I have a couple of Cocoa/Quicktime developers working on a small custom
application. These guys are very capable at OS X programming but don't
have any python experience. I, on the other hand, have a lot of python
experience but virtually no Mac development experience. I could really
do wit
If I understand the architecture correctly I would go with option 1.
And get the Mac guys to write their code in a reusable way, i.e. have
them export enough low-level functionality in their API. This should
be easy enough in ObjC.
It'll allow tweaking from the Python side, and if you're luck
Darran Edmundson wrote:
> I have a python program on the Mac that determines, among other
> things, the screen location. The OS X developers are going to
> write a full-screen Cocoa application [...] The question then: how
> to join these two codes?
> 1) Get the Mac guys to write their ap
Jack and Has, thanks very much for the valuable advice. This weekend
one of the developers is going to have a first crack at implementing
option 1, namely a library that we can invoke from python.
I've recommended that Douglas join this mailing list and ask questions.
My only concern is tha
Oops, I spoke too soon when I said that readline support with
Leopard's Python works for me with IPython.
Many things DO work, but tab-completion does NOT.
I am trying to get tab completion working.
Forget IPython, just try this "unit test" of rlcompleter with the
Python that ships with Leop
I was just going to say the same thing. Getting this to work and then GVim,
and I will be quite happy.
On 10/26/07, Boyd Waters <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Oops, I spoke too soon when I said that readline support with
> Leopard's Python works for me with IPython.
>
> Many things DO work, but t
It right there in my original message (and in the python man page).
You have to use EditLine syntax:
readline.parse_and_bind ("bind ^I rl_complete")
Ed
On Oct 26, 2007, at 6:46 PM, Noah Gift wrote:
I was just going to say the same thing. Getting this to work and
then GVim, and I will be
The rlineimpl.py module is the place in python where readline gets
imported. I would look there and also I would look to see where
ipython is doing its equivalent of parse_and_bind.
Brian
On 10/26/07, Noah Gift <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Ed,
>
> You are a genius! Thanks, I totally forgot you t
Ed,
You are a genius! Thanks, I totally forgot you told me that.
So for the record when you launch IPython:
import readline
readline.parse_and_bind ("bind ^I rl_complete")
Then do something like:
import os
and you will get
In [5]: os.
Display all 234 possibilities? (y or n)
Ok, what is the e
On Oct 26, 2007, at 7:50 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> It right there in my original message
> You have to use EditLine syntax:
>
> readline.parse_and_bind ("bind ^I rl_complete")
Oh good grief... I'm a *user*. You can't expect me to *read*...
um.. what is the smiley-thing for hanging my head
If you write an Objective-C framework, the python code to wrap it
using PyObjC is very short. Here is an example I use to expose Tim
Omernick's CocoaSequenceGrabber framework to capture images from the
iSight camera:
import objc, AppKit, Foundation, os
if 'site-packages.zip' in __file__:
base
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