On Saturday, September 27, 2014 9:21:15 AM UTC+5:30, Seymore4Head wrote:
> Still practicing. Since this is listed as a Pseudocode, I assume this
> is a good way to explain something. That means I can also assume my
> logic is fading with age.
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leap_year#Algorithm
>
Hello list
Python 3.4 applies.
I have a project that involves distributing Python code to users in an
organisation. Users do not interact directly with the Python code; they only
know this project as an Excel add-in.
Now, internal audit takes exception in some cases if users are able to see th
On Mon, Sep 29, 2014 at 5:36 PM, wrote:
> I have a project that involves distributing Python code to users in an
> organisation. Users do not interact directly with the Python code; they only
> know this project as an Excel add-in.
>
> Now, internal audit takes exception in some cases if users
Thanks for the reply!
I'm not concerned about hiding the source code in a fundamental way. The
condition that needs to be satisfied is that independent validators (in the
organisation) must not "have access" to the source code.
Crunching the source is an interesting idea that could achieve that
On Mon, 29 Sep 2014 00:36:47 -0700, norman.ives wrote:
> Hello list
>
> Python 3.4 applies.
>
> I have a project that involves distributing Python code to users in an
> organisation. Users do not interact directly with the Python code; they
> only know this project as an Excel add-in.
>
> Now,
On Mon, Sep 29, 2014 at 6:41 PM, wrote:
> Crunching the source is an interesting idea that could achieve that end, but
> it seems fraught with problems like maintaining consistency between renaming
> objects in a module and renaming where imports happen.
>
Here's a technique that you could use
Hi!
I’m trying to access
https://stsadweb.one.microsoft.com/adfs/.well-known/openid-configuration
Doing it the simplest way I get the following:
>>> import urllib
>>> f =
>>> urllib.urlopen("https://stsadweb.one.microsoft.com/adfs/.well-known/openid-configuration";)
Traceback (most recent call
On Mon, Sep 29, 2014 at 6:55 PM, Chris Angelico wrote:
> It ought to be possible to do an AST reconstitution for at least part
> of this. I can hunt down some of my PEP 463 test code to help out with
> that. It should be possible to figure out what names are local, and
> then just use those.
>
> I
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[email protected] wrote:
> Hello list
>
> Python 3.4 applies.
>
> I have a project that involves distributing Python code to users in an
> organisation. Users do not interact directly with the Python code; they
> only know this project as an Excel add-in.
>
> Now, internal audit takes excep
Hi,
my 11 years old son and his classmate told me, that they would like to
learn Python. They did some programming in Logo and turtle graphics, bat
not too much.
Doesn anybody has an idea how to start?
--
Urbán Gábor
Linux is like a wigwam: no Gates, no Windows and an Apache inside.
--
https:
On Mon, Sep 29, 2014 at 11:18 PM, Gabor Urban wrote:
> my 11 years old son and his classmate told me, that they would like to learn
> Python. They did some programming in Logo and turtle graphics, bat not too
> much.
>
> Doesn anybody has an idea how to start?
Right here:
https://docs.python.org
Gabor Urban wrote:
> Hi,
>
> my 11 years old son and his classmate told me, that they would like to
> learn Python. They did some programming in Logo and turtle graphics, bat
> not too much.
>
> Doesn anybody has an idea how to start?
The Internet is a big place, I always start by searching :-)
On Monday, September 29, 2014 6:59:10 PM UTC+5:30, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Mon, Sep 29, 2014 at 11:18 PM, Gabor Urban wrote:
> > my 11 years old son and his classmate told me, that they would like to learn
> > Python. They did some programming in Logo and turtle graphics, bat not too
> > much.
>
On Mon, Sep 29, 2014 at 11:38 PM, Rustom Mody wrote:
>> https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/
>
> The official tutorial for an 11 year old?? I dont think so...
I don't see why not, to be honest. Not a lot of difference between his
11yo son and my 12yo sister, and I just pointed her at the tutorial
David Alban wrote:
> greetings,
>
> i'm writing a program to scan a data file. from each line of the data
> file
> i'd like to add something like below to a dictionary. my perl background
> makes me want python to autovivify, but when i do:
>
> file_data = {}
>
> [... as i loop th
Abohfu venant zinkeng gmail.com> writes:
>
>
>
>
> Hard drives have been the secondary storage of choice on computers for
many years. They have improved in speed, in capacity, and in cost for over
50 years. It's interesting to look at how the prices have dropped, or,
conversely, how much stor
On Sun, 28 Sep 2014 20:07:31 +, Duncan Booth wrote:
> Later on the B+ had 64k of RAM and the B+128 had 128k of RAM and in each
> case the additional RAM was paged in as necessary but I don't think the
> RAM in the B was ever expandable.
You could get various expansions to page multiple roms,
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> Another possibility is to distribute your modules inside a zip file. See
> here:
>
> https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-list/2014-July/675506.html
>
> Such zip files are not just runnable, but also importable. Depending on your
> Excel requirements, you might need
Chris Angelico wrote:
>> I have a project that involves distributing Python code to users in an
>> organisation. Users do not interact directly with the Python code; they
>> only know this project as an Excel add-in.
>>
>> Now, internal audit takes exception in some cases if users are able to
>>
On Mon, Sep 29, 2014 at 7:52 AM, Steven D'Aprano
wrote:
> Whether you prefer to use setdefault, or a defaultdict, is a matter of
> taste.
There is potentially a significant difference in performance -- with
setdefault, the subordinate data structure is created on every call to
be passed into setd
On Mon, 29 Sep 2014 15:18:31 +0200, Gabor Urban
wrote:
>Hi,
>
>my 11 years old son and his classmate told me, that they would like to
>learn Python. They did some programming in Logo and turtle graphics, bat
>not too much.
>
>Doesn anybody has an idea how to start?
I ordered this book from the l
On 29 September 2014 14:18:31 BST, Gabor Urban wrote:
>my 11 years old son and his classmate told me, that they would like to
>learn Python. They did some programming in Logo and turtle graphics,
>bat
>not too much.
>
>Doesn anybody has an idea how to start?
"How to Think Like a Computer Scient
I am actually teaching Python as a side job. My students have ranged from
eighth graders, up to a Silicon Valley hardware engineer who had no coding
experience, but who needed to do some test engineering.
My wife is an elementary school teacher. We occasionally talk about
age-appropriate lear
On 9/29/2014 9:18 AM, Gabor Urban wrote:
Hi,
my 11 years old son and his classmate told me, that they would like to
learn Python. They did some programming in Logo and turtle graphics, bat
not too much.
Doesn anybody has an idea how to start?
Python has a turtle module, so they can continue w
In article ,
Roland Hedberg wrote:
> Hi!
>
> I¹m trying to access
> https://stsadweb.one.microsoft.com/adfs/.well-known/openid-configuration
>
> Doing it the simplest way I get the following:
>
> >>> import urllib
> >>> f =
> >>> urllib.urlopen("https://stsadweb.one.microsoft.com/adfs/.well
I would like to add the ability to JSONEncode large iterators. Right now there
is no way to do this without modifying the code.
The JSONEncoder.default() doc string suggests to do this:
For example, to support arbitrary iterators, you could
implement default like this::
On Mon, Sep 29, 2014 at 7:19 PM, wrote:
> I would like to add the ability to JSONEncode large iterators. Right now
> there is no way to do this without modifying the code.
>
> The JSONEncoder.default() doc string suggests to do this:
> For example, to support arbitrary iterators, you cou
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