t; > whatever. Can use whatever you like!
>
> Wasn't his real error the word "under"?
> (and having just observed our Git specialist's inexorably-expanding
> waistline)
> Doesn't the FAT surround the lean?
>
> --
> Regards =dn
Cheers, Gene Heske
; Subject: confirm ed9db80f83e18cbbbcbd8158c28cdd7db366e493
> If you reply to this message, keeping the Subject: header intact,
> Mailman will discard the held message. Do this if the message is
> spam. If you reply to this message and include an Approved: header
> with the list
ts,
adjudicating damages, will not be kind to the foot dragger's who think
they are saving money. History sure seems to be pointing in that
direction recently.
Its a puzzle to me, why so-called sane MBA's cannot understand that the
best defense is spending money on the offense by up
orced to use, which just Wednesday resulted in my calling one
to their attention but I'd say that nudge needs to be set in a crontab,
to repeat that nudge often enough to be effective. I suspect what I
experienced Wednesday was python3 growing pains, which the fact that
they are worki
at never should have been
in the code path in the first place. Then a new card processor with his
own card readers wins the next contract, and we repeat the same rodeo
all over again. Except he bought the readers from a BBLB maker, and the
failure rate is, predictably, astronomical.
Cheers, Gen
l.
Cheers, Gene Heskett
--
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author)
If we desire respect for the law, we must first make the law respectable.
- Louis D. Brandeis
Genes Web page <http:/
On Sunday 13 October 2019 16:22:33 Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Mon, Oct 14, 2019 at 6:38 AM Gene Heskett
wrote:
> > I'm not a python expert by a long ways.
> >
> > I have built the linuxcnc-master, which is the development branch of
> > linuxcnc, a machine c
On Monday 14 October 2019 12:00:42 Michael Torrie wrote:
> On 10/14/19 8:52 AM, Gene Heskett wrote:
> > I think thats the obvious path forward. Once ported, we don't have
> > to worry about that legacy stuff for two or 3 generations of linux.
>
> A worthy goal and I'
On Monday 14 October 2019 12:56:22 Gene Heskett wrote:
Continueing this thread, I now have a missing function by name, "units",
that is preventing LinuxCNC from running.
Where in the python 3 world do I find that function?, which in this case
controls what it is fed on to a pyv
On Tuesday 15 October 2019 11:10:41 Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
> On Tue, 15 Oct 2019 01:30:59 -0400, Gene Heskett
>
>
> declaimed the following:
> >On Monday 14 October 2019 12:56:22 Gene Heskett wrote:
> >
> >Continueing this thread, I now have a missing function
ave to, to get your money back.
Cheers, Gene Heskett
--
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author)
If we desire respect for the law, we must first make the law respectable.
- Louis D. Brandeis
d lengthen my visit here, but who knows for
sure?
>
>
> --
> Wulfraed Dennis Lee Bieber AF6VN
> wlfr...@ix.netcom.comhttp://wlfraed.microdiversity.freeddns.org/
Cheers, Gene Heskett
--
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
Dennis Lee Bieber AF6VN
> wlfr...@ix.netcom.comhttp://wlfraed.microdiversity.freeddns.org/
Cheers, Gene Heskett
--
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Aut
%7C01%7C%7Ca4d13696dfe649b76b
>a308d7c25dd7c2%7C84df9e7fe9f640afb435%7C1%7C0%7C63719158060
>9217361&sdata=iEYALDe6NXEt%2BzW9g%2BW4zqLQEJq9kxMPXTFl8nyeg3Q%3D&am
>p;reserved=0
Cheers, Gene Heskett
--
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
soap, b
ands to troubleshoot an
off the air tv transmitter from a thousand miles away. That was my
field of expertise for 60 years.
Cheers, Gene Heskett
--
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author)
If w
linux:
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/286222
Martin v. Löwis wrote:
> Tarek Ziadé wrote:
> > I am trying to find a general memory profiler that can measure the
> > memory usage in Python program
> > and gather some stats about object usages, and things like that.
>
> As Di
(posted c.l.python ONLY)
Xah (may i call you Xah?)
SOrry to say, but your older posts were much funnier:
http://groups.google.com/group/comp.lang.lisp/browse_frm/thread/15f7015d23a6758e/9ee26da60295d7c8?lnk=st&q=&rnum=5&hl=en#9ee26da60295d7c8
(also seems your anti-cult cult really hasn't gotten
http://groups.google.com/group/comp.lang.python/browse_thread/thread/6e6dc84e68e25039/1436d0b3466e262a?q=lucene&rnum=1#1436d0b3466e262a
Mike Meyer wrote:
> "corebump" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > hi everybody,
> > i planinng develop a search engine and i think using the python. Python
> > per
other ways to get at info:
if sys.hexversion > 0x010502F0:
sys.versioninfo, version, etc.
platform.architecture, processor etc.
distutils.sysconfig.get_makefile_filename( )
Benji York wrote:
> Peck, Jon wrote:
> > I have Python code running in an application, and I would like to find
> > the
Good question, but Y'know, i don't think i'm the only one using a
threaded mail reader. Pls don't hijack others' threads.
David Pratt wrote:
> Hi. Is anyone aware of any python based unacceptable language filter
> code to scan and detect bad language in text from uploads etc.
>
> Many thanks.
>
Yup, still there, issues 1 and 2
http://pyzine.com/Issue002/index.html
Also recommend Dave Kuhlman's brief intro (open in your tabbed browser)
http://www.rexx.com/~dkuhlman/python_201/python_201.html#SECTION00600
Alex Martelli wrote:
> Micah Elliott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
request for Google groups enhancement:
Report Abuse button should have 4 choices:
- Spam
- Illegal Content
- Xah
- other
;-}
Christos Georgiou wrote:
> On Wed, 05 Oct 2005 21:36:47 -0600, rumours say that Mahesh Padmanabhan
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> might have written:
>
> >In article <[EMAIL PROTECT
This should be good for a couple weeks
http://www.awaretek.com/tutorials.html
http://www.rexx.com/~dkuhlman/python_101/python_101.html
http://www.rexx.com/~dkuhlman/python_201/python_201.html
http://www.ibiblio.org/obp/py4fun/
http://the.taoofmac.com/space/Python/Grimoire
http://mail.python.org/p
http://www.python.org/doc/faq/library.html#how-do-i-find-a-module-or-application-to-perform-task-x
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> hi
> i am new to python and was wondering where can i find modules for
> python?
> Something very much like what CPAN has for Perl.
> I am searching for SSL/SSH modules for
is this it:?
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor
LenS wrote:
> Hello
>
> Was wandering if there is any place where some one could go to get
> mentoring on python coding. I have started coding in python but I am
> the only one in the shop using it. So there is no one around to look
> o
google "cheat sheet" or "quick reference"
http://rgruet.free.fr/#QuickRef
http://infohost.nmt.edu/tcc/help/pubs/python22/
http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/python/excerpt/PythonPocketRef/index.html
http://diveintopython.org/appendix/abstracts.html
http://www.yukoncollege.yk.ca/~ttopper/COMP118/rCheatShe
http://blog.ianbicking.org/ruby-python-power.html
http://www.ruby-doc.org/RubyEyeForThePythonGuy.html
http://onestepback.org/index.cgi/Tech/Ruby/PythonAndRuby.rdoc
http://www.approximity.com/ruby/Comparison_rb_st_m_java.html
http://www.jvoegele.com/software/langcomp.html
http://reflectivesurface.co
http://www.artima.com/intv/closures.html
http://www.rubyist.net/~matz/slides/oscon2005/index.html
It's a read-write closure, a co-routine, sort of a continuation (tho
Kernel.callcc is considered the real continuation mechanism).
And you can make it a Proc object (basically an unbound object you ca
APL, i haven't thought about that in 15 years. I think it was (quad)CT
for comparison tolerance, at least in IBM APL.
Alex Martelli wrote:
> Tom Anderson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>...
> > What would approximate FP equality even mean? How approximate?
>
> In APL, it meant "to within [a certa
Mike Meyer wrote:
> "Daniel Crespo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > Hi!
> >
> > I would like to know how can I do the PHP ternary operator/statement
> > (... ? ... : ...) in Python...
> >
> > I want to something like:
> >
> > a = {'Huge': (quantity>90) ? True : False}
> >
> > Any suggestions?
>
Anton81 wrote:
> Hi!
>
> When I do simple calculation with float values, they are rarely exactly
> equal even if they should be. What is the threshold and how can I change
> it?
>
> e.g. "if f1==f2:" will always mean "if abs(f1-f2)<1e-6:"
>
> Anton
googled for "floating point" "comparison toleran
And80 wrote:
> Hi,
> I would like to use xpath modules in python2.4 In my local machine
> I am running python2.3.5 and on the server I run python2.4. I have seen
> that while on my computer i am able to import xml.xpath, on the server
> the module seems to not exist. Is it still part of the st
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I'm trying to move beyond Emacs/Vim/Kate
> and was wondering if Eclipse is better and if it is the *best*
> IDE for Python.
>
> Should I leave Emacs and do Python coding in Eclipse?
>
> Chris
I'm agnostic; lots of IDE's/editors have buzz, you should learn to use
at leas
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Though I tried most the above listed IDEs, sticking with a few for
> awhile, I always find myself gravitating back to the one no one ever
> mentions: IDLE. It's simple, fast, and with multiple monitors the lack
> of tabs really isn't much of a problem.
>
> The biggest re
John J. Lee wrote:
> Sanjay Arora <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > We are looking to select the language & toolset more suitable for a
> > project that requires getting data from several web-sites in real-
> > timehtml parsing/scraping. It would require full emulation of the
> > browser, incl
ech0 wrote:
> I would appreciate any help I can get in finding a solution to the
> following problem:
>
> ==
>
> Below is a diagram:
> http://www.muchographiks.com/algo.jpg
>
> THE PROBLEM
>
> Lets say we have 4 terms (purple represen
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> > Gee, I wonder if I typed "sort" into the search box on the wiki it might
> > turn up something useful? Well, what do you know?
> >
> > 2 results of about 4571 pages. (0.19 seconds)
> >
> > 1. HowTo/Sorting
> > 2. SortingListsOf
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> >> Are you telling us you learned C#, smalltalk, lisp, C, perl,
> >> whatever, from 1 website only, without looking at any books, without
> >> spending any money on IDEs or any software? Cause that's what you're
> >> asking here.
>
> rurpy> For perl and
>
> There's more to it than that... isn't there? I've used _winreg and the
> win32 extensions in the past when working with the registry. I thought
> perhaps someone had already scripted something to extract this info.
>
Yes, a small firm named Microsoft has done this (but not tested w/2.4):
htt
Lad wrote:
> Hello,
> what is a way to get the the extension of a filename from the path?
> E.g., on my XP windows the path can be
> C:\Pictures\MyDocs\test.txt
> and I would like to get
> the the extension of the filename, that is here
> txt
>
>
> I would like that to work on Linux also
> Thank
Lad wrote:
> Thank you ALL for help
> Regards,
> L.
addendum: ASPN Python cookbook often has something relevant /
modifiable for your needs:
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/81931
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/52661
(in this case code from 2001 /
Peter A. Schott wrote:
> I know there's got to be an easy way to do this - I want a way to catch the
> error text that would normally be shown in an interactive session and put that
> value into a string I can use later. I've tried just using a catch statement
> and trying to convert the output t
cookbook's not an easy grep but:
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/303060
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/303279
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/347689
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Based on discusses with these guys, who know LAMP, python, ruby inside
and out, and support it well:
http://textdrive.com/
I'm guessing you'd have a hard time finding mod_python / apache hosting
unless you get a dedicated server. It's pretty labor-intensive setup
and admin-wise. linux shell /
Tragi-comic. really. BTW you forgot cross-post to c.l.scheme, C,
smalltalk and C++
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
http://dmoz.org/Computers/Programming/Languages/Python/Ports/
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/299271
or the nice recipe, page 403 of cookbook2, that i can't find in ASPN
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
If your test variable has specific values to branch on, the standard
way is to have those values be keys in a dictionary, and do:
branched_func_obj = dict_of_values.get(testvar)
And the lambda hack is here, courtesy of Peter Norvig
http://www.norvig.com/python-iaq.html
--
http://mail.python.or
Practical Python is quite a good book. And to re-iterate again, teh
humongous tutorial list which has Hetland's Instant python among
others:
http://www.awaretek.com/tutorials.html
Brian van den Broek wrote:
> Michele Simionato said unto the world upon 21/06/2005 07:58:
> > qwwee:
> >
> >>for a c
Dear Mr. Jones:
Our team of 3,972 expert testers judged the output of your
troll-spewing neural net virtually indistinguishable from the original.
Given this, I am please to announce that our firm is willing to
discuss arrangements for an exclusive license that you would likely
find financially c
i think this came up yesterday\
http://www.python.org/cgi-bin/moinmoin/IntegratedDevelopmentEnvironments
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
i think ring buffer
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/68429
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
a ring buffer?
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/68429
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
http://www.python.org/cgi-bin/moinmoin/IntegratedDevelopmentEnvironments
http://wiki.python.org/moin/PythonEditors
http://groups-beta.google.com/group/comp.lang.python/browse_frm/thread/6ab929ca5507a05/ebf77ab2ea664a3c?q=IDE+group:comp.lang.python&rnum=6&hl=en#ebf77ab2ea664a3c
--
http://mail.pyt
woops: I like komodo (almost free, from:
http://wiki.python.org/moin/Komodo
and jedit:
http://www.opensourcetutorials.com/tutorials/Server-Side-Coding/Python/review-of-python-ide/page1.html
http://plugins.jedit.org/updates.php?page=3
Heard good things about WIngIDE, the other almost free IDE
-
I encourage NOPs (non-original posters) to paste their thoughts into
the wiki for posterity/FAQing, e.g. currently no info on synEdit:
http://wiki.python.org/moin/IntegratedDevelopmentEnvironments
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Why don't you use a different delimiter when you're writing the CSV?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
maybe look at Harvestman
http://cheeseshop.python.org/HarvestMan/1.4%20final
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
+1 on investing in emacs. There's a shiny new release of the Oreilly,
which is (a really large book) that a lot of people teach themself out
of:
http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/gnu3/
But i would also recommend komodo from activestate's IDE, easy and
powerful, once you understand what all's in the
The python tutor good for this
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor
Miki Tebeka wrote:
> Hello Jorge,
>
> >Is there some sort of a Wiki where I could post the code and have
> >advice on what, how and where to improve? Or should I post the code it
> >here?
> You can always get
a good text indexer will help, look at lupy, pyndex, xapian etc
http://www.pypackage.org/packages/python-pyndex
http://www.divmod.org/Home/Projects/Lupy/
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Yes, there's a lot of issues, cross-site scripting, session hijacking,
proper authentication, etc. Open Web App Security Project is useful
www.owasp.org
Also, before you start with NLP and full-on parsers, think about if you
can apply a text indexer, stemming and stopping both your user's
queri
Good luck, report back. My canonical 1st step w/stuff that looks like
NLP, is to flip thru the Jurafsky/Martin and Norvig Russell AI texts
and identify paths of least resistance, like naive Bayesian or LSI,
that have perl/python/ruby/C packages that i can thrash around in with
my data .
some othe
ipython and pyshell?
http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/python/2005/01/27/ipython.html
http://www.wxpython.org/PyManual.html
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
curl and wget are the most robust ways to do this
http://cool.haxx.se/mailman/listinfo/curl-and-python
http://www.gnu.org/software/wget/wget.html
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
look at 'path' module too
http://www.jorendorff.com/articles/python/path/
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
you have an embarassment of riches (i think that's the phrase)
http://wiki.python.org/moin/IntegratedDevelopmentEnvironments
also try Eric and Komodo (the other $30 IDE with free trial).
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
not clear if you're asking about XMLHttpRequest
http://www.modernmethod.com/sajax/
http://nevow.com/Nevow2004Tutorial.html#livepage
or custom browser object:
http://wwwsearch.sourceforge.net/mechanize/
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
ok, i don't see URL and password here, so try: urllib2 (maybe
mechanize), then beautiful soup. maybe another HTML parser ...
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
fav DP books:
http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/hfdesignpat/
http://www.netobjectives.com/dpexplained/
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
not clear if you want a FIFO, or a LRU on read or write, so for the
non-dictionary component of this, you could also ( (search Cookbook)
|| google) for terms like "ring buffer", "fixed-size cache", um,
"bounded queue", "circular buffer", "deque", there's probably a bunch
of others.
--
http://mai
just remember: sys.argv[0] == script name
http://www.artima.com/weblogs/viewpost.jsp?thread=4829
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
OR: (I think it does the same thing)
os.access(filename,OS.F_OK)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi Sandeep,
i didn't see where you said if these hosts you want to ping are on your
internal network, or beyond your gateway. Probably the only truly
reliable way to maintain an active hosts list is to install a
ping-sending client on them, like
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/R
http://docs.python.org/lib/module-htmlentitydefs.html
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
this isn't really enough data to go on. What operating system (sounds
like win2k/XP), does Crystal reports and unnamed accounting software
have COM hooks?
Look at Simon Brunning posts:
http://www.brunningonline.net/simon/blog/archives/000652.html
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/
There's a few places to stash apps, libraries, or small code snippets
so they can be search engined, if you provide some inline comments,
unit/functional tests, and examples of how to use/known limitations:
Vaults Parnassus, dmoz, ActiveState cookbook
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Pyth
To be honest, this is a pretty open-ended question. Are there specific
issues (SQL injection/security, minimizing db connections, simplest
code, etc, your'e concerned with?)
To be more honest, googline "Python vs. PHP" raises lots of hits
http://wiki.w4py.org/pythonvsphp.html
http://www.redcor.ch
ok, to make this less open-ended, you should mention what O/S and web
server you have in mind, whether the web and DB servers will be under
your admin (big diff betw python and PHP, as far as finding shared
server accounts at web hosts), what kinds of queries, concurrent
read/write volumes, transac
Here's my trove of FAQ/Gotcha lists
http://www.ferg.org/projects/python_gotchas.html
http://zephyrfalcon.org/labs/python_pitfalls.html
http://zephyrfalcon.org/labs/beginners_mistakes.html
http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/python/2004/02/05/learn_python.html
http://www.norvig.com/python-iaq.html
http:/
look in distutils.cfg:
http://www.python.org/doc/2.4.1/inst/config-syntax.html
for modules compiled in, sys.builtin_module_names
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
this recipe takes medium-deep copies (shallow copies of embedded
sequences/dict's) of an obj's __dict__ when you need to monitor changes
to the object's state from that point on:
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/302742
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
http://tgolden.sc.sabren.com/python/win32_how_do_i/watch_directory_for_changes.html
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
http://onestepback.org/index.cgi/Tech/Ruby/PythonAndRuby.rdoc
this blog talks about design differences, e.g. what "." means, whether
functions and methods are 1st-class objects.
St
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
win32: (I posted this link in response to same question, um, day bef.
yesterday)
http://groups-beta.google.com/group/comp.lang.python/browse_frm/thread/9a1c7629db72d064/56008cb68eeffa23?hl=en#56008cb68eeffa23
(Thanks to Tim Golden for collecting the info)
OS X: I dunno...
--
http://mail.python.
fuzzy's urllib2 info is excellent. The other way peopel snarf stuff
over HTTP and FTP is using 'wget' or 'libcurl'. THere's
http://pycurl.sourceforge.net/
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Here:
http://diveintopython.org/http_web_services/index.html#oa.divein
Here:
Cookbook rel 2, and:
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python?kwd=Web
Here:other really good py intros which cover 2.2 / urllib (maybe 2.3, I
don't have them with me), but examples should all not give deprecation
http://www.python.org/cgi-bin/moinmoin/PythonHosting
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
(instead of saying "google is your bud", & because this ? isn't readily
FAQ-able)
i suggest Google Advanced Searching c.l.py for "python IDE
intellisense" or "code completion" or "regex debugger" or "contextual
help" or "whatever_feature" (each feature has about 15 codenames, keep
at it), maybe th
re-read page 74 of the nutshell about "." and __dict__. this bit about
philosophical differences in dictionary lookups vs. sending a message
to an object might help
http://onestepback.org/index.cgi/Tech/Ruby/PythonAndRuby.rdoc
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Truthfully, the number of frameworks is staggering, tho some are
specialized for blogs/wiki, search engine, PIM, etc.
http://www.colorstudy.com/docs/shootout.html
http://pythonology.org/howto
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python?kwd=Web
http://www.awaretek.com/tutorials.html#web
http:/
http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2005/08/codezoo_program_1.html
http://python.codezoo.com/
Nice to see that python is in-demand, but what is the rationale for
another ASPN cookbook/Parnassus / pypackage / dmoz type repository?
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(copied from "Fat/Lazy" thread
http://martinfowler.com/bliki/CollectionClosureMethod.html
http://onestepback.org/index.cgi/Tech/Ruby/PythonAndRuby.rdoc
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Um, you shd 1st search cookbook, or Vaults Parnassu, dmoz python
section, pypackage:
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/347689
http://www.codezoo.com/
http://www.vex.net/parnassus/
http://www.pypackage.org/packages
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(throw Martin Fowler and Paul Graham into google blender)
http://www.billkatz.com/node/42
http://osteele.com/archives/2005/03/ruby-and-laszlo
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There it is, right on homepage. Thanks, it looks quite nice, and i see
you'll be an indep. gems server, and more... I did try searching on
"postscript" and it didn't pull up pyscript. Also, HTML on the
"Search" results page is kind of not rendered great in Firefox1.06
/WinXP SP2. BUt it's a rea
More ways to do it, from the FAQ
http://www.python.org/doc/faq/programming.html#how-can-i-get-a-dictionary-to-display-its-keys-in-a-consistent-order
Also look at the recipe, page 222 of Cookbook2, that allows you to rank
key values by their associated values, and demonstrate the power of
mixins.
this sounds like LSI / singular value decomposition (?)
http://javelina.cet.middlebury.edu/lsa/out/lsa_explanation.htm
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when *I* google
http://www.awaretek.com/tutorials.html#regular
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Programming:Python_Strings
http://www.regexlib.com/Default.aspx
http://docs.python.org/lib/module-re.html
http://diveintopython.org/regular_expressions/index.html#re.intro
http://www.amk.ca/python/howto/r
I think you'll like python.
http://naeblis.cx/rtomayko/2004/12/15/the-static-method-thing
http://dirtsimple.org/2004/12/java-is-not-python-either.html
(and python-is-not-java)
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