Forwarded conversation
Subject: Setting up global keybindings without corresponding menu items
From: *mercado mercado* <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Fri, Aug 1, 2008 at 4:15 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I'm trying to set up a global keyboard shortcut for my applicati
I have two versions of a script on my machine. One version is for new
development and the other version is a production version. This script
imports a module from a different directory, and this module again has two
versions (a development version and a production version). What I want is
for the
Thanks norseman for the reply.
You're right that I didn't like it though. :-)
Also note that my original question has to do with importing modules from
different locations. If all I had to do was use different paths within the
script (e.g. for sending to os.path.join or whatever), then I could
It seems that you can specify the name of the module to be imported at
runtime using the following syntax:
X = __import__('X')
(from http://effbot.org/zone/import-confusion.htm)
Of course, I would rather specify the path to the module at runtime, not the
module name itself, but at least this is
Thank you Fredrik. This is exactly what I was looking for.
> cannot you just insert the appropriate directory in sys.path the first
> thing you do in the scripts? e.g.
>
> import os, sys
>
> lib = "lib_dev" # change this for prod/rss.py
>
> sys.path.insert(0,
> os.path.j
In Python, is it possible for an instance method to know the name of the
class which is calling it? For example, in the sample below, I would like
for the someMethod method to print the name of the class calling it ("bar"
in the first case, "again" in the second).
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