On Fri, Feb 17, 2012 at 3:16 AM, alain Delon racg...@yahoo.com wrote:
userName = raw_input(Enter your name )
print hi + userName + . \n
seconds = input(Enter the number of seconds since midnight:)
hours = seconds/3600
hoursRemain =
On 17/02/12 03:27, Luke Thomas Mergner wrote:
In the meantime, and continuing my problem of over-cleverness,
At least you know what your problem is :-)
Bonus question: when I create a the def score(self) in class Hand,
should that be an generator?
No.
And if so where do I go as a
I'm building a program that uses one of my own modules for a bunch of
formula defs and another module for the tkinter GUI stuff. There are
half a dozen input variables and about the same in calculated variables.
Is it better/cleaner to just build a global dict and have everything go
into it or
I made a timer that counts down from five minutes. This code runs fine but
I a seeing a cursor blinking on the first number as the code is running.
How do I avoid this?
I am using gnome-terminal and Python 2.6.6.
#!/usr/bin/python
import time
import sys
import os
def countd():
seconds =
Andre' Walker-Loud wrote:
import numpy as np
Vhel_fdiff3 = np.array([abs(Vmatch3_1 - Vmatch3_2), abs(Vmatch3_1 -
Vmatch3_3), abs(Vmatch3_3 - Vmatch3_2)])
your_answer = Vhel_fdiff3.max(axis=0)
or
import numpy as np
a = np.array([Vmatch3_1-Vmatch3_2, Vmatch3_1-Vmatch3_3, Vmatch3_3-
Leam Hall wrote:
I'm building a program that uses one of my own modules for a bunch of
formula defs and another module for the tkinter GUI stuff. There are
half a dozen input variables and about the same in calculated variables.
Is it better/cleaner to just build a global dict and have
On Fri, Feb 17, 2012 at 12:38 PM, brandon w bbbggg...@gmail.com wrote:
I made a timer that counts down from five minutes. This code runs fine but I
a seeing a cursor blinking on the first number as the code is running. How
do I avoid this?
I am using gnome-terminal and Python 2.6.6.
Thanks Peter!
My concern with variables is that they have to be passed in specific
order to the function, and they may have to have their type set
multiple times so that you can perform the right functions on them. In
a dict you could set it on insert and not have to worry about it.
Thanks!
On 17 February 2012 14:04, leam hall leamh...@gmail.com wrote:
My concern with variables is that they have to be passed in specific
order to the function, and they may have to have their type set
multiple times so that you can perform the right functions on them. In
a dict you could set it on
On 2/17/12, Peter Otten__pete...@web.de wrote:
Leam Hall wrote:
I'm building a program that uses one of my own modules for a bunch of
formula defs and another module for the tkinter GUI stuff. There are
half a dozen input variables and about the same in calculated variables.
Is it
leam hall wrote:
My concern with variables is that they have to be passed in specific
order to the function,
Yes, unless you use keywords. You can invoke
def div(x, y):
return x // y
a = div(3, 2)
b = div(y=3, x=2)
assert a == b
and they may have to have their type set
I have no idea
On 2/17/12, Dave Angel d...@davea.name wrote:
Real question is whether some (seldom all) of those variables are in
fact part of a larger concept. If so, it makes sense to define a class
for them, and pass around objects of that class. Notice it's not
global, it's still passed as an
On 2/17/12, Peter Otten __pete...@web.de wrote:
leam hall wrote:
and they may have to have their type set
I have no idea what you mean by have their type set. Can you give an
example?
Peter,
The variables input seem to be assumed to be strings and I need them
to be an integer or a float
On 02/17/2012 09:06 AM, leam hall wrote:
On 2/17/12, Dave Angeld...@davea.name wrote:
Real question is whether some (seldom all) of those variables are in
fact part of a larger concept. If so, it makes sense to define a class
for them, and pass around objects of that class. Notice it's not
leam hall wrote:
On 2/17/12, Peter Otten __pete...@web.de wrote:
leam hall wrote:
and they may have to have their type set
I have no idea what you mean by have their type set. Can you give an
example?
Peter,
The variables input seem to be assumed to be strings and I need them
to be
import numpy as np
Vhel_fdiff3 = np.array([abs(Vmatch3_1 - Vmatch3_2), abs(Vmatch3_1 -
Vmatch3_3), abs(Vmatch3_3 - Vmatch3_2)])
your_answer = Vhel_fdiff3.max(axis=0)
or
import numpy as np
a = np.array([Vmatch3_1-Vmatch3_2, Vmatch3_1-Vmatch3_3, Vmatch3_3-
Vmatch3_2])
print
class Card(object):
def __init__(self):
self.score = self.deal()
def deal(self):
deal a card from 1 to 52 and return it's points
return self.getValue(int(math.floor(random.uniform(1,
52
I think you only need
Alan Gauld wrote:
The x for x in y: syntax makes it harder to follow for learners,
Read about list comprehensions first.
It helps if you studied sets in math at school. The format is
somewhat like the math notation for defining a set. But FWIW it took me
a long time to get used to that
On 17/02/12 14:10, leam hall wrote:
The variables input seem to be assumed to be strings
They are not assumed to be strings, they *are* strings. Users can only
type characters at the keyboard (the usual source of input). Your
program has to interpret those characters and convert to the
On 17/02/12 11:38, brandon w wrote:
I made a timer that counts down from five minutes. This code runs fine
but I a seeing a cursor blinking on the first number as the code is
running. How do I avoid this?
Try putting the carriage return at the start of the line. You print the
line then reset
This is what I ended up using:
import time
import sys
import os
def countd():
seconds = 59
minutes = 4
five_minutes = 0
os.system('clear')
os.system('setterm -cursor off')
while five_minutes != 300:
sys.stdout.write(\r%d:%02.f\t % (minutes, seconds))
On 02/17/2012 09:26 AM, Dave Angel wrote:
There are two ways to think of a class. One is to hold various related
data, and the other is to do operations on that data. If you just
consider the first, then you could use a class like a dictionary whose
keys are fixed (known at compile time).
I
All
Couple of weeks ago I was looking for a nice free IDE for python and got many
wonderful suggestion form very helpful people. However I stumbled upon
PyScripter and I find it really amazing.
I feel once u try it you will hook on to it for ever
Thanks
Best Regards
Kapil
Leam Hall wrote:
I'm building a program that uses one of my own modules for a bunch of
formula defs and another module for the tkinter GUI stuff. There are
half a dozen input variables and about the same in calculated variables.
Is it better/cleaner to just build a global dict and have
On Fri, Feb 17, 2012 at 10:48 PM, Kapil Shukla shukla.ka...@gmail.comwrote:
All
Couple of weeks ago I was looking for a nice free IDE for python and got
many wonderful suggestion form very helpful people. However I stumbled upon
PyScripter and I find it really amazing.
I feel once u try it
Hi,
On Feb 17, 2012, at 20:23, Robert Berman berman...@gmail.com wrote:
On Fri, Feb 17, 2012 at 10:48 PM, Kapil Shukla shukla.ka...@gmail.com wrote:
All
Couple of weeks ago I was looking for a nice free IDE for python and got many
wonderful suggestion form very helpful people. However
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