Hi,
I have a 10k+ line Tcl program that I would like to auto convert over to
Python. Do any scripts exist that can convert ~90% of the standard Tcl
syntax over to Python? I know Python doesn't handle strings, but just for
general syntax e.g., puts > print, expr > math operations
thanks
--
h
On Apr 22, 3:54 pm, Paul McGuire <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Apr 22, 8:47 am, "Anton Mellit" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > I need something like
> > 'overriding' =, which is impossible, but I look for a systematic
> > approach to do something instead. It seems there are two ways to do
>
On Apr 23, 6:12 am, Paul McGuire <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Haven't seen anyone mention this book, it is a "Soul of a New Machine"-
> style record of the Chandler project. Since Chandler uses Python and
> Twisted, and employed a few Python celebs, I thought folks on this
> list might have alread
Hello everybody,
I am building a code for surface meshes (triangulations for instance).
I need to implement Body objects (bodies can be points, segments,
triangles and so on), then a Mesh will be a collection of bodies,
together with their neighbourhood relations.
I also need OrientedBody objects,
On Apr 23, 6:12 am, Paul McGuire <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Haven't seen anyone mention this book, it is a "Soul of a New Machine"-
> style record of the Chandler project. Since Chandler uses Python and
> Twisted, and employed a few Python celebs, I thought folks on this
> list might have alread
Harishankar schrieb:
> Is there any platform independent way to launch a terminal window from a
> desktop (Windows, Linux, etc.)?
No, there isn't. It usually not possible to create a graphical terminal
window on a remote server.
Christian
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Wednesday 23 Apr 2008 14:46:20 Christian Heimes wrote:
> Harishankar schrieb:
> > Is there any platform independent way to launch a terminal window from a
> > desktop (Windows, Linux, etc.)?
>
> No, there isn't. It usually not possible to create a graphical terminal
> window on a remote server.
Mike Hansen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I think the best solution would be to port Pexpect to windows which
> > wouldn't be that difficult according to my reading of the code. If
> > only I had more free time!
>
> Sage ( http://www.sagemath.org ) uses pexpect fairly extensively to
> interfac
Gabriel Genellina <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Because Python doesn't follow the "boxed variables" model.
Be careful here. `Boxed types' or `boxed objects' is a technical term
essentially meaning `heap-allocated objects, probably with reference
semantics', which Python most definitely does use
Hi,
I found a solution thanks to another posting on c++-sig and an answer by
Andreas Klöckner :)
Thank you, Andreas!
The thread is here:
http://mail.python.org/pipermail/c++-sig/2008-April/thread.html#13470
I would like to inform the responsible of the Python Extending/Embedding
FAQ, http://
barbaros a écrit :
Hello everybody,
I am building a code for surface meshes (triangulations for instance).
I need to implement Body objects (bodies can be points, segments,
triangles and so on), then a Mesh will be a collection of bodies,
together with their neighbourhood relations.
I also need
> You mean the type? Not in 2.x, but in 3.x, there are function
> annotations:
>
> def a_function(arg1: int, arg2: str) -> None: pass
Nope, I don't like types ;-) 3.x seems pretty revolutionary, and this
typing can be appreciated by some people.
> Declaring what about them? If you mean declari
I don't know about all Linux distros, but my Ubuntu machine (8.04 Beta), has
the 'TERM' (xterm) and 'COLORTERM' (gnome-terminal) keys in os.environ. You
might be able to use that to ensure that the terminal is installed, but you
should probably look at a couple of other popular distros first to
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hotani wrote:
Thanks for the response. The user I'm connecting as should have full
access but I'll double check tomorrow.
This is the LDAP error that is returned when I leave out the OU:
{'info': ': LdapErr: DSID-0C090627, comment: In order to
perform this operation a successful bind mu
azrael <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> A friend of mine i a proud PERL developer which always keeps making
> jokes on python's cost.
There is only one sane way to deal with this situation: You need a
common enemy. Java comes to mind ;-)
cu
Philipp
--
Dr. Philipp Pagel
Lehrstuhl f. Genomori
barbaros wrote:
Hello everybody,
I am building a code for surface meshes (triangulations for instance).
I need to implement Body objects (bodies can be points, segments,
triangles and so on), then a Mesh will be a collection of bodies,
together with their neighbourhood relations.
I also need Ori
On Apr 23, 9:17 am, "Achillez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have a 10k+ line Tcl program that I would like to auto convert over to
> Python. Do any scripts exist that can convert ~90% of the standard Tcl
> syntax over to Python? I know Python doesn't handle strings, but just for
> general
Спортивные часы в превосходном дизайне: современнейшая технология
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On Wednesday 23 Apr 2008 15:11:21 Ben Kaplan wrote:
> I don't know about all Linux distros, but my Ubuntu machine (8.04 Beta),
> has the 'TERM' (xterm) and 'COLORTERM' (gnome-terminal) keys in os.environ.
> You might be able to use that to ensure that the terminal is installed, but
> you should pro
Hello,
the idea of the following program is to parse a frequency list of the
form FREQUENCY|WORD, to store the frequency of a word in a dictionary
(and to do some things with this information later).
I have done this many many times. Suddenly, it does not work any more:
The value frq[key] is diff
On 23 Apr, 11:12, Mark Wooding <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Gabriel Genellina <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Because Python doesn't follow the "boxed variables" model.
>
> Be careful here. `Boxed types' or `boxed objects' is a technical term
> essentially meaning `heap-allocated objects, probably
On 23 Apr, 13:17, Harishankar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wednesday 23 Apr 2008 15:11:21 Ben Kaplan wrote:
> > I don't know about all Linux distros, but my Ubuntu machine (8.04 Beta),
> > has the 'TERM' (xterm) and 'COLORTERM' (gnome-terminal) keys in os.environ.
> > You might be able to use th
Dietrich:
The web maintainers list is [EMAIL PROTECTED] Your message will be
held for moderation, but will be seen by the team who maintain the web site.
regards
Steve
PS: Anyone who wants to *help* maintain the web site should also email
that list. It helps if you are already known to othe
Simon Strobl wrote:
> the idea of the following program is to parse a frequency list of the
> form FREQUENCY|WORD, to store the frequency of a word in a dictionary
> (and to do some things with this information later).
>
> I have done this many many times. Suddenly, it does not work any more:
> T
On Apr 23, 1:16 pm, Simon Strobl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> the idea of the following program is to parse a frequency list of the
> form FREQUENCY|WORD, to store the frequency of a word in a dictionary
> (and to do some things with this information later).
>
> I have done this many man
On Apr 23, 12:16 pm, Simon Strobl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> the idea of the following program is to parse a frequency list of the
> form FREQUENCY|WORD, to store the frequency of a word in a dictionary
> (and to do some things with this information later).
>
> I have done this many ma
Filip Gruszczyński wrote:
You mean the type? Not in 2.x, but in 3.x, there are function
annotations:
def a_function(arg1: int, arg2: str) -> None: pass
Nope, I don't like types ;-) 3.x seems pretty revolutionary, and this
typing can be appreciated by some people.
Declaring what about them
Simon Strobl wrote:
Hello,
the idea of the following program is to parse a frequency list of the
form FREQUENCY|WORD, to store the frequency of a word in a dictionary
(and to do some things with this information later).
I have done this many many times. Suddenly, it does not work any more:
The
Hello all
I want to convert a tex file into a pdf by using pdflatex. For that, I thought
the 'subprocess' module might be a good option. My code doesn't work at all tho:
Import os, subprocess
def main():
scriptpath = os.path.dirname(__file__)
p = subprocess.Popen("pdflatex --in
kdwyer a écrit :
On Apr 23, 12:16 pm, Simon Strobl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
(snip)
#!/usr/bin/python
import sys
frqlist = open('my_frqlist.txt', 'r')
(snip)
frq = {}
for line in frqlist:
line = line.rstrip()
frequency, word = line.split('|')
frq[word] = int(frequency)
(snip
[EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb:
Hello all
I want to convert a tex file into a pdf by using pdflatex. For that, I thought
the 'subprocess' module might be a good option. My code doesn't work at all tho:
Import os, subprocess
def main():
scriptpath = os.path.dirname(__file__)
p = su
On Apr 23, 1:22 pm, Bruno Desthuilliers wrote:
> kdwyer a écrit :> On Apr 23, 12:16 pm, Simon Strobl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> (snip)
> >> #!/usr/bin/python
>
> >> import sys
>
> >> frqlist = open('my_frqlist.txt', 'r')
> (snip)
> >> frq = {}
>
> >> for line in frqlist:
> >> line = line.rst
> You musts have missed the memo. The rules of the universe
> changed at 0834 UST yesterday, and all functioning Python programs
> stopped working.
As always, the rules of the universe have not changed. (Or, at least,
I do hope so.)
It seems that the cause of my problem was my switching too fast
Andrew Lee a écrit :
(snip)
as a rule of thumb .. if you are using "isinstance" in a class to
determine what class a parameter is ... you have broken the OO contract.
Nope.
Remember, every class ought to have a well defined internal state and a
well defined interface to its state.
I don't
[EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb:
> Hello all
>
> I want to convert a tex file into a pdf by using pdflatex. For that, I
> thought the 'subprocess' module might be a good option. My code doesn't work
> at all tho:
>
> Import os, subprocess
>
> def main():
> scriptpath = os.path.dirname(__file
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:python-
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of azrael
> Sent: Tuesday, April 22, 2008 6:26 AM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Python Success stories
>
> Hy guys,
> A friend of mine i a proud PERL developer which always keeps making
>
Hi All,
I have a program with a Dbus interface, and would like to allow remote users
to use telnet ( or something ) to log in, and run predefined commands
against the Dbus interface, return the results, and allow the user to log
off.
Any examples / help would be great.
Thanks
Chumly
--
http://ma
Hi all. I am using this to try to document my python-coded apps.
http://effbot [DOT] org/zone/pythondoc [DOT] htm
i am using windows XP professional. I have put the install directory
of pythondoc.py in my path file. So i "cd" to the directory containing
the python scripts I wish to python-doc, typ
Is there a way to block these messages. I do not want to be caught
with filth such as this material. I could lose my job with Belcan with
evil messages such as these messages.
David Blubaugh
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesd
Is there a way to block these messages. I do not want to be caught
with filth such as this material. I could lose my job with Belcan with
evil messages such as these messages.
David Blubaugh
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tues
Wow!! Thank you all for these incredible examples! I really appreciate you
all
taking the time to share your thoughts. I'm really wanting to learn efficient
ways of programming in Python and this is really going to help!
Thanks again!
Jay
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pyth
I would really like to know more about python 2.5's new generator
characteristics that make them more powerful and analogous to
coroutines. Is it possible for instance to employ them in situations
where I would normally use a thread with a blocking I/O (or socket)
operation? If it is, could someone
Blubaugh, David A. schrieb:
Is there a way to block these messages. I do not want to be caught
with filth such as this material. I could lose my job with Belcan with
evil messages such as these messages.
If I (or *anybody*) knew how to block these messages, he or she would
sell the resu
2008/4/23, Reedick, Andrew <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
> IIRC, Python is used in games like Eve Online (SciFi MMO) and Vampire:
> Bloodlines (RPG.) Years later, a dedicated fan is still fixing/updating
> the Bloodlines python scripts that control the dialogue and scripted
> events.
>
Now that you m
Blubaugh, David A. wrote:
Is there a way to block these messages. I do not want to be caught
with filth such as this material. I could lose my job with Belcan with
evil messages such as these messages.
David Blubaugh
In future please ensure you do not quote the offending URLs when send
[EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb:
I would really like to know more about python 2.5's new generator
characteristics that make them more powerful and analogous to
coroutines. Is it possible for instance to employ them in situations
where I would normally use a thread with a blocking I/O (or socket)
opera
Thanks to Christian and Jean-Paul for your reply. I moved away from
the stackless version (which I don't understand what uniqueness it
comes with) and downloaded a fresh copy of Python 2.5.2 (r252:60911,
Feb 21 2008, 13:11:45) [MSC v.1310 32 bit (Intel)] on win32. Following
J-P's suggestion, I incl
Harishankar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wednesday 23 Apr 2008 15:11:21 Ben Kaplan wrote:
>> I don't know about all Linux distros, but my Ubuntu machine (8.04 Beta),
>> has the 'TERM' (xterm) and 'COLORTERM' (gnome-terminal) keys in os.environ.
> This is set on Debian too. Thanks. I should be ab
On Wed, 23 Apr 2008 07:17:46 -0700 (PDT), [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I would really like to know more about python 2.5's new generator
characteristics that make them more powerful and analogous to
coroutines. Is it possible for instance to employ them in situations
where I would normally use a thre
On Wed, 23 Apr 2008 10:31:23 -0400
Steve Holden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Blubaugh, David A. wrote:
> > Is there a way to block these messages. I do not want to be caught
> > with filth such as this material. I could lose my job with Belcan with
> > evil messages such as these messages.
>
Hey everyone,
So I've got a quick query for advice.
We have an embedded device in which we are displaying to an LCD
device that sits at /dev/screen. This device is not readily available
all the time, so I am needing to write an emulator. This will
basically just monitor a file, /dev/screen f
Eduardo Schettino wrote:
I find the doit syntax a bit cumbersome, especially as you can avoid
'args' by just returning a lamda in 'action'.
My idea was to: do *not* add any new syntax (to avoid being
cumbersome). It is just python, you dont have to import or subclass
Yeah, decorators get
Steve Holden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Filip Gruszczy"ski wrote:
>> Just declaring, that they exist. Saying, that in certain function
>> there would appear only specified variables. Like in smalltalk, if I
>> remember correctly.
>>
> Icon has (had?) the same feature: if the "local" statement
I am getting application error message " The instruction at "0x7c910f29"
referenced memory at "0x". The memory could not be "read". I am
running one python script and it is running good without any exception
or error message but getting this message when I am closing python 2.4.1
applicatio
I found Python code to validate a XML document basd on DTD file
layout. The code uses the 'xmlproc' package and these module loading
steps
from xml.parsers.xmlproc import xmlproc
from xml.parsers.xmlproc import xmlval
from xml.parsers.xmlproc import xmldtd
Unfortunately, the xml package no long
Civilisation 4 uses Python everywhere and is the main tool used by
Modders of the game.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
blaine wrote:
Hey everyone,
So I've got a quick query for advice.
We have an embedded device in which we are displaying to an LCD
device that sits at /dev/screen. This device is not readily available
all the time, so I am needing to write an emulator. This will
basically just monitor a fil
blaine wrote:
example usage: echo 'line 0 0 10 10' > /dev/screen
On the actual embedded device this is handled by a kernel module. We
can spit commands into it as fast as we can and the kernel module can
keep up. This is typical unix device file behavior.
Any suggestions or advice would be s
(let's try this again, and actually send it to the list this time)
On Wed, Apr 23, 2008 at 11:02 AM, blaine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hey everyone,
> So I've got a quick query for advice.
>
> We have an embedded device in which we are displaying to an LCD
> device that sits at /dev/screen.
Ahmed, Shakir wrote:
I am getting application error message “ The instruction at “0x7c910f29”
referenced memory at “0x”. The memory could not be “read”. I am
running one python script and it is running good without any exception
or error message but getting this message when I am closin
Achillez wrote:
Hi,
I have a 10k+ line Tcl program that I would like to auto convert over to
Python. Do any scripts exist that can convert ~90% of the standard Tcl
syntax over to Python? I know Python doesn't handle strings, but just for
general syntax e.g., puts > print, expr > math operatio
On Apr 23, 10:48 am, Bruno Desthuilliers wrote:
>
> > My question is: can it be done using inheritance ?
>
> Technically, yes:
>
> class OrientedBody(Body):
>def __init__(self, orient=1):
> Body.__init__(self)
> self.orient = 1
>
> Now if it's the right thing to do is another questi
On Apr 23, 11:17 am, "Ville M. Vainio" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> blaine wrote:
> > example usage: echo 'line 0 0 10 10' > /dev/screen
>
> > On the actual embedded device this is handled by a kernel module. We
> > can spit commands into it as fast as we can and the kernel module can
> > keep up.
Wow! This is extremely easy and seems to do exactly what I need. Those
decorators are pretty powerful then. Thanks for your help, I'll try to
use this.
> def uses(names):
> def decorator(f):
> used = set(f.func_code.co_varnames)
> declared = set(names.split())
> undecl
On Wed, Apr 23, 2008 at 10:24 AM, Diez B. Roggisch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Blubaugh, David A. schrieb:
>
> > Is there a way to block these messages. I do not want to be caught
> > with filth such as this material. I could lose my job with Belcan with
> > evil messages such as these messages
"blaine" schrieb
>
> # Fake Nokia Screen Emulator
> import sys, os
>
> class nokia_fkscrn:
> def __init__(self, file):
> if not os.path.exists(file):
> os.mkfifo(file)
> self.fifodev = open(file, 'r')
> def read(self):
> while 1:
> r = self.fifodev.readline()
> p
On 2008-04-22, Blubaugh, David A. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Is there a way to block these messages. I do not want to be caught
> with filth such as this material. I could lose my job with Belcan with
> evil messages such as these messages.
No, not really.
That's one reason I never use my w
Mike Driscoll wrote:
Ken,
On Tue, Apr 22, 2008 at 1:36 PM, Kenneth McDonald
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Sadly.
Thanks,
Ken
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I've attached the 2.4 version. I also have some Windows binaries for
Beautiful Soup uploaded to my website:
ht
On Apr 23, 12:27 pm, "Martin Blume" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> "blaine" schrieb
>
>
>
>
>
> > # Fake Nokia Screen Emulator
> > import sys, os
>
> > class nokia_fkscrn:
> > def __init__(self, file):
> > if not os.path.exists(file):
> > os.mkfifo(file)
> > self.fifodev = open(file,
On Apr 23, 10:44 am, barbaros <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> If I understand correctly, in the above implementation I cannot
> define firstly a (non-oriented) body, and then build, on top of it,
> two bodies with opposite orientations. The point is, I want
> both oriented bodies to share the same b
On Apr 23, 4:52 pm, "Filip Gruszczyński" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > You mean the type? Not in 2.x, but in 3.x, there are function
> > annotations:
>
> > def a_function(arg1: int, arg2: str) -> None: pass
>
> Nope, I don't like types ;-) 3.x seems pretty revolutionary, and this
> typing can b
On Apr 22, 9:48 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Apr 22, 12:57 pm, Miki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Hello,
>
> > > So far so good. In the relevant applications, the code looks something
> > > like this:
> > >logging.config.fileConfig('log.ini')
> > > logger =logging.getLogger('log.regular
I want a function that removes values from a list if a predicate evaluates
to True. The best I could come up with is:
def extract(lst, pred):
idx = 0
ret = []
for obj in lst[:]:
if pred(obj):
ret.append(obj)
lst.pop(idx)
else:
idx +=
John Nagle wrote:
Mike Driscoll wrote:
Ken,
On Tue, Apr 22, 2008 at 1:36 PM, Kenneth McDonald
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Sadly.
Thanks,
Ken
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I've attached the 2.4 version. I also have some Windows binaries for
Beautiful Soup uploade
John Nagle wrote:
Mike Driscoll wrote:
Ken,
On Tue, Apr 22, 2008 at 1:36 PM, Kenneth McDonald
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Sadly.
Thanks,
Ken
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I've attached the 2.4 version. I also have some Windows binaries for
Beautiful Soup uploade
On Apr 23, 11:47 am, John Nagle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Mike Driscoll wrote:
> > Ken,
>
> > On Tue, Apr 22, 2008 at 1:36 PM, Kenneth McDonald
> > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >> Sadly.
>
> >> Thanks,
> >> Ken
> >> --
> >> http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
>
> > I've attac
Jared Grubb wrote:
I want a function that removes values from a list if a predicate
evaluates to True. The best I could come up with is:
Have a look at the itertools module, and the ifilter function
in particular.
TJG
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Are there any completely free developent tools for python scripts like
IDLE. I have used IDLE , but I want to try out others also. I saw
stuff like PyCrust, but I don't see that it can run the script as
well.
Thanks,
RR
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On Apr 23, 4:17 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I would really like to know more about python 2.5's new generator
> characteristics that make them more powerful and analogous to
> coroutines. Is it possible for instance to employ them in situations
> where I would normally use a thread with a blocki
It seems the only way I can bind is by using this format:
simple_bind_s('[EMAIL PROTECTED]','password')
If I try using a DN, it fails every time. This will not work:
simple_bind_s('cn=user,dc=server,dc=local', 'password')
Errors out with "invalid credentials": ldap.INVALID_CREDENTIALS:
{'info': '
On Apr 23, 12:39 pm, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Are there any completely free developent tools for python scripts like
> IDLE. I have used IDLE , but I want to try out others also. I saw
> stuff like PyCrust, but I don't see that it can run the script as
> well.
> Thanks,
>
>
"blaine" schrieb
> >
> > while 1:
> > r = self.fifodev.readline()
> > if r: print r
> >
> > According to my docs, readline() returns an empty
> > string at the end of the file.
> > Also, you might want to sleep() between reads a
> > little bit.
> >
>
> Oh ok, that makes sense. Hmm. So do I n
On 2008-04-22, Paul Hankin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Apr 22, 5:50 pm, Jérémy Wagner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Sure. Python is more readable than Perl, though I have found Python
>> to have a weird behavior regarding this little issue :
>>
>> How can you explain that Python doesn't support
Hi
I have a python code performing some computation for me.I have a
html page which passes certain argumnets to a php page.This php page
needs to pass on the value to the Python class and get the result
back.
How do I go about this??
Cheers
Vijay
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