Alan Gauld wrote:
> What's available and in what state of readiness?
>
> I tried Boa Constructor but after half a dozen code tweaks
> I was still running into compatibility errors with the latest
> wxPython and gave up.
>
> I know that Glade is out there, but what state is it in?
> And PythonC
"bellzii" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
> hey everyone , can any1 tell me what does the module optparse do ?
It parses options.
That is it takes a command string and works out what
the various bits mean, in particular the command line
options or "switches".
For example you can call python like this
Oh, thank you, exactly what i was looking for :)
On 6/18/07, Andreas Kostyrka <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Tip: consult the documentation of the struct module.
>
> Andreas
>
> -- Ursprüngl. Mitteil. --
> Betreff:[Tutor] sockets
> Von:"Linus Nordström" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Datum:
"Henry Dominik" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
> Besides, why did I have to do this: class
> EmplAddrBookEntry(AddrBookEntry.AddrBookEntry):
>
> The AddrBookEntry and EmplAddrBookEntry classes
> are in the same folder,
Python doesn't care abpout the foldrs it only cares about
the modules. They ar
Tip: consult the documentation of the struct module.
Andreas
-- Ursprüngl. Mitteil. --
Betreff:[Tutor] sockets
Von:"Linus Nordström" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Datum: 17.06.2007 22:47
Hello
I'm trying to rewrite a chat-program i did in school this spring in
python, the school progr
Hello
I'm trying to rewrite a chat-program i did in school this spring in
python, the school program was in java. All this to leran python.
Anyway. I m trying to send a message using udp to a server that
conntains the message 3 0 0 0, it has to be in network byte order and
unsigned. I have tried t
I have used a function to input the data and then a module Tproblem has
been solved .Thank you to all
From: "Kent Johnson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "lucio arteaga" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "tutor-python"
Sent: Sunday, June 17, 2007 3:41 PM
Subject: Re: [Tutor] using zip
> lucio arteaga wrote:
>>
>
lucio arteaga wrote:
>
> - Original Message - From: "Kent Johnson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "lucio arteaga" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Cc:
> Sent: Saturday, June 16, 2007 8:33 AM
> Subject: Re: [Tutor] using zip
>
>
>> lucio arteaga wrote:
>>> I am trying to learn using zip in combination o
bellzii wrote:
> hey everyone , can any1 tell me what does the module optparse do ?
It helps parse command line arguments. See the docs at
http://docs.python.org/lib/module-optparse.html
Kent
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Norman Khine wrote:
>
> Hi I have this class:
>
> def title_to_name(title):
> title = title.encode('ascii', 'replace')
> name = title.lower().replace('/', '_').replace('?',
> '_').replace('.', '')
> return '_'.join(name.split())
>
> Is there a way to have just one replace and so that
hey everyone , can any1 tell me what does the module optparse do ?
thanks 4 ur time
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View this message in context:
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Well, Python is not Java :)
Unqualified names reference always only objects defined in the local
module by default.
If you want to use unqualified names, you could do something like that:
from AddrBookEntry import AddrBookEntry
or
import AddrBookE
Thanks a million Alan,
Your suggestion helped solve the problem.
Besides, why did I have to do this: class
EmplAddrBookEntry(AddrBookEntry.AddrBookEntry):
The AddrBookEntry and EmplAddrBookEntry classes are in the same folder, I
didn't think I needed to call another module or something..
Well,
"pierre cutellic" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
>I am new to Python and trying to get my head around catia V5
> I would like to start to write some automated process in python for
> catia,
> does anybody know the way to or some docs maybe?
Until your post I'd never even heard of Catia. Having looke
"Henry Dominik" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
> import AddrBookEntry
>
> class EmplAddrBookEntry(AddrBookEntry):
This says you are creating a new class that inherits
from the *module* AddrBookEntry. Notice that the
error message referred to the module not the class...
You probably meant:
class
I love this [Tutor] list. There are always new tricks that change the
way I write code. And it makes me like Python more every day.
I keep a script file with "notes" on the things I learn here and I refer
to these notes frequently. Here are the notes I made for this thread:
""" iterate/map/modu
I am new to Python and trying to get my head around catia V5
I would like to start to write some automated process in python for catia,
does anybody know the way to or some docs maybe?
cheers
Pierre
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Henry Dominik wrote:
> Hello people,
>
> I was trying my hands on Python's Classes and have a first hurdle and can't
> seem to get past it.
>
> -Below is the error message --
>
> Traceback (most recent call last):
> File "C:/Development/python/EmplAddrBookEntry.py", line 3, in -toplevel-
Hello people,
I was trying my hands on Python's Classes and have a first hurdle and can't
seem to get past it.
-Below is the error message --
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:/Development/python/EmplAddrBookEntry.py", line 3, in -toplevel-
class EmplAddrBookEntry(AddrBoo
On Jun 17, 2007, at 3:44 AM, John Fouhy wrote:
> On 17/06/07, Iyer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>> say, if I have a list l = [1,2,3,5]
>>
>> and another tuple t = ('r', 'g', 'b')
>>
>> Suppose I iterate over list l, and t at the same time, if I use
>> the zip
>> function as in zip(l,t) , I wil
"Luke Paireepinart" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
> The first thing that occurred to me was just to use a modulus to
> index
> into the second, shorter list.
That was the first thing that occured to me too but when
I tried it I couldn't get it to work...
> >>> l = [1,2,3,4,5]
> >>> t = ('r','g','b
Alan Gauld wrote:
> "Iyer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
>
>
>> Any pythonic way to iterate over a sequence, while iterating
>> over another shorter sequence continously
>>
The first thing that occurred to me was just to use a modulus to index
into the second, shorter list.
>>> l = [1,2,3,4
"Iyer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
> Any pythonic way to iterate over a sequence, while iterating
> over another shorter sequence continously
I don;t know how pythonic it is, but I'd do it thus:
>>> a = (1, 2, 3, 4)
>>> b = ('a', 'b', 'c')
>>> n = len(a)/len(b) + 1
>>> t = map(None,a,b*n)[:len(
On 17/06/07, Iyer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> say, if I have a list l = [1,2,3,5]
>
> and another tuple t = ('r', 'g', 'b')
>
> Suppose I iterate over list l, and t at the same time, if I use the zip
> function as in zip(l,t) , I will not be able to cover elements 3 and 5 in
> list l
>
> >>> l =
say, if I have a list l = [1,2,3,5]
and another tuple t = ('r', 'g', 'b')
Suppose I iterate over list l, and t at the same time, if I use the zip
function as in zip(l,t) , I will not be able to cover elements 3 and 5 in list l
>>> l = [1,2,3,5]
>>> t = ('r', 'g', 'b')
>>> for i in zip(l,t):
..
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