Thanks, Sander. That was simple enough, as I'm learning I sometimes get
caught up in these all too silly mistakes.
Becky
On Mon, Mar 7, 2011 at 11:38 PM, Sander Sweers wrote:
> On Tue, 8 Mar 2011, 07:44:31 CET, Becky Mcquilling <
> ladymcse2...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > gpg = 'c:/program files (x
"Knacktus" wrote
He doesn't have to write it, as it is very obvious, that no Python
code on earth (even written by Guido himself ;-)) stands a chance
compared to Fortran or C. Look at this:
There is one big proviso. The C or Fortran needs to be well written
in the first place. It's quite pos
Hi all,
Thanks for your replies. It wasn't a permissions issue. Apparently, not the
full
path name should be used. When I use os.chdir (by the way: why on earth isn't
this called os.setcwd()?? That's consistent with os.getcwd()) and then use the
file name only, it works. See the Idle session b
> When I use os.chdir (by the way: why on earth isn't this called os.setcwd()??
> That's consistent with os.getcwd())
History.
They are Unix commands (and possibly Multics/PDP before that!).
cd has been the command in almost every CLI OS I've ever used from
CP/M thru' OS/9, Unix, DOS, etc...
Alan Gauld, 08.03.2011 09:51:
"Knacktus" wrote
He doesn't have to write it, as it is very obvious, that no Python code
on earth (even written by Guido himself ;-)) stands a chance compared to
Fortran or C. Look at this:
There is one big proviso. The C or Fortran needs to be well written
in th
Hi
I am receiving a string over a socket connection. The string may be
either line and value delimited ascii, or formated binary. The skeleton
of the code which handles the data is:
buffer = socket.recv(1000)
lines = buffer.split(linedelim)
for line in l
On Tue, Mar 8, 2011 at 4:09 AM, ALAN GAULD wrote:
> > When I use os.chdir (by the way: why on earth isn't this called
> os.setcwd()??
> > That's consistent with os.getcwd())
>
> History.
> They are Unix commands (and possibly Multics/PDP before that!).
> cd has been the command in almost every CLI
Hi Joel,
I found this on stackoverflow*)
os.environ['PATH'] = os.path.dirname(__file__) + ';' + os.environ['PATH']
windll.LoadLibrary('mydll.dll')
It extends the directory list of the environment variable 'path'.
Now at least I've loaded the dll, but I still need to read up on ctypes an file
ha
Hello
I need help in translating a C++ code into python..
Can you help please?
Please find attached the two codes.
The python result is wrong because I may have misread the C++ code
Thanks
Vickram
from mpmath import *
mp.dps=5
c = mpf('299792.458')
H0 = float(70) # Hub
"Stefan Behnel" wrote
He doesn't have to write it, as it is very obvious, that no Python
code
on earth (even written by Guido himself ;-)) stands a chance
compared to
Fortran or C. Look at this:
There is one big proviso. The C or Fortran needs to be well written
It's seriously hard to wri
On Tue, Mar 8, 2011 at 6:38 PM, Vickram wrote:
> The python result is wrong because I may have misread the C++ code
Well, really, I suggest you read a tutorial on Python - you don't seem
to be getting a hang on the basics, for example, there's no need for
to use the float() function.
The first hundred pages of a thorough python tutorial, and a c++
tutorial should have you doing both of those quite well in a day or
so.
___
Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org
To unsubscribe or change subscription options:
http://mail.python.org/mailman/
Am 08.03.2011 20:00, schrieb Alan Gauld:
"Stefan Behnel" wrote
He doesn't have to write it, as it is very obvious, that no Python code
on earth (even written by Guido himself ;-)) stands a chance
compared to
Fortran or C. Look at this:
There is one big proviso. The C or Fortran needs to be w
"Vickram" wrote
I need help in translating a C++ code into python..
Can you help please?
The python result is wrong because I may have misread the C++ code
The C++ code is really just C code, there is virtualy no C++ stuff
there.
But that aside your translation is pretty faithful (too fait
14 matches
Mail list logo