a local, t2 is indeed referenced before it's
assigned (t2 = t2 + letter). The fix is to declare t2 global at the top
of Proc:
def Proc(text):
global t2
...
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Dan Bishop wrote:
They must have gotten the idea from floppy disks, which also use a
1024000-byte "megabyte".
It's pretty common industry-wide. Memory is measured in binary prefixes
(x 1024), but disk space and bandwidth are measured in decimal prefixes
(x 1000).
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on -- as a tipoff to modified clients and bots.
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If love is the answer, could you rephrase the question?
-- Lily Tomlin
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ed in kibibytes, but disk space is measured in kilobytes.
Something as basic as "1 meg" has different numeric meanings depending
on whether you're talking about memory or disk space or metered
bandwidth usage. And a 1.44 MB isn't 1000^2 bytes or 1024^2 bytes, but
rath
there anyway I can patch python such that It will
convert the unicode string to utf-8 before the write?
Where should I start?
codecs.open
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re a good case to iterate over something useful in a message
Why would it be a bug if the documentation never stated that the object
was iterable?
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John Machin wrote:
Xah is asserting his right to be recognised as the author of his
artistic creations, line by line.
Not very well, however, since his usage doesn't constitute a valid
copyright notice :-).
--
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at's .find in strings that returns -1. .index in lists raises a
ValueError:
>>> [1, 2, 3].index(4)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "", line 1, in ?
ValueError: list.index(x): x not in list
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Xah Lee wrote:
... sorry for the latching on on this broadside issue, but it is
impotant ...
You made a typo in that last word there. Obviously you meant to write
an _e_ instead of an _a_.
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ompletely
valid regardless of whether you converted it to a list or not.
If that was just a thinko while you were asking the question, then the
reason ([...]) didn't work is that it's just syntactically wrapping a
list comprehension in parentheses, rather than turning them into a tupl
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm trying to do something along the lines of
print '%temp %d' % 1
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "", line 1, in ?
ValueError: unsupported format character 't' (0x74) at index 1
Use %%:
>>> '%%temp %d'
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Was doing some string formatting, noticed the following:
x = None
"%s" % x
'None'
Is there a reason it maps to 'None'? I had expected ''.
Because %s just calls str on the arguments, and str(None) == 'None'.
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be whether or not this as useful as one might
thing in Python; if you find yourself doing this, often there are better
ways to accomplish the same thing, such as using dictionaries.
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both based on the 1.5
codebase, and both appear to be unmaintained (Pippy has the last news
date in 2002; I couldn't find an obvious date for ).
Is there any news regarding Python on the Palm OS front?
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Egor Bolonev wrote:
gui folder link is a .lnk file
What he's telling you is that Windows doesn't implement symbolic links.
os.path.islink does not detect what you think it does.
--
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een before.
Somewhat surprisingly to me, I can't seem to find an aggregator that
supports all these features (using Mozilla). Is it possible it's time
for another Yet Another-type project?
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t's a safety net to make sure
you don't fall of the end of the function without returning anything;
that is, the code analysis is not in place to see whether it's necessary
to actually include in the bytecodes or not.
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(sometimes) spin off a subprocess?
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Defeat is a school in which truth always grows strong.
-- Henry Ward Beecher
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Noam Raphael wrote:
Well, what do you say?
Raising NotImplementedError in the methods that need to be overridden is
much more customary, more straightforward, and already works fine.
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time I used a
Sparc - 4 years ago?)
That's OpenBoot, the boot prompt. Most people never use that enough to
even realize it has anything to do with Forth.
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w bizarre is it that they're trying to "sell" Spry by indicating it
uses the "very best" features of Prothon, given that Prothon was a
failed project?
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n mentions ABC in background information on where Python
comes from. But Python doesn't mention this as the first sentence in
describing what its virtues are!
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, Pycs, or whatever its name is this week as being
inspired by Prothon, a project that failed in every possible way there
it to fail, doesn't impress anybody -- technically, marketing-wise, or
any other criteria.
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Doug Holton wrote:
I'm not going to dignify that or the rest of your note with a response.
Please stop dignifying the whole group, then.
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of its banner.
Further more, the poplib modules complains when I try to call the
poplib.POP3_SSL class, saying that the module has no such class, though
the online docs say it does.
You've got a copy of Python 2.3.4 installed on your system which is in
your PATH first.
--
Erik Max Francis &
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I definitely have no rights to judge this article but I have a vague
idea that this fine article goes to a wrong place. Except that the
topic thing is symbolically related: Photon hYpoTHesis limitatiON.
It's a well-known and persistent crank.
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Erik Max Francis &
r it's in a list.
repr vs. str. The str of the sequence types prints the repr of their
contents.
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History is a set of lies agreed upon.
-- Napoleon Bonaparte
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Xah Lee wrote:
Very fucking stupid confusional writing.
I agree. Oh, were you talking about the Python documentation?
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Men liv
GujuBoy wrote:
how can you check in python at the beginning if you running the app in
WIN32 or UNIX.
import sys
print sys.platform
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Raymond Hettinger wrote:
I'm looking for an 'easy' way to have the last item in a list returned.
Try mylist.pop() or mylist[-1].
Note that list.pop also removes the last element from the list in the
process.
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Erik Max Francis && [EMAIL PROTECTED] && http://ww
Daniel Silva wrote:
Shriram Krishnamurthi has just announced the following elsewhere; it might
be of interest to c.l.s, c.l.f, and c.l.p:
http://list.cs.brown.edu/pipermail/plt-scheme/2005-April/008382.html
April Fool's Day again, eh?
--
Erik Max Francis && [EMAIL PROTE
Sean Kemplay wrote:
You could use
condition and consequent or alternative
I use it
You should do so cautiously, since if consequent is false, it will not
behave as suspected. Not to mention that it's quite unreadable.
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wo would not be equivalent.
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If the sun comes up / And you're not home / I'll be strong
-- India Arie
--
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he same script in java. This is
making me wonder if there is an issue with the wrapper for the google
api that was originally done in java.
Java does not handle Unicode the same way.
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pper
bound you wish.
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Be able to be alone. Lose not the advantage of solitude.
-- Sir Thomas Browne
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[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Ok the key was "r+b" as opposed to "a+b" but why is that? R is for
read, correct? And b for binary. Adding the plus gives me some form
of write capability?
Read binary is "rb," but read-write binary is "r+b." The "+" me
emplate would look something like this::
@[for record in records]@
@record.title
@[end for]@
Batch expanding the template would look like something as simple as
(substituting in your example)::
...
return em.expand(open(templateFilename).r
had a need to do so, so it's always been low
priority. I've certainly never heard of any complaints of EmPy's speed
(or lack therefore) as being a problem in the field. Unless you huge
realtime demands, I doubt EmPy's speed would be a major impediment. (Of
course, if you
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If anyone want to check this out, heres the url:
http://pyar.decode.com.ar/Members/ltorre/PythonPalm
Note the links are swapped; the one that says source package points to
the .prc file, and the one that says .prc file goes to the source package.
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Erik Max Francis
d never returns.
It worked on my Treo 650, although you quickly ran out of space in the
input text area (if you typed too many characters it would beep and
prevent you from typing anymore).
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Fredrik Lundh wrote:
did you check that link before you posted it?
Works here. Your browser is probably concluding the trailing . is part
of the URL, rather than sentence punctuation :-).
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San Jose, CA, USA &
RM wrote:
I get odd results when trying to use exponents. For example:
4^2
6
Someone else already pointed out that ** is exponentiation. ^, on the
other hand, bitwise exclusive or.
--
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riday. Too bad it comes to an abrupt
"temporary end".
Ironically, I just used Unix tools (tr, grep, sed) for each of the
puzzles except the first one, and that first one was only because I tend
to use Python as a convenient calculator anyway :-).
--
Erik Max Francis && [E
EmPy should work with any version of Python from 2.4 onward,
including 3.x.
License
This code is released under the LGPL.
Release history [since 3.3]
- 3.3.2; 2014 Jan 24. Additional fix for source compatibility
between 2.x and 3.0.
- 3.3.1; 2014 Jan 22. Source c
Example 1
def compose_greet_func():
def get_message():
return "Hello there!"
return get_message
greet = compose_greet_func()
print greet()
Example 2
def greet(name):
return "hello "+name
greet_someone = greet
print greet_someone("John"
In Example 1, the function compoe_
Just to be clear, I was referring to these two lines
greet = compose_greet_func()
greet_someone = greet
On Wednesday, November 5, 2014 11:15:46 AM UTC+8, Max Nathaniel Ho wrote:
> Example 1
>
> def compose_greet_func():
> def get_message():
> return "Hello the
On Wednesday, November 5, 2014 2:00:08 PM UTC+8, Cameron Simpson wrote:
> On 04Nov2014 19:17, Max Nathaniel Ho wrote:
> >Just to be clear, I was referring to these two lines
> >
> >greet = compose_greet_func()
> >
> >greet_someone = greet
>
> Please
7;s quite reasonable to assume that (even in Python 2)
`True` is bound to something which is, in fact, true.
The real reason people still use the `while 1` construct, I would
imagine, is just inertia or habit, rather than a conscious, defensive
decision. If it's the latter, it's a cas
e idiomatic `while 1` notation comes from back in the pre-Boolean
days. In any reasonably modern implementation, `while True` is more
self-documenting. I would imagine the primary reason people still do
it, any after-the-fact rationalizations aside, is simply habit.
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y to import an
already-imported module, inline or not, the second (or subsequent)
imports are no-operations.
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Golf is a good walk spoile
ek or two. Hopefully I'll have a basic system ready by New
Year's, but I can't really make any promises. The best way to encourage
me to get it done is probably to keep me talking about it :-).
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> a = point.x
> b = point.x
> assert (a is b)# can fail
>
> for that matter
>
> assert (point.x is point.x)
>
> can fail. These attributes aren't "member variables" any more.
Which is perfectly fine, since testing identity with `
having Booleans, if you can't tell them from integers?
Because
return True
is clearer than
return 1
if the purpose of the return value is to indicate a Boolean rather than
an arbitrary integer.
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sent true
print x, y
Besides, it's not the only reason, but it's a good one.
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Ipsa scientia potestas est. "Kn
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> True too, and could be the reason(or similar too) why the OP wants to
> test the type rather than the logical value of it.
The type is for the self-documentation purposes. The value is the same;
so no, that's not a good reason either.
--
Erik Max Franci
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Utf-8 is the same as Unicode?
No, UTF-8 is one (of several) possible encodings for expressing Unicode
as a stream of bytes.
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examples I saw (python.org, aspn.activestate.com,
> Learning Python by Lutz, among others) use d={'x' : 'y'}.
In the latter case the values are ints, whereas in the former they are
strings. But you probably didn't mean that; indeed it is the case that
d
e an id3 tag) how do I make the
> interpretter understand that it may contain unicode?
Read it as a string, and then decode it with the .decode method. You
specify what encoding it's in.
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http://www.id3.org/id3v2.4.0-structure.txt
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You are in the music / In the man's car next to me
-- Sade
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erly, you have to encode it to a string properly.
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Could it be / That we need loving to survive
-- Neneh Cherry
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Pelmen wrote:
> what to do, to encode it properly? UTF-8?
You're the one sending it through a socket; only you know what the other
side expects.
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ImportError in your except clause.
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Substance is one of the greatest of our illusions.
-- Sir Arthur Eddington
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t; => 12000.0
> I searched the web, but could not find any function.
There's some extensive code in the SI class in BOTEC which does this:
http://www.alcyone.com/software/botec/
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eError:
... do something else ...
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May it not be that, at least, the brighter stars are like our Sun,
the upholding and energizing ce
.
To make sure you get it right, you'll have to do exactly what the Python
parser does in order to distinguish integer literals from other tokens.
Taken to the extreme for other types, such as floats, you're far
better off just using the internal mechanisms that Python itself uses,
e latter is clearly a more useful
functionality.
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Make it come down / Like molasses rain
-- Sandra St. Victor
--
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Noah wrote:
> You can give up on pickle, because pickle is only
> guaranteed to work with the exact same version of the Python
> interpreter.
Not true. You're thinking of marshal.
--
Erik Max Francis && [EMAIL PROTECTED] && http://www.alcyone.com/max/
San Jos
f and
> using setup. My method is defined as
>
> static PyMethodDef ast_man_methods[] = {
> {"exec",exec,METH_VARARGS,"Execute Asterisk commands."},
> {NULL,NULL,0,NULL}
> };
>
> What might be my problem??
exec is a reserved word.
>>> exe
o do vector
> addition, cross products, dot products etc. and probably in the future
> I'll need matrix math as well.
ZOE has an la a module that helps with linear algebra computations
including (three-dimensional) vectors and matrices:
http://www.alcyone.com/software/zoe/
David Pratt wrote:
> This is not working for me. Can someone explain why. Many thanks.
Because '\xbe' isn't UTF-8 for the character you want, '\xc2\xbe' is, as
you just showed yourself in the code snippet.
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Erik Max Francis && [EMAIL PROTECTED] &&a
nts of type int.
> C, C++:
>int intarr[5]
> How can I achieve this kind of behavior ?
Use a list and keep it of length 5.
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e whether
your hierarchy of numeric types includes a complex type or not.
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Walk into a room and make the / Whole interior inferior
-- Ice Cube
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t; Mathematica.
Note that cmath.sqrt returns the expected complex result for
cmath.sqrt(-1.0).
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Our purpose is to make the agony o
out that cmath.sqrt is what you want
if you really do want the complex result rather than the principal real one.
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Dear World: I am le
t;for w in words:
> yield w
>
> message = "%s %s %s %s"
>
> print message % SentenceGenerator()
>
> (I ask because the above doesn't work)?
Use tuple(SentenceGenerator()). A generator is just another object, so
using it with the % operator tries to sub
Tom Plunket wrote:
> Excellent. Thanks. Has this been around long? I "learned" Python in
> the 1.6 days iirc, but haven't done much except simple scripting with
> it since...
Yep. Been around since at least 1.5.x.
--
Erik Max Francis && [EMAIL PROTECTE
se::
aFormatString % anObject
is a shortcut for::
aFormatString % (anObject,)
so things like::
print "Your birthday is on %s" % date
are allowed. So when the object is an iterator, it's just treated as a
single value in a 1-tuple, rather than iterate
Donn Cave wrote:
> Tac-tics is right, an empty list is not False.
But that's not what he said. He said it was "not false." That's wrong.
It's false. It's just not False.
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riginal question
was, "The first one." Feel free to write it the other way with an
explicit test, but it's not Pythonic.
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alex23 wrote:
> The standard library module 'libcache' does exactly what you're
> considering implementing.
I believe the module you're referring to is `linecache`.
--
Erik Max Francis && [EMAIL PROTECTED] && http://www.alcyone.com/max/
Sa
Andre Meyer wrote:
> Am I missing something here? What is the preferred pythonic way of
> implementing singleton elegantly?
Create a class and then derive from it. There are examples on the Cookbook.
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Erik Max Francis && [EMAIL PROTECTED] && http://www.alcyone.com/ma
path will invariably be wrong. (Yes, for those about to nitpick, it's
conceivable that env might be somewhere other than /usr/bin. However,
that is very rare and results in a no-win situations regardless of the
issue of where Python is installed.)
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nX.Y would be a better choice. (Maybe
that's what you meant.)
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Never contend with a man who has nothing to lose.
-
h list comprehensions? Use reversed:
>>> t = (1, 2, 3)
>>> u = tuple(reversed(t))
>>> u
(3, 2, 1)
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Stephan Kuhagen wrote:
> Michał Bartoszkiewicz wrote:
>
>> #!/bin/sh
>> """exec" python "$0" "$@"""
>
> Wow, cool... I like that!
Only someone genuinely fond of the Tcl hack could ...
--
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evel
of a sh interpreter -- thereby, defeating the purpose?
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Only those who dare to fail greatly can ever achieve greatly.
-- Robert F. Kennedy
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the right thing but foil `file`,
intentionally or unintentionally -- just as we've seen in this thread.
The right way to approach this with `file` is to acknowledge that such
tricks are inherently sh-specific and leave it identified as a sh file.
Because that is, of course, exactly what it
's processing, which is what the
previously discussed tricks amount to.
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Punctuality is the virtue of the bored.
-- Evelyn Waugh
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rly not if almost all tcl-scripts are
> started that way.
The problem is that there are endless ways to do that, and figuring out
all the cases makes `file` an sh interpreter, not the magic number
detector it's supposed to be.
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Erik Max Francis && [EMAIL PROTECTED] && h
not having publicly-writable things in
your PATH. In other words, this is the argument for not putting things
like /tmp or . (because you might cd to somewhere publicly writable like
/tmp) in your PATH, not really for avoiding /usr/bin/env in hash bangs.
--
Erik Max Francis && [EMAIL P
KraftDiner wrote:
> myGlobalDictionary doesn't seem to be visible to my someClass methods.
> Why? What should I do?
Specify more clearly what is happening, what you wanted it to do, and
why you think it's wrong? You haven't given enough information.
--
Erik Max Franci
[4, 8, 10]
>
> Any hints?
>>> from itertools import izip
>>> a = [0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0]
>>> b = [2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12]
>>> [y for x, y in izip(a, b) if x == 1]
[4, 8, 10]
--
Erik Max Francis && [EMAIL PROTECTED] && http://www.alcyone.com/max/
Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> please relax and do not speak for all current and future readers
> (archives).
He may not be speaking for all of them, but he's speaking for the vast
majority. You are a consummate pest.
--
Erik Max Francis && [EMAIL PROTECTED] && http:/
Steve Holden wrote:
> I have to say I find the colour of your socks *much* more interesting.
Especially what with the skulls and all.
--
Erik Max Francis && [EMAIL PROTECTED] && http://www.alcyone.com/max/
San Jose, CA, USA && 37 20 N 121 53 W && AIM, Y!M e
SpreadTooThin wrote:
> Hi... Many python object can be printed simpy by saying:
> print obj
> what method(s) need to be implemented in my own classes such that print
> dumps the object?
__str__
--
Erik Max Francis && [EMAIL PROTECTED] && http://www.alcyone.com/max/
So, I'd really appreciate any hints as to where to look for anything a
> little more usable.
There's also ZOE:
http://www.alcyone.com/software/zoe/
but if a lack of documentation turned you off to VPython then ZOE is
probably not for you either.
--
Erik Max Francis &&
Ilias Lazaridis wrote:
> http://dabodev.com
> http://case.lazaridis.com/wiki/DaboAudit
Who. Cares. What. You. Think?
--
Erik Max Francis && [EMAIL PROTECTED] && http://www.alcyone.com/max/
San Jose, CA, USA && 37 20 N 121 53 W && AIM, Y!M erikmaxfran
David C. Ullrich wrote:
> Good example, because we know that EMF is not dumb. I've seen
> the same algorithm many times - the best example is ...
Man, an error made _six years ago_ and people are still bringing it up ...
--
Erik Max Francis && [EMAIL PROTECTED] &&
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> With all due respect to your well-deserved standing in the Python
> community, I'm not convinced that equality shouldn't imply invariance
> under identical operations.
Doo you really want
2 == 2.0
to be False?
--
Erik Max Francis
They actually wanted to talk about Python, not some
random other language that you're trying to learn that has nothing to do
with it ...
--
Erik Max Francis && [EMAIL PROTECTED] && http://www.alcyone.com/max/
San Jose, CA, USA && 37 20 N 121 53 W && AIM e
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