Emile van Sebille, 22.07.2011 20:59:
You'll likely get more traction on this at
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/xml-sig
Unlikely.
Stefan
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Garry Bettle, 22.07.2011 20:18:
I'm trying some calls to an wsdl API I've subscribed to.
You might find this interesting:
http://effbot.org/zone/element-soap.htm
But I'm struggling to know what they want when sending an unsignedByte in a
request.
That's just a number, plain old-fashioned
On 7/22/2011 12:09 PM Stefan Behnel said...
Emile van Sebille, 22.07.2011 20:59:
You'll likely get more traction on this at
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/xml-sig
Unlikely.
Wow. Agreed. Five unanswered posts this year.
Emile
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Tutor
I realize this is a fairly generic type of question, but being new to
programming, I'm not sure how best to approach it.
I'm doing a tutorial and was given a problem, using shelve. It's taking a
user name and then asking for scores in a game, until you end the loop.
Whatever score is the high
On Sun, May 22, 2011 at 11:11 PM, Becky Mcquilling
ladymcse2...@gmail.com wrote:
I realize this is a fairly generic type of question, but being new to
programming, I'm not sure how best to approach it.
I'm doing a tutorial and was given a problem, using shelve. It's taking a
user name and
Thanks, you are correct of course. I need to just scrap this and start
over, but I understand it a lot better now.
On Sun, May 22, 2011 at 4:57 PM, Alan Gauld alan.ga...@btinternet.comwrote:
Becky Mcquilling ladymcse2...@gmail.com wrote
I'm doing a tutorial and was given a problem, using
Hi all,
I'm new in Python, so I'm reading 3.1 tutorial and now I've got a question
about locale.setlocale function. I've tryed in python idle this:
import locale
locale.setlocale(locale.LC_ALL, 'English_United States.1252')
and i got:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File pyshell#40, line
--- On Sun, 1/16/11, zhengqing gan zhengqing...@gmail.com wrote:
From: zhengqing gan zhengqing...@gmail.com
Subject: [Tutor] question about manipulate images!
To: tutor@python.org
Date: Sunday, January 16, 2011, 11:37 PM
Hi, All:
I have a question about
manipulating images
zhengqing gan zhengqing...@gmail.com wrote
I have a question about manipulating images.
In Python that usually translates to use PIL...
If I have a image, is there a kind of algorithm to convert it
into kind of Iphone icon style? part transparent, gradient
PIL can do most of
, zhengqing gan zhengqing...@gmail.com wrote:
From: zhengqing gan zhengqing...@gmail.com
Subject: [Tutor] question about manipulate images!
To: tutor@python.org
Date: Sunday, January 16, 2011, 11:37 PM
Hi, All:
I have a question about
manipulating images.
If I have a image
Hi. Try to find a tutorial on the steps to achieve such effect in a graphic
program. Then map it to the scrpting steps to do the same with pil, python
for gimp, for inkscape or simply Imagemagick.
On 2011-01-17 8:37 AM, zhengqing gan zhengqing...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
Thanks for the reply.
Hi, All:
I have a question about manipulating images.
If I have a image, is there a kind of algorithm to convert it
into kind of Iphone icon style? part transparent, gradient
Thanks!
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To
Luke Paireepinart wrote:
No. Did you try that? It doesn't evn look like valid python code to me.
You want a single string with the r before it, not 3 separate strings.
The line of code in question is:
test = re.compile('MAT file (billing|carrier|log|util)' r'\\' '\d{8}
deleted')
I am determining a regular expression that can recognize the any of the
following strings:
MAT file log\20101225 deleted
MAT file billing\20101225 deleted
MAT file util\20101225 deleted
MAT file carrier\20101225 deleted
I begin by creating a regular expression object so that I can reuse it in
On 12/01/11 13:19, Yaniga, Frank wrote:
I am determining a regular expression that can recognize the any of
the following strings:
MAT file log\20101225 deleted
MAT file billing\20101225 deleted
MAT file util\20101225 deleted
MAT file carrier\20101225 deleted
I begin by creating a regular
I am determining a regular expression that can recognize the any of the
following strings:
MAT file log\20101225 deleted
MAT file billing\20101225 deleted
MAT file util\20101225 deleted
MAT file carrier\20101225 deleted
I begin by creating a regular expression object so that I can
I believe I had epiphany:
test = re.compile('MAT file (billing|carrier|log|util)' r'\\' '\d{8}
deleted')
is this correct?
_
From: Yaniga, Frank
Sent: Wednesday, January 12, 2011 8:20 AM
To: 'tutor@python.org'; 'h...@python.org'
Subject:
Can someone give me some sample code to use to determine if a checkbox
has been selected using Tkinter? thanks
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Hello,
You can even use a StringVar as the checkbutton's variable, and supply
string values for the
offvalue and onvalue. Here's an example:
self.spamVar = StringVar()
self.spamCB = Checkbutton ( self, text=Spam?,
variable=self.spamVar, onvalue=yes, offvalue=no )
If this checkbutton is on,
No. Did you try that? It doesn't evn look like valid python code to me.
You want a single string with the r before it, not 3 separate strings.
-
Sent from a mobile device. Apologies for brevity and top-posting.
-
On Jan 12, 2011, at 8:02
Of Stefan Behnel
Sent: Friday, December 03, 2010 11:43 PM
To: tutor@python.org
Subject: Re: [Tutor] Question about the main Python help list
Joel Schwartz, 04.12.2010 08:19:
I just went to sign up for the main Python help list and discovered
that it is a closed list
What (and where
Joel Schwartz, 04.12.2010 09:07:
I meant the Python-Help mailing list
(http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-help), which is described on
the Python mailing list page (http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo) as
Expert volunteers answer Python-related questions.
I guess I should have
On 01/-10/-28163 02:59 PM, Joel Schwartz wrote:
I meant the Python-Help mailing list
(http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-help), which is described on
the Python mailing list page (http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo) as
Expert volunteers answer Python-related questions.
I guess
Subject: Re: [Tutor] Question on tkinter event binding
Hello Albert-Jan:
I am glad you made the comment below. I was fascinated with the fact that your
code was partly in English/Python and also in Dutch. I am a linguist so have
great interest in bilingualism. How does this work in practice? I
To: Albert-Jan Roskam fo...@yahoo.com; Python Mailing List
tutor@python.org
Sent: Fri, December 3, 2010 11:39:28 PM
Subject: Re: [Tutor] Question on tkinter event binding
Hello Albert-Jan:
I am glad you made the comment below. I was fascinated with the fact that
your code was partly
Joel Schwartz j...@joelschwartz.com wrote
My question: Is there a general Python help list that is open for
all to
see, in the same way that the Python Tutor list is open?
There are many Python mailing lists and usenet newsgroups.
They are all available to browse on gmane. (just short of
Subject: Re: [Tutor] Question on tkinter event binding
Hi Patty,
As far as books are concerned, I actually prefer (programming) books in the
English language. Although the Dutch don't do it as much as e.g. the French or
the Germans, I hate it when technical terms are translated into Dutch
Evert Rol wrote:
I actually find it a bit weird that a (programming?) company has a coding
convention for non-English names; makes it harder if you want to hire non-Dutch
speaking employees, distribute software ( code) internationally etc.
I can't put my hands on the reference right now,
Albert-Jan Roskam wrote:
Meanwhile, I tinkered a bit more with the code. I used exec() to isolate the
event handler function. It works and it's better, but I think it could be still
better. I'm not so fond of eval() and exec().
They have their uses, but yes, it's best to avoid them unless
Next time you email tutor, start a new email msg instead of clearing out the
contents of a reply to a different e-mail. When you do it like that it breaks
threading, so all these emails are in the same thread as the need help one
even though they aren't related to that e-mail.
?
~~
From: Steven D'Aprano st...@pearwood.info
To: Python Mailing List tutor@python.org
Sent: Sat, December 4, 2010 3:49:26 PM
Subject: Re: [Tutor] Question on tkinter event binding
Albert-Jan Roskam wrote:
Meanwhile, I tinkered a bit more with the code. I used exec() to isolate the
event handler
Hi,
I'm trying to make a small improvement on a data entry program and it is
literally giving me a headache. I would appreciate your help or suggestions.
The actual program uses Autocomplete entry widgets [1], which is a subclass of
the Tkinter Entry widget. The sample code below uses a
?
~~
From: Albert-Jan Roskam fo...@yahoo.com
To: Python Mailing List tutor@python.org
Sent: Fri, December 3, 2010 11:19:02 AM
Subject: [Tutor] Question on tkinter event binding
Hi,
I'm trying to make
On Fri, 3 Dec 2010, Albert-Jan Roskam wrote:
I'm trying to make a small improvement on a data entry program and it is
literally giving me a headache.
Followed shortly thereafter with:
On Fri, 3 Dec 2010, Albert-Jan Roskam wrote:
Aaahhh, got it! Peace! ... I'll paste the working code below.
I just went to sign up for the main Python help list and discovered that it
is a closed list, in the sense that the answers to queries are kept
private between the questioner and the helpers, rather than shared with
everyone on the list.
My question: Is there a general Python help list that is
Joel Schwartz, 04.12.2010 08:19:
I just went to sign up for the main Python help list and discovered that it
is a closed list
What (and where) is the main Python help list?
Stefan
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Hello,
Im now studying this page :
http://openbookproject.net/thinkcs/python/english2e/ch16.html
But I don't get it why aces are now lower then deuces in the cmp function.
Roelof
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On 2:59 PM, Roelof Wobben wrote:
Hello,
Im now studying this page :
http://openbookproject.net/thinkcs/python/english2e/ch16.html
But I don't get it why aces are now lower then deuces in the cmp function.
Roelof
Why would you be surprised that aces are lower than deuces? If aces are
From: rwob...@hotmail.com
To: da...@ieee.org
Subject: RE: [Tutor] question
Date: Tue, 28 Sep 2010 14:22:17 +
Date: Tue, 28 Sep 2010 10:02:27 -0400
From: da...@ieee.org
To: rwob...@hotmail.com
CC: tutor@python.org
Subject: Re: [Tutor] question
On 2:59 PM, Roelof Wobben
On 9/28/2010 10:22 AM, Roelof Wobben wrote:
Date: Tue, 28 Sep 2010 10:02:27 -0400
From: da...@ieee.org
To: rwob...@hotmail.com
CC: tutor@python.org
Subject: Re: [Tutor] question
On 2:59 PM, Roelof Wobben wrote:
Hello,
Im now studying this page :
http://openbookproject.net/thinkcs
From: rwob...@hotmail.com
To: da...@ieee.org
Subject: RE: [Tutor] question
Date: Tue, 28 Sep 2010 19:14:29 +
Date: Tue, 28 Sep 2010 10:49:28 -0400
From: da...@ieee.org
To: rwob...@hotmail.com; tutor@python.org
Subject: Re: [Tutor] question
On 9/28/2010 10:22 AM, Roelof
On Fri, 27 Aug 2010 02:18:10 pm Greg Bair wrote:
yeah, from package import * doesn't actually import every name
from a module. For example, by default, names starting with an
underscore are not imported. Alternatively, if you have a variable
named __all__ in your module, and it's a list of
Bill Allen walle...@gmail.com wrote
*from tkinter import *
from tkinter import ttk
These two lines tell Python that our program needs two modules. The
first,
tkinter, is the standard binding to Tk, which when loaded also
causes the
existing Tk library on your system to be loaded. The
Greg Bair wrote:
On 08/26/2010 10:29 PM, Hugo Arts wrote:
On Thu, Aug 26, 2010 at 9:16 PM, Bill Allen walle...@gmail.com wrote:
I did try that and of course it gave an error because it was necessary.
I
just did not know why. However, I later found an explanation on the
web. Here it is:
hello,
I have this programm
# Add your doctests here:
a_list[3]
42
a_list[6]
'Ni!'
len(a_list)
8
a_list = ['test', 'test','test',42,'test','test','Ni!','test']
print a_list[3]
print a_list[6]
print len(a_list)
if __name__ == '__main__':
import doctest
The doctest module searches for pieces of text that look like interactive
Python sessions, and then executes those sessions to verify that they work
exactly as shown.
Here ur a_list[3] in docstring is 42 then doctest expects it to be 42 for
success. Since u changed 42 to 16 then it is not = 42 as
I was experimenting with Tk today, just trying it out. I found this
example of a very simple hello world button click program. This is it.
from tkinter import *
from tkinter import ttk
root = Tk()
button = ttk.Button(root, text=Hello World).grid()
root.mainloop()
What I don't understand is
On Thu, Aug 26, 2010 at 7:44 PM, Corey Richardson kb1...@aim.com wrote:
Why don't you try it out without the from tkinter import ttk statement,
and see if it works?
Bill Allen wrote:
I was experimenting with Tk today, just trying it out. I found this
example of a very simple hello world
On Thu, Aug 26, 2010 at 7:44 PM, Corey Richardson kb1...@aim.com wrote:
Why don't you try it out without the from tkinter import ttk statement,
and see if it works?
Bill Allen wrote:
I was experimenting with Tk today, just trying it out. I found this
example of a very simple hello
On Thu, Aug 26, 2010 at 9:16 PM, Bill Allen walle...@gmail.com wrote:
I did try that and of course it gave an error because it was necessary. I
just did not know why. However, I later found an explanation on the web.
Here it is:
from tkinter import *
from tkinter import ttk
These two
On 08/26/2010 10:29 PM, Hugo Arts wrote:
On Thu, Aug 26, 2010 at 9:16 PM, Bill Allen walle...@gmail.com wrote:
I did try that and of course it gave an error because it was necessary. I
just did not know why. However, I later found an explanation on the web.
Here it is:
from tkinter
On Thu, Aug 26, 2010 at 11:18 PM, Greg Bair gregb...@gmail.com wrote:
On 08/26/2010 10:29 PM, Hugo Arts wrote:
On Thu, Aug 26, 2010 at 9:16 PM, Bill Allen walle...@gmail.com wrote:
I did try that and of course it gave an error because it was necessary. I
just did not know why. However, I
Hello,
I follow the online book How to think like a computer scientist.
But now I have a problem with a exercise.
This is not homework.
The exercise is :
Using a text editor, create a Python script named tryme3.py . Write a function
in this file called nine_lines that uses
Can you copy and paste the exact error message you receive in the traceback
when you run your program. Also, copy the complete program here since it is
only a handful of lines
On Thu, Aug 19, 2010 at 7:31 AM, Roelof Wobben rwob...@hotmail.com wrote:
Hello,
I follow the online book How to
and then expand to 9 lines and then expand to the
function clear_screen
Roelof
Date: Thu, 19 Aug 2010 08:37:25 -0400
Subject: Re: [Tutor] question about a exercise.
From: joel.goldst...@gmail.com
To: rwob...@hotmail.com
CC: tutor@python.org
Can you copy and paste the exact error
Roelof Wobben rwob...@hotmail.com wrote
I don't see a traceback only this output.
That looks about right to me, what did you expect to see that was
different?
regel 1
regel 2
script terminated.
=
I have learned to do one problem at
Hi All,
I know that I can look up the value for a particular key in a
dictionary, but can I look up the key associated with a particular
value? I understand that this could be problematic from the standpoint
of multiple keys having the same value, but even then I feel like Python
could just
On 8/16/2010 10:44 AM Chorn, Guillaume said...
Hi All,
I know that I can look up the value for a particular key in a
dictionary, but can I look up the key associated with a particular
value?
Yes. But you'll need to implement it. There are likely modules out
there that'll do this, but it'd
I know that I can look up the value for a particular key in a
dictionary, but can I look up the key associated with a particular
value?
I am using bidict in one of my projects:
http://pypi.python.org/pypi/bidict/0.1.1
It's probably a bit more complex than what I
need, but the parts I am
Chorn, Guillaume wrote:
Hi All,
I know that I can look up the value for a particular key in a
dictionary, but can I look up the key associated with a particular
value? I understand that this could be problematic from the standpoint
of multiple keys having the same value, but even then I feel
What do you mean by subclass?
On Aug 16, 2010 3:26 PM, Emile van Sebille em...@fenx.com wrote:
On 8/16/2010 10:44 AM Chorn, Guillaume said...
Hi All,
I know that I can look up the value for a particular key in a
dictionary, but can...
Yes. But you'll need to implement it. There are
Chorn, Guillaume guillaume_ch...@merck.com wrote
dictionary, but can I look up the key associated with a particular
value?
Not directly but its not hard to do bearing in mind you will
get a collection back.:
d = {1:10,2:20,3:10,4:20}
val = 10
ks = [k for k in d if d[k] == val]
ks
[1,
all key-value pairings were unique...
-Original Message-
From: Dave Angel [mailto:da...@ieee.org]
Sent: Monday, August 16, 2010 4:03 PM
To: Chorn, Guillaume
Cc: tutor@python.org
Subject: Re: [Tutor] Question about Dictionaries
Chorn, Guillaume wrote:
Hi All,
I know that I can look up
On Tue, 17 Aug 2010 03:44:33 am Chorn, Guillaume wrote:
Hi All,
I know that I can look up the value for a particular key in a
dictionary, but can I look up the key associated with a particular
value? I understand that this could be problematic from the
standpoint of multiple keys having the
On 8/16/2010 4:12 PM Huy Ton That said...
What do you mean by subclass?
snip
If you need repeated access such that iterating over a large dict frequently
impacts performance, you could subclass dict and maintain a second index
allowing instant access to the keys associated with a specific
On Tue, 17 Aug 2010 09:12:39 am Huy Ton That wrote:
What do you mean by subclass?
It's a fundamental term from object-oriented programming.
If you have a class that defines certain data and behaviour, you can
create a *subclass* that inherits the same data and behaviour, except
for specific
Hi, I'm trying to solve an exercise, a beginners one but I have a question.
So the exercise sounds like this:
Define a string s = ’colorless’. Write a Python statement that changes this
to ’colour-
less’, using only the slice and concatenation operations.
So I did wrote this:
*1)s = 'colorless'
Hey email in plain text in the future, HTML is not kind to mobile screens and
in general you should plaintext reply to tech lists.
All list indices start from 0. But you don't get the last value. So slice[1:5]
would skip the first char and then include the next 3. It's the same as range.
Daniel asmosis.aste...@gmail.com wrote
*1)s = 'colorless'
2)ss = s[:4] + 'u' + s[4:]
*I do not understand something. So on the second line, the slicing
lasts from the start of the s string to the forth character.
Correct, slices include the first index but not the last.
does the counting
On Sat, Jun 19, 2010 at 11:24:44AM +, ALAN GAULD wrote:
Actually that's a point. I favour learning two languages that are
semantically
similar buut syntactically different. Thats why I chose JavaScript and
VBScript
as my tutorial languages, because the syntax of each is so different
On 6/20/2010 5:59 AM, Payal wrote:
On Sat, Jun 19, 2010 at 11:24:44AM +, ALAN GAULD wrote:
Actually that's a point. I favour learning two languages that are semantically
similar buut syntactically different. Thats why I chose JavaScript and VBScript
as my tutorial languages, because the
Steven D'Aprano st...@pearwood.info wrote
Yea I took an intro to comp sci class(like 2 years ago) and a
computer programming logic class(also like 2 years ago) both
using pseudocode
Good grief! How do they teach a class in computer programming using
pseudocode???
Yes, doing that 2 years ago
Mark Lawrence breamore...@yahoo.co.uk wrote
...I take issue with this learn a language in five minutes bit.
It took me five years to get to grips with plain old C.
C is non trivial but not hard (certainly compared to C++)
But 5 years is enough to do a lot more than get to grips with
a
Payal payal-pyt...@scriptkitchen.com wrote
Hijacking the thread a bit. What about learning Jython and Python?
Do I
need to know Java to learn Jython?
No, but you will need to know the class heirarchy and reading
the documentation will be difficulty without at least a basic
knowledge of the
Independent Learner nbr1ninrs...@yahoo.com wrote
~I was wondering if I should try to learn 2 programming languages
at once, Python and C++.
No, no no! If it had been a different pair I might have said try it.
But C++ is one of the most difficult, complex and difficult
programming
On Sat, 19 Jun 2010 01:55:05 pm Independent Learner wrote:
~I was wondering if I should try to learn 2 programming languages at
once, Python and C++.
I don't know. That depends on you.
How much time do you have to spend on learning the languages? If it's
one hour a week, you'll have trouble
Alan Gauld wrote:
div class=moz-text-flowed style=font-family:
-moz-fixedIndependent Learner nbr1ninrs...@yahoo.com wrote
~I was wondering if I should try to learn 2 programming languages at
once, Python and C++.
No, no no! If it had been a different pair I might have said try it.
But C++
belt, then go ahead and learn anything else you like. But even then, if you
have
to learn two new ones at the same time, I'd recommend they be very unlike.
So you could learn Lisp or Forth at the same time as you were learning Ruby,
but
I'd not try to learn Perl and Python at the
On Sat, Jun 19, 2010 at 7:24 AM, ALAN GAULD alan.ga...@btinternet.com wrote:
belt, then go ahead and learn anything else you like. But even then, if you
have
to learn two new ones at the same time, I'd recommend they be very unlike.
So you could learn Lisp or Forth at the same time as you
Back in ancient days, my college training began with FORTRAN the
first semester, then COBOL, ALC (BAL), and RPG in the second
semester. Even though this was back when dinosaurs were still ruling
the earth, the learning program remains relevant. Understand one
language in a practical way, then
On Sat, Jun 19, 2010 at 4:56 AM, Steven D'Aprano st...@pearwood.info wrote:
On Sat, 19 Jun 2010 01:55:05 pm Independent Learner wrote:
~I was wondering if I should try to learn 2 programming languages at
once, Python and C++.
I don't know. That depends on you.
How much time do you have to
On 19/06/2010 04:55, Independent Learner wrote:
~After doing a google search, I could not find any good solid anwsers. So I
will apologize ahead of time since this is not really a Python specific
question. However...
~I was wondering if I should try to learn 2 programming languages at once,
~So is it better to learn 1 programming language first, then learn
another. Or better to pretty much learn them at the same time? And why?
First, I think python is a bit underrated for creating real
applications. I'm amazed again and again by it's power on all
programming scales (e.g. quick
6/19/2010 11:51 AM, Steve Bricker wrote:
Back in ancient days, my college training began with FORTRAN the first
semester, then COBOL, ALC (BAL), and RPG in the second semester.
Back in even more ancient days, my college training began with IBM 650
machine language, then ALC (SOAP), then
~After doing a google search, I could not find any good solid anwsers. So I
will apologize ahead of time since this is not really a Python specific
question. However...
~I was wondering if I should try to learn 2 programming languages at once,
Python and C++. Obviously I am working on learning
Hello,
I am preparing a package for distribution using distutils and when writing the
setup.py, i want to specific meta-data like version, author, maintainer ...etc.
My question is, assuming that I already have all of that information in the
package's __init__.py as __meta-data__
On Tue, 18 May 2010 08:27:09 am steve wrote:
Hello,
I am preparing a package for distribution using distutils and when
writing the setup.py, i want to specific meta-data like version,
author, maintainer ...etc.
My question is, assuming that I already have all of that information
in the
Hi Everybody,
My friend and I were having a disagreement about Python. Has Python
always been an OO language or was it at one point a procedural language like
C? Thanks!
-Tino
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On Saturday May 8 2010 18:19:53 Tino Dai wrote:
Hi Everybody,
My friend and I were having a disagreement about Python. Has Python
always been an OO language or was it at one point a procedural language
like C? Thanks!
The Wikipedia article states: Yes, it was always an object oriented
On 5/8/2010 12:19 PM, Tino Dai wrote:
Hi Everybody,
My friend and I were having a disagreement about Python. Has
Python always been an OO language or was it at one point a procedural
language like C? Thanks!
OO and procedural are not mutually exclusive!
From
On 05/09/10 02:19, Tino Dai wrote:
Hi Everybody,
My friend and I were having a disagreement about Python. Has Python
always been an OO language or was it at one point a procedural language like
C? Thanks!
AFAIK Python has always been a mixed paradigm language. You can write
fully OO
GREETINGS,
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Peter Meagher wrote:
GREETINGS,
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HOWEVER, I GOT ANOTHER EMAIL, THAT CAME IN AT PRECISELY THE
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LIST. I'VE PASTED IT IN
Hi all.
How can I import a module which is located in the upper directory.
--
Криле имат само тия, дето дето сърцето им иска да лети !
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--- On Tue, 2/2/10, Григор grigor.ko...@gmail.com wrote:
From: Григор grigor.ko...@gmail.com
Subject: [Tutor] Question about importing
To: Python Tutor tutor@python.org
Date: Tuesday, February 2, 2010, 12:07 PM
Hi all.
How can I import a module which is located in the upper directory.
I
В 10:33 -0800 на 02.02.2010 (вт), David Hutto написа:
--- On Tue, 2/2/10, Григор grigor.ko...@gmail.com wrote:
From: Григор grigor.ko...@gmail.com
Subject: [Tutor] Question about importing
To: Python Tutor tutor@python.org
Date: Tuesday, February
--- On Tue, 2/2/10, Grigor Kolev grigor.ko...@gmail.com wrote:
From: Grigor Kolev grigor.ko...@gmail.com
Subject: Re: [Tutor] Question about importing
To: David Hutto dwightdhu...@yahoo.com
Cc: Python Tutor tutor@python.org
Date: Tuesday, February 2, 2010, 2:28 PM
В 10:33 -0800 на 02.02.2010
В 11:47 -0800 на 02.02.2010 (вт), David Hutto написа:
--- On Tue, 2/2/10, Grigor Kolev grigor.ko...@gmail.com wrote:
From: Grigor Kolev grigor.ko...@gmail.com
Subject: Re: [Tutor] Question about importing
To: David Hutto dwightdhu...@yahoo.com
Cc
On Tuesday February 2 2010 20:28:03 Grigor Kolev wrote:
Can I use something like this
#--
import sys
sys.path.append(/home/user/other)
import module
#-
Yes I think so. I just tried something
--- On Tue, 2/2/10, Grigor
Kolev grigor.ko...@gmail.com
wrote:
From: Grigor Kolev
grigor.ko...@gmail.com
Subject: Re: [Tutor] Question about
importing
To: David Hutto dwightdhu...@yahoo.com
Cc:
Python Tutor tutor@python.org
Date:
Tuesday, February 2,
2010, 2:54 PM
В 11:47 -0800 на
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