Is there any updated roadmap/schedule for the new python.org site ?
It has been in beta mode at http://preview.python.org/ for several months but I
can not find in there any indication of the progress or the possible date for
publishing it. Most paragraphs are still with Lore Ipsum.
--
https://m
On 14 mar, 12:34, vsoler wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am still learning python, thus developnig small scripts.
>
> Some of them consist only of the main module. While testing them
> (debugging) I sometimes want to stop the script at a certain point,
> with something like stop, break, end or somethin
On 14 mar, 20:35, Michael Rudolf wrote:
> Am 14.03.2010 16:03, schrieb pyt...@bdurham.com:
>
> > Any reason you prefer PDB over WinPDB?
> >http://winpdb.org/
>
> Yes. I don't have Windows except one one PC :P
WinPdb is crossplatform. Is build with
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On 14 mar, 20:35, Michael Rudolf wrote:
> Am 14.03.2010 16:03, schrieb pyt...@bdurham.com:
>
> > Any reason you prefer PDB over WinPDB?
> >http://winpdb.org/
>
> Yes. I don't have Windows except one one PC :P
Sorry, i hit the wrong key. Again:
winpdb is crossplatform. It uses a wxwindows gui.
Nam
On 14 mar, 22:22, Guillermo wrote:
> > That is what happens: the file now starts with a BOM \xEB\xBB\xBF as
> > you can see with a hex editor.
>
> Is this an enforced convention under Windows, then? My head's aching
> after so much pulling at my hair, but I have the feeling that the
> problem o
On Mar 16, 5:20 pm, Johny wrote:
> Is there any tutorial how to write a bindings for a exe ( dos)
> program?
> I would like to run it from a Python directly
> ( using import command and a particular function from the binding)
> not using os.system command.
> Thanks
> L.
subprocess ?
--
http://m
On Mar 16, 5:20 pm, Johny wrote:
> Is there any tutorial how to write a bindings for a exe ( dos)
> program?
> I would like to run it from a Python directly
> ( using import command and a particular function from the binding)
> not using os.system command.
> Thanks
> L.
subprocess ?
--
http://m
On Mar 17, 3:43 pm, Patrick Maupin wrote:
> On Mar 17, 4:12 am, Bruno Desthuilliers
> 42.desthuilli...@websiteburo.invalid> wrote:
> > Patrick Maupin a écrit :
>
> > > On Mar 16, 1:59 pm, Jason Tackaberry wrote:
> > >> Why not create the bound methods at instantiation time, rather than
> > >> us
On Mar 18, 12:11 am, Patrick Maupin wrote:
> On Mar 17, 5:34 pm, Joaquin Abian wrote:
>
>
>
> > On Mar 17, 3:43 pm, Patrick Maupin wrote:
>
> > > On Mar 17, 4:12 am, Bruno Desthuilliers
> > > 42.desthuilli...@websiteburo.invalid> wrote:
> > >
I'm trying to understand the description of method object creation in
the python 2.6 language reference (3.2. The standard type hierarchy)
with little success. The points knocking me are:
"User-defined method objects may be created when getting an attribute
of a class (perhaps via an instance of t
On Mar 20, 5:39 pm, Terry Reedy wrote:
> On 3/20/2010 9:54 AM, Joaquin Abian wrote:
>
>
>
> > I'm trying to understand the description of method object creation in
> > the python 2.6 language reference (3.2. The standard type hierarchy)
> > with little
On Mar 20, 5:24 pm, Duncan Booth wrote:
> Joaquin Abian wrote:
> > "User-defined method objects may be created when getting an attribute
> > of a class (perhaps via an instance of that class), if that attribute
> > is a user-defined function object, an unbound user-def
On Mar 30, 5:40 pm, gentlestone wrote:
> Hi, how can I write the popular C/JAVA syntax in Python?
>
> Java example:
> return (a==b) ? 'Yes' : 'No'
>
> My first idea is:
> return ('No','Yes')[bool(a==b)]
>
> Is there a more elegant/common python expression for this?
(a==b) and 'YES' or 'NO
Hi,
PyPI is reaching the 1 package figure (In the case of 3.x only
about 140 packages and increasing very very slowly).
Looking at available packages for 3.x I observed that some packages
are listed several times. For example, lxml is listed 5 times.
Are these repetitions included in the packa
On Mar 31, 1:18 am, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
> In message <7316f3d2-bcc9-4a1a-8598-
>
> cdd5d41fd...@k17g2000yqb.googlegroups.com>, Joaquin Abian wrote:
> > (a==b) and 'YES' or 'NO'
>
> > Yes, ugly
>
> Why would you say that’s ug
In python 3.1,
>>> import exceptions
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "", line 1, in
import exceptions
ImportError: No module named exceptions
in 2.6 no exception is raised
It should be the same in 3.1, isnt it?
Joaquin
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On Apr 2, 1:25 pm, "vlad_fig" wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> I would like some help with setting up a method that would allow me to change
> its number of parameters. For example:
>
> #-
> class createfile(object):
>
> def __init__(self,
> modelName = None,
> someLines = None):
>
> s
On Apr 6, 9:04 pm, ja1lbr3ak wrote:
> I'm trying to teach myself Python, and so have been simplifying a
> calculator program that I wrote. The original was 77 lines for the
> same functionality. Problem is, I've hit a wall. Can anyone help?
>
> loop = input("Enter 1 for the calculator, 2 for the F
On Apr 6, 11:04 pm, ja1lbr3ak wrote:
> On Apr 6, 4:56 pm, Joaquin Abian wrote:
>
>
>
> > On Apr 6, 9:04 pm, ja1lbr3ak wrote:
>
> > > I'm trying to teach myself Python, and so have been simplifying a
> > > calculator program that I wrote.
On Apr 8, 10:08 pm, "M. Hamed"
wrote:
> Thanks All. That clears alot of confusion. It seems I assumed that
> everything that works for lists works for strings (the immutable vs
> mutable hasn't sunken in yet).
>
> On the other hand (other than installing NumPy) is there a built-in
> way to do an a
On Apr 9, 12:52 am, Ben Racine wrote:
> I have a list...
>
> ['dir_0_error.dat', 'dir_120_error.dat', 'dir_30_error.dat',
> 'dir_330_error.dat']
>
> I want to sort it based upon the numerical value only.
>
> Does someone have an elegant solution to this?
>
> Thanks,
> Ben R.
not sure about elega
On Apr 9, 1:58 am, Chris Rebert wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 8, 2010 at 4:01 PM, Joaquin Abian wrote:
> > On Apr 9, 12:52 am, Ben Racine wrote:
> >> I have a list...
>
> >> ['dir_0_error.dat', 'dir_120_error.dat', 'dir_30_error.dat',
>
On Apr 11, 6:53 pm, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
>
> In any case, IDLE is one IDE out of many, and not really up to
> professional quality -- it's clunky and ugly. It isn't Python, it is a
> tool written in Python.
>
> --
> Steven
But this is a tool that is a part of the python distribution and often
r
On Apr 13, 9:56 pm, Mike Driscoll wrote:
> On Apr 12, 5:20 pm, Alex Hall wrote:
>
>
>
> > Hi all,
> > While my project is still suffering from major import problems, I will
> > soon have to try to package it as a Windows executable file. I do not
> > want an installer; I want the user to be able
On Apr 15, 6:19 am, Alex Hall wrote:
> Hi all,
> I am still fighting with py2exe; I keep getting "error: msvcp90.dll:
> no such file or directory" right after it says it is searching for
> required dlls. I have followed the py2exe tutorial, though, and I am
> not sure why it is not finding the dll
On Apr 19, 7:15 pm, gerardob wrote:
> I installed scipy (and all the required libraries) and the following error
> appears when i tried run a simple example which uses the optimize package of
> scipy. I tried also numpy alone and it works ( at least for printing
> numpy.array([10,20,10]))
>
> erro
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