Is there a way of setting the OS X screen saver using Python?
The System Preferences ap looks like it's AppleScript (and hence
appscript) drivable, but I can't work out how to make it actually
change any settings.
I've also found the screen saver plist, but it's binary rather than
XML, so I'd rat
Simon Brunning wrote:
> Is there a way of setting the OS X screen saver using Python?
>
> The System Preferences ap looks like it's AppleScript (and hence
> appscript) drivable, but I can't work out how to make it actually
> change any settings.
System Preferences' scripting support is rudimentar
On 18/07/2006, at 3:15 PM, Bob Ippolito wrote:
>> def check(cmd, mf):
>> m = mf.findNode('matplotlib')
>> if m is None or m.filename is None:
>> return None
>> mf.import_hook('pytz.zoneinfo', m, ['UTC'])
>> return dict(
>> packages = ['matplotlib']
>> )
>>
>> If
Dear List,I am new to the list and new to python, so please be kind :) I've recently started playing with duplicity (http://duplicity.nongnu.org) and really like the feature set that is offered by the project. However, I am being stung by the thorn in Apple's side; resource forks. duplicity uses
Josh Marshall wrote:
> However, I can't figure out how to copy resources in the recipe. It
> seems in recipes, you can return in the dict: packages, flatpackages,
> filters, loader_files, and prescripts. Could you enlighten me on the use
> of each of these?
I wonder what the plan should be for
On Jul 18, 2006, at 3:48 PM, Christopher Barker wrote:
> Josh Marshall wrote:
>> However, I can't figure out how to copy resources in the recipe. It
>> seems in recipes, you can return in the dict: packages, flatpackages,
>> filters, loader_files, and prescripts. Could you enlighten me on
>> th
On Jul 18, 2006, at 17:17 , Apple Consultants Network wrote:
Dear List,
I am new to the list and new to python, so please be kind :) I've
recently started playing with duplicity (http://
duplicity.nongnu.org) and really like the feature set that is
offered by the project. However, I am
On Jul 18, 2006, at 2:36 PM, Josh Marshall wrote:
> On 18/07/2006, at 3:15 PM, Bob Ippolito wrote:
>>> def check(cmd, mf):
>>> m = mf.findNode('matplotlib')
>>> if m is None or m.filename is None:
>>> return None
>>> mf.import_hook('pytz.zoneinfo', m, ['UTC'])
>>> return d
Thanks for the info on how the various recipes work, Bob. Very helpful.
On 19/07/2006, at 9:28 AM, Bob Ippolito wrote:
> The recipe mechanism doesn't allow for it because it doesn't
> generally make sense. There are very few packages that can find
> their resources in an alternative manner. I'
On Jul 18, 2006, at 5:32 PM, Josh Marshall wrote:
> Thanks for the info on how the various recipes work, Bob. Very
> helpful.
>
> On 19/07/2006, at 9:28 AM, Bob Ippolito wrote:
>> The recipe mechanism doesn't allow for it because it doesn't
>> generally make sense. There are very few packages t
Thanks for the fix Bob.
Unfortunately Matplotlib does not work with zipped data files, after
all that. So, we'll leave the recipes as is, as they work for now.
I suspect the way forward is to get numpy/Matplotlib/scipy working
with setuptools and using pkg_resources to manage the data files.
On Jul 18, 2006, at 7:26 PM, Josh Marshall wrote:
> Thanks for the fix Bob.
>
> Unfortunately Matplotlib does not work with zipped data files,
> after all that. So, we'll leave the recipes as is, as they work for
> now.
>
> I suspect the way forward is to get numpy/Matplotlib/scipy working
Josh Marshall wrote:
> so it seems like the entire purpose of PackageLoader is to make life
> difficult for me, just to save a few lines of typing. :) Seriously,
> can a numpy developer tell me why PackageLoader is necessary?
I can't think of a good reason why it's used in __init__.py the way
On Jul 18, 2006, at 9:16 PM, Robert Kern wrote:
> Josh Marshall wrote:
>> so it seems like the entire purpose of PackageLoader is to make life
>> difficult for me, just to save a few lines of typing. :) Seriously,
>> can a numpy developer tell me why PackageLoader is necessary?
>
> I can't think
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