Re: Computer Music Toolkit (CMT) ?

2010-01-11 Thread Michele Petrazzo
Terry Reedy wrote: On 1/10/2010 4:15 AM, Peter Billam wrote: Greetings. Is there a way to get at the Computer Music Toolkit (CMT) http://www.ladspa.org/cmt/ functionality from Python (Python3 in my case) ? You can access compiled C shared libraries most easily via the ctypes module. so if you

Re: Computer Music Toolkit (CMT) ?

2010-01-10 Thread Terry Reedy
On 1/10/2010 4:15 AM, Peter Billam wrote: Greetings. Is there a way to get at the Computer Music Toolkit (CMT) http://www.ladspa.org/cmt/ functionality from Python (Python3 in my case) ? You can access compiled C shared libraries most easily via the ctypes module. Searching Python CMT "Co

Re: Computer Music Toolkit (CMT) ?

2010-01-10 Thread Stefan Behnel
Peter Billam, 10.01.2010 10:15: Greetings. Is there a way to get at the Computer Music Toolkit (CMT) http://www.ladspa.org/cmt/ functionality from Python (Python3 in my case) ? Googling is confusing because of www.cmt.com and cmt-graph and openscientist.lal.in2p3.fr/v9/cmt.html and pyAMISecure

Re: computer support

2008-08-29 Thread andrew
On 2008-08-29, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > hello every body in the group Hello Dr Nick :-) -- http://www.andrews-corner.org -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Computer

2008-05-15 Thread Mensanator
On May 15, 1:14 pm, gaojihuiyuan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Plastic Coat Your Cedar with EPL > EPL is a clear thin polymer coat that will maintain the bright cedar > wood look. Buy online today.http://www.healthhuman.com.cn/Computer.htm > > Cedar Wood > Find Deals on Cedar Wood and other Home & G

Re: computer, printer, and another

2007-08-06 Thread kyosohma
On Aug 6, 10:21 am, angga_cute <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi guys > I have some information for you... > I would like you to invite to visiting my web, may be you need some > information about newest information about computer, laptop, and than > printer. I have little bit information on my

Re: Computer locks up when running valid stand alone Tkinter file.

2006-10-29 Thread jim-on-linux
Thanks for responding, For those who care. The solution to the problem was; First, I did not give a parent to the Yview scrollbar. Next, I used the pack geometry for this class and everything else is grid geometry. When run stand alone it ran fine because the Yview scrollbar attached itself

Re: Computer locks up when running valid stand alone Tkinter file.

2006-10-25 Thread faulkner
> But, when I call it from another module it locks methinks this "other module" has the answer. jim-on-linux wrote: > py help, > > The file below will run as a stand alone file. > It works fine as it is. > > But, when I call it from another module it locks > my computer, The off switch is the only

Re: Computer Language Popularity Trend

2006-09-30 Thread Arne Vajhøj
Danno wrote: > Xah Lee wrote: >> This page gives a visual report of computer languages's popularity, as >> indicated by their traffic level in newsgroups. This is not a >> comprehensive or fair survey, but does give some indications of >> popularity trends. >> >> http://xahlee.org/lang_traf/index.h

Re: Computer Language Popularity Trend

2006-09-28 Thread Steve Holden
Xah Lee wrote: > Computer Language Popularity Trend > > This page gives a visual report of computer languages's popularity, as > indicated by their traffic level in newsgroups. This is not a > comprehensive or fair survey, but does give some indications of > popularity trends. > > http://xahlee.o

Re: Computer Language Popularity Trend

2006-09-27 Thread Tagore Smith
Stefan Scholl wrote: > In comp.lang.lisp Jon Ribbens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > >>> http://xahlee.org/lang_traf/index.html > >> > >> Careful there with the sweeping generalizations and quick judgments > >> about languages :) > > > > I j

Re: Computer Language Popularity Trend

2006-09-27 Thread Gabriel Genellina
At Wednesday 27/9/2006 13:51, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > You can also get a rough measure ot the popularity of web scripting > languages from an analysis of the URLs. The last time I did this was in > 2003, and as I recall, these were the results: > PHP 30% and increasing > Perl 28% and falling

Re: Computer Language Popularity Trend

2006-09-27 Thread semiopen
John Bailo wrote: > Xah Lee wrote: > > Computer Language Popularity Trend > > > > This page gives a visual report of computer languages's popularity, as > > indicated by their traffic level in newsgroups. > > The only problem being that in the last five years, there are now a > multiplicity of opt

Re: Computer Language Popularity Trend

2006-09-27 Thread James Stroud
Sherm Pendley wrote: > "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > >>Xah Lee wrote: >> >>>Computer Language Popularity Trend >>> >> >>Careful there with the sweeping generalizations and quick judgments > > > Such things are all Xah does. Look at the distribution list for this > message

Re: Computer Language Popularity Trend

2006-09-27 Thread Ari Johnson
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: > I don't think you can use any measure as an accurate yardstick, but > rather as an impressionistic canvas. Exactly. You can't measure "popularity" without defining the term. Xah Lee appears to define popularity based on the number of posts made in a given language's U

Re: Computer Language Popularity Trend

2006-09-27 Thread cartercc
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > At the site I'm working on, you'd see a URL like > http://www.whatever.com/login or http://www.whatever.com/boards?id=131 > -- how would you count them? Such (extensionless) URLs are far more > common in the Python, Ruby, and Java world in my experience than the > PHP, P

Re: Computer Language Popularity Trend

2006-09-27 Thread Mladen Adamovic
There is one index at : http://www.tiobe.com/tpci.htm It isn't much reliable, put still I think it is a bit reliable. Also, you might use number of open source projects at Sourceforge for the given language for giving assumptions, or number of job openings at Monster, i.e. -- Mladen Adamov

Re: Computer Language Popularity Trend

2006-09-27 Thread John Bailo
Xah Lee wrote: > Computer Language Popularity Trend > > This page gives a visual report of computer languages's popularity, as > indicated by their traffic level in newsgroups. The only problem being that in the last five years, there are now a multiplicity of options for discussing any of these

Re: Computer Language Popularity Trend

2006-09-27 Thread Stefan Scholl
In comp.lang.lisp Jon Ribbens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: >>> http://xahlee.org/lang_traf/index.html >> >> Careful there with the sweeping generalizations and quick judgments >> about languages :) > > I just read "PHP as a language is rath

Re: Computer Language Popularity Trend

2006-09-27 Thread Steve Holden
Joe Marshall wrote: > Xah Lee wrote: > >>Computer Language Popularity Trend >> >>This page gives a visual report of computer languages's popularity, as >>indicated by their traffic level in newsgroups. This is not a >>comprehensive or fair survey, but does give some indications of >>popularity tre

Re: Computer Language Popularity Trend

2006-09-27 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > You can also get a rough measure ot the popularity of web scripting > languages from an analysis of the URLs. The last time I did this was in > 2003, and as I recall, these were the results: > PHP 30% and increasing > Perl 28% and falling > ASP 25% and falling fast > Cold

Re: Computer Language Popularity Trend

2006-09-27 Thread Joe Marshall
Xah Lee wrote: > Computer Language Popularity Trend > > This page gives a visual report of computer languages's popularity, as > indicated by their traffic level in newsgroups. This is not a > comprehensive or fair survey, but does give some indications of > popularity trends. Suggestions: Prov

Re: Computer Language Popularity Trend

2006-09-27 Thread Sherm Pendley
"[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Xah Lee wrote: >> Computer Language Popularity Trend >> > > Careful there with the sweeping generalizations and quick judgments Such things are all Xah does. Look at the distribution list for this message - of what possible use is cross-posting so

Re: Computer Language Popularity Trend

2006-09-27 Thread cartercc
I, too, attempt to track the popularity of computer languages, but I like to look at the job boards. My theory is that the number of employers looking for particular skills indicates the relative popularity of the language. This is a somewhat crude measure, particularly with Microsoft technologies

Re: Computer Language Popularity Trend

2006-09-27 Thread James Stroud
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Xah Lee wrote: >> Computer Language Popularity Trend >> >> This page gives a visual report of computer languages's popularity, as >> indicated by their traffic level in newsgroups. This is not a >> comprehensive or fair survey, but does give some indications of >> popular

Re: Computer Language Popularity Trend

2006-09-27 Thread Jon Ribbens
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: >> http://xahlee.org/lang_traf/index.html > > Careful there with the sweeping generalizations and quick judgments > about languages :) I just read "PHP as a language is rather dry and business-like", and fell off my chair. -- http://mail.p

Re: Computer Language Popularity Trend

2006-09-27 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Xah Lee wrote: > Computer Language Popularity Trend > > This page gives a visual report of computer languages's popularity, as > indicated by their traffic level in newsgroups. This is not a > comprehensive or fair survey, but does give some indications of > popularity trends. > > http://xahlee.or

Re: Computer Language Popularity Trend

2006-09-26 Thread Danno
Xah Lee wrote: > Computer Language Popularity Trend > > This page gives a visual report of computer languages's popularity, as > indicated by their traffic level in newsgroups. This is not a > comprehensive or fair survey, but does give some indications of > popularity trends. > > http://xahlee.or

Re: Computer Industry Workers May Face Cancer Risks

2006-07-02 Thread Cydrome Leader
In comp.unix.solaris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Computer Industry Workers May Face Cancer Risks > > http://www.studyandjobs.com/Comp_worker_cancer.html > > or visit > http://www.studyandjobs.com/Cancer.html > > Regards worthless add banner site -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python

Re: computer algebra packages

2006-02-23 Thread Robert Kern
JCDenton wrote: >>Rahulwrote: > > Hi. > >>Well is there an open source computer algebra system written in > > python > >>or at least having a python interface? >>I know of 2 efforts: pythonica and pyginac...are there any others? [Apologies for piggybacking.] http://sage.sourceforge.net/ --

Re: computer algebra packages

2006-02-23 Thread JCDenton
> Rahulwrote: Hi. > Well is there an open source computer algebra system written in python > or at least having a python interface? > I know of 2 efforts: pythonica and pyginac...are there any others? > > rahul There is mascyma http://home.arcor.de/mulk/projects/mascyma/download.xhtml.en that i

Re: Computer Language Shootout

2005-11-30 Thread Fredrik Lundh
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > "Be Nice!" *is* one of paragraph headings in the FAQ section "How can I > help?" yeah, we've noticed that it's not one of the headings in the FAQ section "How can we encourage you to contribute". -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Computer Language Shootout

2005-11-30 Thread igouy
Fredrik Lundh wrote: > Bengt Richter wrote: > > > That's not just blunt and concise, it looks like the modus operandi > > of a typical volunteer/employee-exploiter (or perhaps spoiled brat, > > the typical precursor to the former). > > careful. his faq requires you to "be nice". > > "Be Nice!"

Re: Computer Language Shootout

2005-11-30 Thread Fredrik Lundh
Bengt Richter wrote: > That's not just blunt and concise, it looks like the modus operandi > of a typical volunteer/employee-exploiter (or perhaps spoiled brat, > the typical precursor to the former). careful. his faq requires you to "be nice". -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/py

Re: Computer Language Shootout

2005-11-30 Thread igouy
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > This is a direct translation of the D code, maybe it's not the faster > Python implementation, and surely it's not the shorter one. But Psyco > makes it much faster (Psyco likes "low level" style code). And if you contributed the program like this http://shootout.alioth

Re: Computer Language Shootout

2005-11-30 Thread bearophileHUGS
malv: >Hi bearophileH, bearophile is enough :-) >Could you post some more information about ShedSkink? ShedSkin (SS) is a Python -> C++ compiler (or translator) written in Python, created by Mark Dufour. Its development was initially "financed" by the summer of code by Google. It contains some

Re: Computer Language Shootout

2005-11-30 Thread Fredrik Lundh
"malv" wrote: > Could you post some more information about ShedSkink? http://sourceforge.net/projects/shedskin/ -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Computer Language Shootout

2005-11-30 Thread igouy
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Bengt Richter wrote: > > On 29 Nov 2005 14:08:12 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > > > >We don't scrape programs from news-groups, if you'd like the program to > > >be shown on the shootout then please attach the source code to a > > >tracker item. > > You asked for so

Re: Computer Language Shootout

2005-11-30 Thread malv
Hi bearophileH, Thank you for the code example. Could you post some more information about ShedSkink? malv -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Computer Language Shootout

2005-11-29 Thread bonono
Bengt Richter wrote: > >Interestingly, I find this response quite compatible with the > >personality of this group. > Which "this"? ;-) > I meant his response. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Computer Language Shootout

2005-11-29 Thread Bengt Richter
On 29 Nov 2005 18:34:34 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > >Bengt Richter wrote: >> On 29 Nov 2005 14:08:12 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: >> >> >We don't scrape programs from news-groups, if you'd like the program to >> >be shown on the shootout then please attach the source code to a >> >tracker

Re: Computer Language Shootout

2005-11-29 Thread bonono
Bengt Richter wrote: > On 29 Nov 2005 14:08:12 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > >We don't scrape programs from news-groups, if you'd like the program to > >be shown on the shootout then please attach the source code to a > >tracker item. > You asked for something, got a response, and then you h

Re: Computer Language Shootout

2005-11-29 Thread Bengt Richter
On 29 Nov 2005 14:08:12 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: >We don't scrape programs from news-groups, if you'd like the program to >be shown on the shootout then please attach the source code to a >tracker item. You asked for something, got a response, and then you haughtily[1] declare that it's not

Re: Computer Language Shootout

2005-11-29 Thread igouy
We don't scrape programs from news-groups, if you'd like the program to be shown on the shootout then please attach the source code to a tracker item. Please follow the FAQ instructions http://shootout.alioth.debian.org/faq.php#contribute [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > This is a direct translation o

Re: Computer Language Shootout

2005-11-29 Thread bearophileHUGS
This is a direct translation of the D code, maybe it's not the faster Python implementation, and surely it's not the shorter one. But Psyco makes it much faster (Psyco likes "low level" style code). ShedSkink is (almost) able to compile it too, producing a really fast executable (with some "smart a

Re: computer programming

2005-11-03 Thread Ben Finney
Brandon K <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > what is .tk? Turkmenistan? or is it just some arbitrary suffix. The country top-level domains are the ISO 3166 two-letter country codes. http://dmoz.com/Science/Reference/Standards/Individual_Standards/ISO_3166/> -- \"Nothing in life is so

Re: computer programming

2005-11-03 Thread Magnus Lycka
Brandon K wrote: > what is .tk? Turkmenistan? or is it just some arbitrary suffix. Nope that's tm. Tokelau has tk. I'm sure you can learn more from Wikipedia etc. See e.g. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_3166-1 > >> www.javaholics.tk > > > > > == Posted via Newsgroups.com - Usenet Acc

Re: computer programming

2005-11-02 Thread Brandon K
what is .tk? Turkmenistan? or is it just some arbitrary suffix. > www.javaholics.tk == Posted via Newsgroups.com - Usenet Access to over 100,000 Newsgroups == Get Anonymous, Uncensored, Access to West and East Coast Server Farms! == Highest Retention and Completion Rates! HTTP:/

Re: computer algebra packages

2005-07-11 Thread Florian Diesch
François Pinard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> > Mascyma is (trying to be) a user-friendly graphical frontend for >> > the Computer Algebra System GNU MAXIMA. > >> I was not successful googling for this one. Would you have an URL handy? > > Oops, OK! Found it at http://cens.ioc.ee/~pearu/misc/m

Re: computer algebra packages

2005-07-10 Thread Bengt Richter
On Sun, 10 Jul 2005 15:53:22 -0700, Robert Kern <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >Bengt Richter wrote: > >> Then googling for mascsyma [sic ;-)] got Dang, and I put "[sic]" too. IOW, 'macsyma'.replace('cs','sc') > >I doubt it. ;-) > Rightly ;-/ Fingers think they know spelling better than I do ;-/ Reg

Re: computer algebra packages

2005-07-10 Thread Robert Kern
Bengt Richter wrote: > Then googling for mascsyma [sic ;-)] got I doubt it. ;-) -- Robert Kern [EMAIL PROTECTED] "In the fields of hell where the grass grows high Are the graves of dreams allowed to die." -- Richard Harter -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: computer algebra packages

2005-07-10 Thread Bengt Richter
On Sun, 10 Jul 2005 13:12:21 -0400, =?iso-8859-1?Q?Fran=E7ois?= Pinard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >[Florian Diesch] > >> Probably this is usable for you (I never used any of them): > >> This system MAXIMA is [...] based on the original implementation of >> Macsyma at MIT [...] > >Wow! A deriva

Re: computer algebra packages

2005-07-10 Thread François Pinard
[Robert Kern] > François Pinard wrote: > > [Florian Diesch] > >> Mascyma is (trying to be) a user-friendly graphical frontend for > >> the Computer Algebra System GNU MAXIMA. It is written in Python > >> and provides two GUIs, one of which based on PyGTK, the other based > >> on wxPython. > > I

Re: computer algebra packages

2005-07-10 Thread Robert Kern
François Pinard wrote: > [Florian Diesch] >>Description: A user-friendly frontend for MAXIMA >> Mascyma is (trying to be) a user-friendly graphical frontend for the Computer >> Algebra System GNU MAXIMA. It is written in Python and provides two GUIs, >> one of which based on PyGTK, the other base

Re: computer algebra packages

2005-07-10 Thread François Pinard
> > Mascyma is (trying to be) a user-friendly graphical frontend for > > the Computer Algebra System GNU MAXIMA. > I was not successful googling for this one. Would you have an URL handy? Oops, OK! Found it at http://cens.ioc.ee/~pearu/misc/maxima/ . -- François Pinard http://pinard.pro

Re: computer algebra packages

2005-07-10 Thread François Pinard
[Florian Diesch] > Probably this is usable for you (I never used any of them): > This system MAXIMA is [...] based on the original implementation of > Macsyma at MIT [...] Wow! A derivative of Joel Moses' integrator!! I was not aware this existed, so thanks for the pointer. It worked out of

Re: computer algebra packages

2005-06-09 Thread Florian Diesch
Rahul <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Well is there an open source computer algebra system written in python > or at least having a python interface? > I know of 2 efforts: pythonica and pyginac...are there any others? Probably this is usable for you (I never used any of them): Package: mascyma De

Re: computer algebra packages

2005-06-08 Thread Fernando Perez
Bill Mill wrote: > On 6/8/05, Fernando Perez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> Rahul wrote: >> >> > >> > Hi. >> > The reason is simple enough. I plan to do some academic research >> > related to computer algebra for which i need some package which i can >> > call as a library. Since i am not going to

Re: computer algebra packages

2005-06-08 Thread Bill Mill
On 6/8/05, Fernando Perez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Rahul wrote: > > > > > Hi. > > The reason is simple enough. I plan to do some academic research > > related to computer algebra for which i need some package which i can > > call as a library. Since i am not going to use the package > > myself

Re: computer algebra packages

2005-06-08 Thread David M. Cooke
Fernando Perez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Rahul wrote: > >> Hi. >> The reason is simple enough. I plan to do some academic research >> related to computer algebra for which i need some package which i can >> call as a library. Since i am not going to use the package >> myself..(rather my progra

Re: computer algebra packages

2005-06-08 Thread Fernando Perez
Rahul wrote: > > Hi. > The reason is simple enough. I plan to do some academic research > related to computer algebra for which i need some package which i can > call as a library. Since i am not going to use the package > myself..(rather my program will)..it will be helpful to have a python > pa

Re: computer algebra packages

2005-06-08 Thread Rahul
Hi. The reason is simple enough. I plan to do some academic research related to computer algebra for which i need some package which i can call as a library. Since i am not going to use the package myself..(rather my program will)..it will be helpful to have a python package since i wanted to writ

Re: computer algebra packages

2005-06-07 Thread Kay Schluehr
Rahul wrote: > Hi. > Well is there an open source computer algebra system written in python > or at least having a python interface? > I know of 2 efforts: pythonica and pyginac...are there any others? > > rahul Not in the moment. But I have a question to you: why do you seek for a CAS in Python?

Re: Computer Cluster Python Software

2005-06-06 Thread uli
Hi Mandus Thanks for your reply. I am looking for an application written in python (preferably a bioinformatics application) which will be able to take advantage of parallel processing on a cluster. I guess what I am asking for is applications which have been written using pyMPI or other python

Re: Computer Cluster Python Software

2005-06-06 Thread Mandus
6 Jun 2005 07:22:54 -0700 skrev uli: > Is there any open source Python software (preferably biopython) written > which runs on a cluster. Alternatively are there interfaces written in > Python to existing cluster software. Can you be more specific? There are for example several MPI interfaces (py

Re: computer unable to load _pysvn.pyc

2005-05-08 Thread Timothy Smith
vincent wehren wrote: >"Timothy Smith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> schrieb im Newsbeitrag >news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] >| Timothy Smith wrote: >| >| >this is truely maddening >| > >| >Traceback (most recent call last): >| > File "PubWare.py", line 11, in ? >| > File "Main.pyc", line 46, in ? >| > File "pys

Re: computer unable to load _pysvn.pyc

2005-05-08 Thread vincent wehren
"Timothy Smith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> schrieb im Newsbeitrag news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Timothy Smith wrote: | | >this is truely maddening | > | >Traceback (most recent call last): | > File "PubWare.py", line 11, in ? | > File "Main.pyc", line 46, in ? | > File "pysvn\__init__.pyc", line 12, in ? |

Re: computer unable to load _pysvn.pyc

2005-05-08 Thread Timothy Smith
Timothy Smith wrote: >this is truely maddening > >Traceback (most recent call last): > File "PubWare.py", line 11, in ? > File "Main.pyc", line 46, in ? > File "pysvn\__init__.pyc", line 12, in ? > File "pysvn\_pysvn.pyc", line 9, in ? > File "pysvn\_pysvn.pyc", line 7, in __load >ImportError