Hell,
My name is Amna and I am totally new to python world with zero experience
in programming. I am facing the challenge of converting data from pdf to
excel. The data within pdf is numbers separated by space not within a table.
I need a help to figure out a code that help me to convert these pdf
On Sun, Oct 19, 2014 at 7:27 AM, AMNA MOHAMMED ALRUHEILI
alruhe...@berkeley.edu wrote:
My name is Amna and I am totally new to python world with zero experience in
programming. I am facing the challenge of converting data from pdf to excel.
The data within pdf is numbers separated by space not
Sorry, I missed copying this to the list.
On Aug 4, 2014 8:13 AM, P McCombs mcco...@imperium.org wrote:
On Jul 31, 2014 4:50 PM, McKinley, Brett D. bmckin...@mawss.com wrote:
I would like to see if someone can help me with a python script. I’m
trying to export a file geodatabase feature
On Mon, Aug 4, 2014 at 11:20 AM, P McCombs mcco...@imperium.org wrote:
Sorry, I missed copying this to the list.
On Aug 4, 2014 8:13 AM, P McCombs mcco...@imperium.org wrote:
On Jul 31, 2014 4:50 PM, McKinley, Brett D. bmckin...@mawss.com wrote:
I would like to see if someone can help
I would like to see if someone can help me with a python script. I'm trying to
export a file geodatabase feature class to csv file. This is what I have so
far:
import arcpy
import os
import csv
import domainvalues
def export_to_csv(dataset, output, dialect):
Output the data to a CSV
# Hi am leaning python with A Byte of Python - Swaroop CH and am a little confused with The format method. So I leaned that printing the code:
age = 20
name = 'Swaroop'
print '{0} was {1} years old when he wrote this book'.format(name, age)
print
On 07/07/14 19:29, keith papa wrote:
Please post in plain text and avoid attachments if possible.
Just paste code directly into the email.
I've had to cut n paste everything to write this which is a pain...
print '{0} was {1} years old when he wrote this book'.format(name, age)
print 'Why
On 07/07/14 19:29, keith papa wrote:
# decimal (.) precision of 3 for float '0.333'
print '{0:.3f}'.format(1.0/3)
The best way to see how this works is to try it
with different values:
print('{0:.3f}'.format(1.0/3))
0.333
print('{0:.5f}'.format(1.0/3))
0.3
I am doing Building Skills in Python. In the Generator Function example
at [url]
http://www.itmaybeahack.com/homepage/books/python/html/p02/p02c08_generators.html#generator-function-example[/url]i
can't understand, how it is working properly.
what i understood is as follows:
1)First it makes count
On 15/02/14 13:35, Bunny Sehgal wrote:
I am doing Building Skills in Python. In the Generator Function
example at
I assume you are talking about this one:
spins = [('red', '18'), ('black', '13'), ('red', '7'),
('red', '5'), ('black', '13'), ('red', '25'),
('red', '9'), ('black',
On 11/01/2014 14:52, S Tareq wrote:
how can i do this on python using py game:
No idea as what you've sent isn't readable when you try to reply. Also I
can't see any code so sorry but I'm not doing your homework for you :(
--
My fellow Pythonistas, ask not what our language can do for you,
Hi,
On 11 January 2014 14:52, S Tareq stare...@yahoo.com wrote:
how can i do this on python using py game:
You need to tell us more about what you've tried and where you're stuck.
Needless to say we're not a solution provision service, but we'd be happy
to help you get unstuck if you've
need help how to run it on python 3.3, or change it to python 3.3 when i run it
says syntax error if i run it on python 2.7 it works.
# Import statements
import random
import datetime
#Arrays to store the definitions and keywords read from the file
keywords=[];
definition=[];
correctAnswer=[];
On 08/01/2014 18:19, S Tareq wrote:
need help how to run it on python 3.3, or change it to python 3.3 when i
run it says syntax error if i run it on python 2.7 it works.
if(counter%2==0):
Please remove those unneeded brackets, this is a Python list, not C :)
print Please
Hi S Tareq,
You probably want to review the What's new in Python 3 document,
with close attention to the Common Stumbing Blocks section:
http://docs.python.org/3.0/whatsnew/3.0.html#common-stumbling-blocks
Have you read this document already?
___
You might want to check out the '2to3' program to convert Python 2.x
code to Python 3.x code.
The following command worked to change your code to runnable Python 3.x
code:
2to3 -w your file containing 2.x code
--
Steve Mayer
smaye...@me.com
On 8 Jan 2014, at 10:19, S Tareq wrote:
Hi S Tareq,
If you can, next time please just copy and paste the error message as
plain text. Please avoid screenshots unless they really are relevant
to the problem at hand.
There are good reasons why you should prefer plain text when asking
questions on a mailing list like this one. (1)
On 08/01/2014 20:54, S Tareq wrote:
On Wednesday, 8 January 2014, 20:46, Danny Yoo d...@hashcollision.org
wrote:
Hi S Tareq,
You probably want to review the What's new in Python 3 document,
with close attention to the Common Stumbing Blocks section:
On Wed, 8 Jan 2014 20:54:09 + (GMT), S Tareq stare...@yahoo.com
wrote:
___
Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org
To unsubscribe or change subscription options:
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor
This is a text newsgroup. Html messages
Hi Sourav,
Please use Reply all when you reply an email so that everyone else
also gets your messages and your chances of getting better help
increases.
On Sat, Nov 16, 2013 at 3:35 PM, Sourav Biswas sob...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Amit,
Yes I know, the question is not quite good. Currently I am
Hi All,
This is my first post. I want to learn API programming with Python. I have
basic knowledge of Python Programming. Could you please let me know the
starting points for this programming.
--
Thanks,
Sourav Biswas
Hyderabad
___
Tutor maillist -
Hello Sourav,
On 16/11/2013 6:53 AM, Sourav Biswas sob...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi All,
This is my first post. I want to learn API programming with Python. I
have basic knowledge of Python Programming. Could you please let me know
the starting points for this programming.
Since your question is
Hi i need help with something with python.
Alexander Palazzo
Rhode Island College '17
(401)474-1669
apalazzo_5...@email.ric.edu___
Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org
To unsubscribe or change subscription options:
On Sat, Sep 14, 2013 at 11:17:31PM -0400, Alex Palazzo wrote:
Hi i need help with something with python.
And we're here to help. Would you like to tell us what you need help
with, or shall we guess?
--
Steven
___
Tutor maillist -
On 30/06/13 04:41, Matt D wrote:
So i have a program that gets pickled data from a thread and displays
the data (9 strings) in TextCtrl fields in the UI.
The fact that it is a UI is largely irrelevant apart from the
fact that it forces an event driven architecture.
When the pickle is
On 30/06/13 15:04, Matt D wrote:
that sounds ideal, but i have not found a way to pass the user selected
file into the loop that writes the data without opening another file.
Don;t pass the file pass the fgile *name*
Then inside the update method open the file(in append mode)
and write the
On 30/06/13 16:42, Matt D wrote:
im sorry i don't understand how to pass the file name from the open
dialog into the update method? I'm sorry i just don't get it. so if
the user opened file is 'handle' like this?:
OK, technically you probably donb;t want to pasws it into the metjod but
to
On 06/29/2013 08:26 AM, Matt D wrote:
Matt probably read somewhere about an interface like
tempfile.TemporaryFile
where the file has no explicit name, and will be deleted from disk, and
the space reused as soon as it is closed.
I don't believe he's using such an interface, however.
Yes
On 29/06/13 16:00, Matt D wrote:
with tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile('a+t',) as tf:
self.logfile = tf
This could give problems.
with guarantees to close the file at the end of the block.
But you have assigned it to self.logfile.
So when the file is closed (and tempfile then
On 30/06/13 10:51, Alan Gauld wrote:
On 29/06/13 16:00, Matt D wrote:
with tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile('a+t',) as tf:
self.logfile = tf
This could give problems.
with guarantees to close the file at the end of the block.
But you have assigned it to self.logfile.
So when the
On 06/29/2013 09:38 PM, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
SNIP
I haven't read this entire thread, but the bits I have read lead me to
think that Matt has tangled himself up in a total confused mess. It's
*not this hard* to write status messages to a log file, the log module
does all the work. Can
On 06/28/2013 07:27 AM, Matt D wrote:
As for the shutil.copy() function, how complex can it be? It takes two
file names, source and destination. It does not need a with statement
since it wants strings, not file handles.
You might get into trouble on some OS's with the source file already
On 28/06/13 23:18, Matt D wrote:
what if i did some thing like this i saw on stackoverflow:
f = open(bigfile.txt, w)
That clears any existing content of bigfile.txt, and opens it for writing. Do
you intend to clear the content?
for tempfile in tempfiles:
What is in tempfiles? A list of
On 28/06/13 20:54, Matt D wrote:
def openFile(self, evt):
with wx.FileDialog(self, Choose a file, os.getcwd(), ,
*.txt*, wx.SAVE) as dlg:
if dlg.ShowModal() == wx.ID_OK:
path = dlg.GetPath()
mypath = os.path.basename(path)
On 28/06/13 22:25, Matt D wrote:
Python UI. I have a thread that waits on new data and when it comes in
it gets displayed in TextCtrl fields. every time this happens my logger
puts those values into a text file one row at a time.
this how i open and the file for logging data:
# open a
On 06/28/2013 08:04 PM, Alan Gauld wrote:
On 28/06/13 22:25, Matt D wrote:
Python UI. I have a thread that waits on new data and when it comes in
it gets displayed in TextCtrl fields. every time this happens my logger
puts those values into a text file one row at a time.
this how i open and
On 06/27/2013 10:55 AM, Matt D wrote:
On 06/27/2013 10:36 AM, Matt D wrote:
You asked about a save-as feature. Why isn't that as simple as
copying the current contents of the saved csv file? Or do you not know
how you would go about copying?
Hi. So I have the logger working, meaning
On 06/27/2013 12:33 PM, Matt D wrote:
SNIP
I forgot to mention i have the 'with open(mypath, a) as f: commented
out because it was making an indentation error that i could not fix.
It was indented, and should not have been. The extra indentation
FOLLOWS the with statement, it's not
On 06/27/2013 05:09 PM, Matt D wrote:
On 06/27/2013 12:54 PM, Dave Angel wrote:
On 06/27/2013 12:33 PM, Matt D wrote:
SNIP
I forgot to mention i have the 'with open(mypath, a) as f: commented
out because it was making an indentation error that i could not fix.
It was indented, and
Matt D wrote:
On 06/24/2013 07:17 PM, Alan Gauld wrote:
On 24/06/13 23:05, Matt D wrote:
I have been unable to find a way to write pickled data to text file.
Probably because pickled data is not plain text.
You need to use binary mode. However...
def __init__(self, data):
On Mon, Jun 24, 2013 at 6:57 PM, Steven D'Aprano st...@pearwood.info wrote:
You certainly shouldn't be writing pickle data to a log file! Firstly,
log files are usually opened in text mode, not binary mode, so it
probably won't work, and secondly even if it did work, you will be
dumping a
On 06/25/2013 07:28 AM, eryksun wrote:
On Mon, Jun 24, 2013 at 6:57 PM, Steven D'Aprano st...@pearwood.info wrote:
You certainly shouldn't be writing pickle data to a log file! Firstly,
log files are usually opened in text mode, not binary mode, so it
probably won't work, and secondly even if
Peter Otten wrote:
Matt D wrote:
On 06/24/2013 07:17 PM, Alan Gauld wrote:
On 24/06/13 23:05, Matt D wrote:
I have been unable to find a way to write pickled data to text file.
Probably because pickled data is not plain text.
You need to use binary mode. However...
def
with open('mypicklelog.txt','ab') as log: # open in binary mode
pickle.dump(self.data, log) # serialize data and write to file
where pickle.dump(obj, file) converts `obj` to a sequence of bytes before it
is written to `file`.
I put this like this:
class DataEvent(wx.PyEvent):
Well I think self.data is some kind of container with a pickled string,
given the code to unpickle it is:
Exactly! This is what the C++ file 'pickle.h' creates to send to the
Python GUI:
/**
* A pickled Python dictionary. Used to pass stuff to the UI.
*/
class pickle
{
public:
Please leave attributions in so we know who is saying what.
Matt D wrote:
[Ramit Prasad wrote]
[Peter Otten wrote]
with open('mypicklelog.txt','ab') as log: # open in binary mode
pickle.dump(self.data, log) # serialize data and write to file
where pickle.dump(obj, file) converts
On 25/06/13 17:32, Matt D wrote:
self.data = data
with open('mypicklelog.txt','ab') as log: # open in binary mode
pickle.dump(self.data, log) # serialize data and write to file
And I still get nothing.
Define 'nothing'.
Does the file exist?
Does it have
Again, please leave in attributions.
Matt D wrote:
[Ramit Prasad wrote]
Well I think self.data is some kind of container with a pickled string,
given the code to unpickle it is:
Exactly! This is what the C++ file 'pickle.h' creates to send to the
Python GUI:
Not really.
/**
*
On 06/25/2013 01:54 PM, Alan Gauld wrote:
On 25/06/13 17:32, Matt D wrote:
self.data = data
with open('mypicklelog.txt','ab') as log: # open in binary mode
pickle.dump(self.data, log) # serialize data and write to
file
And I still get nothing.
Define
On 25/06/13 19:30, Matt D wrote:
Does the file exist?
Does it have anything in it?
Does self.data exist - what does it look like if you print it?
Are there any error messages?
Yeh nothing as in an empty file. The file is there but there is nothing
written in it.
OK, Try deleting the file
The real question is why do you want this pickle in a file? I am not sure
it will be easy to pull out and reuse anyway. Given your experience level,
I think this is a lot of work for something that you are unlikely to be able
to easily use. I think it would be more useful to
On 26/06/13 04:30, Matt D wrote:
On 06/25/2013 01:54 PM, Alan Gauld wrote:
On 25/06/13 17:32, Matt D wrote:
self.data = data
with open('mypicklelog.txt','ab') as log: # open in binary mode
pickle.dump(self.data, log) # serialize data and write to
file
And I
On Tue, Jun 25, 2013 at 6:12 PM, Steven D'Aprano st...@pearwood.infowrote:
Why do you want to see rubbish like that inside your log file? Surely
something like this is better?
log.write(data = %r % data)
which will give you a line like this:
data = {'a': None, 'b': 42}
in your log,
On 26/06/13 03:03, Matt D wrote:
meanwhile can you please take a look at this update() and tell me if you
see something wrong because ever sense I tried using the array for
logging the values from the TextCtrls the program is not updating
meaning when the program receives the c++ map, or the
On 06/24/2013 05:39 PM, Matt D wrote:
But what he's doing has nothing to do with logging. He's just using
that word.
Right, I'm not doing a debugging thing. Just trying to create a log of
data that has been passed into the display of this program. Since I
started trying to use the array
I have been unable to find a way to write pickled data to text file.
My last attempt was to add the last two lines:
# the dataevent class -- stores the data that gets transmitted when the
event occurs.
#it is the data in text fields, stored in self.data as a dictionary,
which is basically a c++
On 06/24/2013 05:57 PM, Dave Angel wrote:
On 06/24/2013 05:39 PM, Matt D wrote:
But what he's doing has nothing to do with logging. He's just using
that word.
Right, I'm not doing a debugging thing. Just trying to create a log of
data that has been passed into the display of this
On Mon, Jun 24, 2013 at 06:05:37PM -0400, Matt D wrote:
I have been unable to find a way to write pickled data to text file.
Normally you write pickled data to a file like this:
import pickle
data = {'something': 'goes', 'here': 42}
with open(/path/to/file/name.pickle, rb) as f:
On 06/24/2013 06:05 PM, Matt D wrote:
I have been unable to find a way to write pickled data to text file.
My last attempt was to add the last two lines:
# the dataevent class -- stores the data that gets transmitted when the
event occurs.
#it is the data in text fields, stored in
On 24/06/13 23:05, Matt D wrote:
I have been unable to find a way to write pickled data to text file.
Probably because pickled data is not plain text.
You need to use binary mode. However...
def __init__(self, data):
wx.PyEvent.__init__(self)
self.SetEventType
On Mon, Jun 24, 2013 at 3:48 PM, Matt D md...@nycap.rr.com wrote:
def __init__(self, data):
wx.PyEvent.__init__(self)
# this line *binds* this class to a certain type of event,
wxDATA_EVENT
self.SetEventType (wxDATA_EVENT)
# and this is the actual
On 06/24/2013 07:17 PM, Alan Gauld wrote:
On 24/06/13 23:05, Matt D wrote:
I have been unable to find a way to write pickled data to text file.
Probably because pickled data is not plain text.
You need to use binary mode. However...
def __init__(self, data):
Dne 17. 6. 2013 20:17, Dave Angel napsal(a):
On 06/17/2013 01:36 PM, Matt D wrote:
Hey,
I wrote some simple code to write data to a logfile and it works pretty
well (thanks guys). Now my problem is that every time i run the program
the old logfile.txt is overwritten. I need to be able to stop
On 06/17/2013 02:20 PM, Lukáš Němec wrote:
SNIP
Or even better, use python moto, dont re-invent the wheel, so use built
in library logging, read the docs for it, or if you want, I can send you
some examples how to work it, it takes some time to figure out properly...
But what he's doing
Peter Otten wrote:
Matt D wrote:
Hey,
I wrote some simple code to write data to a logfile and it works pretty
well (thanks guys). Now my problem is that every time i run the program
the old logfile.txt is overwritten.
The help() function in the interactive interpreter is a good tool
Matt D wrote:
Also note, that unless you do self.logfile.close() it is not guaranteed
that the data is being written to file. I prefer to use the following
idiom for Python 2.6+ (might be in 2.5, but not sure offhand when it was
added).
with open('filename.txt', 'a') as f:
#
A common way to trigger UI actions is a button whose callback calls that.
Or you can bind in an event hook for closing the window.
in __init__ add this line -
self.Bind(wx.EVT_CLOSE, self.onExit)
def onExit(self, event):
'''Run when closing'''
self.logfile.close()
Matt D wrote:
There are other ways a script might change the current directory. For
example, some naive scripts use os.chdir()
But how is it you don't know what the current directory was when the
code ran? A simply pwd can tell you, if your prompt doesn't already
reveal it.
hey
Everything Dave Angel said applies.
You can sort the keys by doing and sorting the keys and then logging.
That should ensure field order.
for k in sorted(self.fields):
v = self.fields[k]
Also note, that unless you do self.logfile.close() it is not guaranteed
that the data is
Hey,
I wrote some simple code to write data to a logfile and it works pretty
well (thanks guys). Now my problem is that every time i run the program
the old logfile.txt is overwritten. I need to be able to stop and start
the program without overwriting, or losing, the old data. here is the
On 06/17/2013 01:36 PM, Matt D wrote:
Hey,
I wrote some simple code to write data to a logfile and it works pretty
well (thanks guys). Now my problem is that every time i run the program
the old logfile.txt is overwritten. I need to be able to stop and start
the program without overwriting, or
Matt D wrote:
Hey,
I wrote some simple code to write data to a logfile and it works pretty
well (thanks guys). Now my problem is that every time i run the program
the old logfile.txt is overwritten.
The help() function in the interactive interpreter is a good tool hunt for
help on
On 17 June 2013 11:30, Peter Otten __pete...@web.de wrote:
The help() function in the interactive interpreter is a good tool hunt for
help on features of functions and classes. For example:
I tripped on Python help a couple of times, since I'm used to
easy-living GUI help, so here is a bit of
On 06/17/2013 05:17 PM, Jim Mooney wrote:
On 17 June 2013 11:30, Peter Otten __pete...@web.de wrote:
The help() function in the interactive interpreter is a good tool hunt for
help on features of functions and classes. For example:
I tripped on Python help a couple of times, since I'm used
But in 3.3, it says:
Help on built-in function close:
close(...)
with no more explanation.
Hmm, I thought close in 3.3 was a method of the file handle, not a
builtin function. Have I
missed something? I assume all builtin functions do not need an object
dot prefix, and close needs the file
On 17/06/2013 23:39, Jim Mooney wrote:
But in 3.3, it says:
Help on built-in function close:
close(...)
with no more explanation.
Hmm, I thought close in 3.3 was a method of the file handle, not a
builtin function. Have I
missed something? I assume all builtin functions do not need an object
On 17 June 2013 16:04, Mark Lawrence breamore...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
You now have an opportunity to expand your knowledge of the Python
infrastructure by raising your first bug report to get this fixed. I look
forward to seeing your effort on the bug tracker mailing list.
Well, although I
On 06/17/2013 08:07 PM, Jim Mooney wrote:
On 17 June 2013 16:04, Mark Lawrence breamore...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
You now have an opportunity to expand your knowledge of the Python
infrastructure by raising your first bug report to get this fixed. I look
forward to seeing your effort on the bug
On Mon, Jun 17, 2013 at 5:43 PM, Dave Angel da...@davea.name wrote:
But in 3.3, it says:
Help on built-in function close:
close(...)
with no more explanation.
The category built-in function here doesn't mean it's in the
builtins namespace. It means it's a function or method from an
On 17 June 2013 17:57, Dave Angel da...@davea.name wrote:
Well, although I would like to see my name in lights, I didn't
discover it, Dave did, so that would be dishonest ;')
http://bugs.python.org/issue18249
filed at 8:55 pm
Looks like you've got a quibble on that. But the point is, it
On 06/13/2013 03:39 AM, Alan Gauld wrote:
On 13/06/13 05:24, Matt D wrote:
I already told you i found the file? why would someone else be running
the program?
Because it does something useful?
Most pro programmers write programs for other people to use.
Even an amateur may be creating
On 06/10/2013 12:23 PM, Prasad, Ramit wrote:
Matt D wrote:
Ramit Prasad wrote:
Scrolled panel is just a graphical container that allows for scrolling
inside,
but it is the window that scrolls not widgets inside it. This of it like
a webpage that scrolls. If you use web email the text
On 06/12/2013 05:32 PM, Matt D wrote:
On 06/10/2013 12:23 PM, Prasad, Ramit wrote:
Matt D wrote:
Ramit Prasad wrote:
Scrolled panel is just a graphical container that allows for scrolling inside,
but it is the window that scrolls not widgets inside it. This of it like
a webpage that scrolls.
On 06/12/2013 05:59 PM, Dave Angel wrote:
On 06/12/2013 05:32 PM, Matt D wrote:
On 06/10/2013 12:23 PM, Prasad, Ramit wrote:
Matt D wrote:
Ramit Prasad wrote:
Scrolled panel is just a graphical container that allows for
scrolling inside,
but it is the window that scrolls not widgets inside
On 06/12/2013 08:46 PM, Matt D wrote:
On 06/12/2013 05:59 PM, Dave Angel wrote:
On 06/12/2013 05:32 PM, Matt D wrote:
SNIP
Hey,
if i put:
self.logfile = open('logfile.csv', 'w')
in the .py file, within the 'class TrafficPane', then shouldn't
logfile.csv be written to the directory
There are other ways a script might change the current directory. For
example, some naive scripts use os.chdir()
But how is it you don't know what the current directory was when the
code ran? A simply pwd can tell you, if your prompt doesn't already
reveal it.
hey i found the
On 06/12/2013 09:23 PM, Matt D wrote:
There are other ways a script might change the current directory. For
example, some naive scripts use os.chdir()
But how is it you don't know what the current directory was when the
code ran? A simply pwd can tell you, if your prompt doesn't already
On 06/12/2013 09:54 PM, Dave Angel wrote:
On 06/12/2013 09:14 PM, Matt D wrote:
On 06/12/2013 09:02 PM, Dave Angel wrote:
On 06/12/2013 08:46 PM, Matt D wrote:
On 06/12/2013 05:59 PM, Dave Angel wrote:
On 06/12/2013 05:32 PM, Matt D wrote:
SNIP
Hey,
if i put:
self.logfile =
Matt D wrote:
Hello,
I am using an open source wxPython GUI that I like very very much. I
have ideas about some modifications I need but I cannot be bothering the
author too much so I must learn some very specific things about Python
in order to make the modification myself. First, I need
Hello,
I am using an open source wxPython GUI that I like very very much. I
have ideas about some modifications I need but I cannot be bothering the
author too much so I must learn some very specific things about Python
in order to make the modification myself. First, I need some help
On 03/06/13 15:01, Matt D wrote:
I am using an open source wxPython GUI that I like very very much. I
have ideas about some modifications I need but I cannot be bothering the
author too much so I must learn some very specific things about Python
OK, we can help on the python bits but not so
Hi Team,
I am facing folowing erro while executing python code:
Win32 exception occurred releasing IUnknown at 0x03210eb8
Please let me know the resolution of the same.PFA the version details of python
exe that I am using.
Thanks and Regards,
Ankesh Pratap
Programmer
On 2 April 2013 19:19, ankesh.pra...@cognizant.com wrote:
Hi Team,
I am facing folowing erro while executing python code:
Win32 exception occurred releasing IUnknown at 0x03210eb8
Please let me know the resolution of the same.PFA the version details of
python exe that I
On 02/04/13 19:19, ankesh.pra...@cognizant.com wrote:
Hi Team,
I am facing folowing erro while executing python code:
Win32 exception occurred releasing IUnknown at 0x03210eb8
Please let me know the resolution of the same.PFA the version details of python
exe that I am
On 02/04/2013 19:19, ankesh.pra...@cognizant.com wrote:
I am facing folowing erro while executing python code:
Win32 exception occurred releasing IUnknown at 0x03210eb8
You need to give us a bit more of a clue as to what your code does. My
guess is that you're using the
On Mon, Mar 11, 2013 at 8:59 PM, akuma ukpo johnnyu...@gmail.com wrote:
This is the problem
Implement a function called get_direction which, on a particular character
, gives the
direction corresponding to that character.
Do you know how to write a test case for this function?
You had test
On 12/03/13 03:59, akuma ukpo wrote:
I have tried
def get_direction(self):
whenever a key is pressed the character moves to
the direction corresponding to the key
'North':w
'South': s
'East' : d
'West' : a
What did
Finally, from a user experience point of view, it might be more logical to
make the keys w,a,s,z North, West,East and South respectively since its a
more logical correspondence to the compass points (assuming a standard
QWERTY keyboard layout).
Most games use WASD, so user experience would be
Finally, from a user experience point of view, it might be more logical to
make the keys w,a,s,z North, West,East and South respectively
Most games use WASD, so user experience would be in favour of it
compared to WASZ. There are a couple of reasons for this:
You live and learn! :-)
You
This is the problem
Implement a function called get_direction which, on a particular character
, gives the
direction corresponding to that character. The correspondences are as
follows:
The character ’w’ corresponds to the direction ’North’
The character ’a’ corresponds to the direction
101 - 200 of 496 matches
Mail list logo