buildNum = int(raw_input('Select build # '))
while buildNum (len(BuildList) -1) or buildNum = -1:
print
print Error: Invalid build number!
print Select a build
Ah, thank you for the respone!
I have not gotten around to test it yet, but I hope it will work! :)
-Daniel
2007-01-23 10:59:37
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hello everyone!
I have a piece of code that looks like this:
if len(BuildList) 0:
print The script
where is a good open-source project website?
thank-you
(sorry for being so annoying)(if I'm annoying)(if not then I'm not
sorry)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
xandeer wrote:
where is a good open-source project website?
thank-you
(sorry for being so annoying)(if I'm annoying)(if not then I'm not
sorry)
sourceforge.net
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
http://code.google.com/hosting/
xandeer wrote:
where is a good open-source project website?
thank-you
(sorry for being so annoying)(if I'm annoying)(if not then I'm not
sorry)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Jason Nordwick wrote:
*mouth agape*
Wow. That really sucks. I make extensive use of reduce. It seems to run more
than twice as fast as a for loop.
t = Timer('bino.reduceadd(bino.bits)', 'import bino')
s = Timer('bino.loopadd(bino.bits)', 'import bino')
t.timeit(10)
1.2373670396656564
I use reduce to also do indexing, hashing with upsert semantics of lists of
key-value pairs, transitioning through a state table, etc...
Somebody else pointed out to me how odd it is of Python to be ditching reduce
when Guido van Rossum was hired by Google, and Google is literally built on map
Jason Nordwick wrote:
I use reduce to also do indexing, hashing with upsert semantics of lists of
key-value pairs, transitioning through a state table, etc...
Somebody else pointed out to me how odd it is of Python to be ditching reduce
when Guido van Rossum was hired by Google, and Google
That isn't what I meant. If there was a a point (and I'm not really sure that
I'm even trying to make one), the point was that Google makes heavy use of
reduce-like functionality, essentially implementing a distributed reduce across
a cluster. From what I hear, they use a lot of Python and
Jason Nordwick schrieb:
Or without filter:
from operator import add
def pr(x): print x
def cross(x,y): return reduce(add, [[a+b for b in y] for a in x])
x=map(pr, reduce(cross, [map(str,range(1,6))]*5))
[...]
reduce(add, list) is the same as sum(list) and is only half as fast as sum:
Stargaming:
Also note that reduce will be removed in Python 3000.
Then let's use it until it lasts! :-)
bearophile
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
mike_wilson1333 wrote:
I would like to generate every unique combination of numbers 1-5 in a 5
digit number and follow each combo with a newline. So i'm looking at
generating combinations such as: (12345) , (12235), (4) and so on.
What would be the best way to do this? So, basically i'm
Gerard Flanagan:
mod5 = ['1','2','3','4','5']
X = [ ''.join([a,b,c,d,e])
for a in mod5
for b in mod5
for c in mod5
for d in mod5
for e in mod5 ]
A modified version of your one is the faster so far:
v = 12345
r = [a+b+c+d+e for a in v for b in v for c in v
Somehow my other response to the list got lost. I'm still learning Python, but
this seems much better than my first attempt:
def pr(x): print x
def cross(x,y): return [a+b for a in x for b in y]
x=map(pr, reduce(cross, [map(str,range(1,6))]*5))
-j
Stargaming wrote:
Jason Nordwick schrieb:
Or
Stargaming wrote:
Also note that reduce will be removed in Python 3000.
What will replace it?
-j
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Jason Nordwick:
Stargaming wrote:
Also note that reduce will be removed in Python 3000.
What will replace it?
Nothing, I presume. You will have to write a function to find another
way to solve problems.
Bye,
bearophile
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
*mouth agape*
Wow. That really sucks. I make extensive use of reduce. It seems to run more
than twice as fast as a for loop.
t = Timer('bino.reduceadd(bino.bits)', 'import bino')
s = Timer('bino.loopadd(bino.bits)', 'import bino')
t.timeit(10)
1.2373670396656564
s.timeit(10)
mike_wilson1333 wrote:
I would like to generate every unique combination of numbers 1-5 in a 5
digit number and follow each combo with a newline. So i'm looking at
generating combinations such as: (12345) , (12235), (4) and so on.
What would be the best way to do this? So, basically i'm
Jason Nordwick wrote:
benchmark here
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Jason Nordwick:
Stargaming wrote:
Also note that reduce will be removed in Python 3000.
What will replace it?
Nothing, I presume. You will have to write a function to find another
way to solve problems.
Bye,
I would like to generate every unique combination of numbers 1-5 in a 5
digit number and follow each combo with a newline. So i'm looking at
generating combinations such as: (12345) , (12235), (4) and so on.
What would be the best way to do this? So, basically i'm looking for a
list of all
mike_wilson1333 schrieb:
I would like to generate every unique combination of numbers 1-5 in a 5
digit number and follow each combo with a newline. So i'm looking at
generating combinations such as: (12345) , (12235), (4) and so on.
What would be the best way to do this? So, basically i'm
mike_wilson1333 wrote:
I would like to generate every unique combination of numbers 1-5 in a 5
digit number and follow each combo with a newline. So i'm looking at
generating combinations such as: (12345) , (12235), (4) and so on.
What would be the best way to do this? So, basically i'm
mike_wilson1333:
I would like to generate every unique combination of numbers 1-5 in
a 5 digit number [...] What would be the best way to do this?
Ask the Java newsgroup to design a clever algorithm and post it here for
pythonification. Ask for the pseudocode, not the Java code.
--
René
Stargaming:
Generally, it is range(1, 5)
Minus all numbers whose decimal string representation matches
[0-9]*[06-9][0-9]* Briljant!
--
René Pijlman
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Stargaming schrieb:
mike_wilson1333 schrieb:
I would like to generate every unique combination of numbers 1-5 in a 5
digit number and follow each combo with a newline. So i'm looking at
generating combinations such as: (12345) , (12235), (4) and so on.
What would be the best way to do
Stargaming wrote:
Stargaming schrieb:
mike_wilson1333 schrieb:
I would like to generate every unique combination of numbers 1-5 in a 5
digit number and follow each combo with a newline. So i'm looking at
generating combinations such as: (12345) , (12235), (4) and so on.
What
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