> There seem to loads of python frameworks for Web-Apps, but I have a hard
> time finding one for desktop-apps.
> I imagine it wouldn't be too hard (if still time consuming) whipping up
> something simple myself, but I thought, I'd ask here before diving into it.
Sounds like you should look at DAB
> It often happened in the past that patches were admitted which don't
> simultaneously update the documentation, hence they diverge. These
> days, patches are regularly rejected for not providing proper
> documentation changes.
Nevertheless, the docs *ARE* old and poorly maintained. Sometimes yo
> PythonWare complements the digest you're reading with the
> marvelous daily python url
> http://www.pythonware.com/daily
Ha, ha, ha...
That is a good joke!
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On 22 Jul, 18:29, "John Simeon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi there. I had an old computer at my disposal and decided to put it to use
> by setting up a nostalgia project with DOS and Windows for Workgroups 3.11.
> gcc -c -fno-strict-aliasing -DNDEBUG -g -O3 -Wall -Wstrict-prototypes -I.
> -I./I
> Well, I ran Process Monitor with some filters enabled to only watch
> Thunderbird and MS Word. Unfortunately, that didn't give me any of the
> registry edits, so I disabled my filters and ran it without. Now I
> have a log file with 28,000 entries. It's amazing to see all the stuff
> that happens
On 19 Jul, 05:52, Gordon Airporte <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have some code which relies on running each line of a file through a
> large number of regexes which may or may not apply.
Have you read and understood what MULTILINE means in the manual
section on re syntax?
Essentially, you can ma
On 18 Jul, 14:02, "Sells, Fred" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I need to talk to a vendor side via SOAP, Googling is overwhelming and many
> hits seem to point to older attempts.
>
> Can someone tell me which SOAP module is recommended. I'm using Python 2.4.
If you are doing this inside the enterp
On 15 Jul, 04:30, "Sebastian Bassi" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> In my CSV file, the first line has the name of the variables. So the
> data I want to parse resides from line 2 up to the end. Here is what I
> do:
>
> import csv
> lines=csv.reader(open("MYFILE"))
> lines.next() #this is just
On 22 Jul, 18:56, John Nagle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Is there something available that will parse the "netloc" field as
> returned by URLparse, including all the hard cases? The "netloc" field
> can potentially contain a port number and a numeric IP address. The
> IP address may take man