On Sun, 18 Oct 2020 12:19:18 -0600, Michael Torrie wrote:
> Python certainly is procedural. A script starts at the top and executes
> through to the bottom and ends, barring any flow control in the middle.
> Like Perl you can use it in many different ways and paradigms including
&g
ules which are not compatible with
Perl6 or "Roku"
as it is known.
--
Mladen Gogala
Database Consultant
http://mgogala.byethost5.com
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
> On Oct 22, 2020, at 5:51 PM, Pasha Stetsenko wrote:
>
> Dear Python gurus,
>
> I'm a maintainer of a python library "datatable" (can be installed from
> PyPi), and i've been recently trying to debug a memory leak that occurs in
> my library.
>
but YMMV.
>
> Maxime
Thank you. I am a YAPN (yet another Python newbie) and this helps me a
lot.
--
Mladen Gogala
Database Consultant
http://mgogala.byethost5.com
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
if I need
> to stop the code for any reason, I can't gather current data and the text
> file is blank. I'm not as familiar with buffering and things like that and
> tried "outputFile = open("./outputFile.txt", "a", 0)" but that gave me the
> erro
s, when they do.
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 2020-10-31, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Sat, Oct 31, 2020 at 1:51 PM Jon Ribbens via Python-list
> wrote:
>>
>> On 2020-10-31, Stefan Ram wrote:
>> > Siddhharth Choudhary writes:
>> >>I want to know why x+=1 does not return the value of the variable.
simple problem to solve unless I misunderstand
it. Elegance aside, what would be wrong with this approach.
- Read a word at a time in a loop from the file of dictionary words
(non-Python meaning of dictionary.) For each one do the following, perhaps
using a function:
Break the current word into a
loops within, albeit it may
be implemented in a compiled language like C++.
I did not write out my algorithm in Python but have done it for myself. It
runs fast enough with most of the time spent in the slow I/O part.
We can agree all algorithms have to read in all the words in a data file.
There
My comments at end:
-Original Message-
From: Python-list On
Behalf Of duncan smith
Sent: Wednesday, November 4, 2020 1:09 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Find word by given characters
On 04/11/2020 04:21, Avi Gross wrote:
> Duncan, my comments below yours at
inter import ttk
ttk = sys.modules['tkinter'].ttk
All of these 3 things set local variables/names in your script to some
value. The "*" import sets a bunch of variables.
Cheers,
Cameron Simpson
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
?
The builtin ‘open’ function is defined in the io streams module. I presume the
builtin open(‘file’, ‘r’) returns an io.TextIOWrapper object. And maybe the
readlines method just isn’t documented?
Just curious and lazy.
thanks,
Karen
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
ion is active.
Why is jedi not updated.
(I cannot uninstall jedi, because it is used by ipython.)
--
Cecil Westerhof
Senior Software Engineer
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/cecilwesterhof
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Dear Sir/Madam,I am trying to install python on my laptop with windows 7, 32
bit operating system with service pac 1 installed. I have installed python
3.7.1 and some more versions but while opening the command prompt always it is
showing the message as :The above program can’t start because
Hi,
I had uninstalled and installed Python in Windows 10 but I am getting the error
below. Can you please help ?
C:\Users\mchak>pythonFatal Python error: init_sys_streams: can't initialize sys
standard streamsPython runtime state: core initializedAttributeError: module
'io'
1. The command 'py' doesn't work. It gives me the error below :
C:\Users\mchak>pyFatal Python error: init_sys_streams: can't initialize sys
standard streamsPython runtime state: core initializedAttributeError: module
'io' has no attribute 'open'
Curren
Hi Terry,
1. The command py doesn't work. It gives me the error below :
C:\Users\mchak>pyFatal Python error: init_sys_streams: can't initialize sys
standard streamsPython runtime state: core initializedAttributeError: module
'io' has no attribute 'open'
Curre
Hi,
I have solved the issue by updating the Environment variables, now I am able to
launch 'py' from the command prompt. However, I can't launch 'python' from
command prompt. I am also encountering an issue when I try to execute the
'python' command from co
Thanks - I am able to launch 'py' from the command prompt and it gives me the
python versions installed in my machine from python.org website.
However, when I am trying to execute a python program from command prompt, I am
getting the error below. I had reinstalled python packa
09:27:00 PM GMT, Barry
wrote:
Two observations.
Python.exe is not on your PATH. But that does not matter as you can use the py
command instead
And nymph may not be available for python 3.9 yet. Check on pypi to see if
there is a build for 3.9.
Maybe use 3.8 for the time being.
Barry
&
On 05/12/2020 09:17, Dan Stromberg wrote:
On Fri, Dec 4, 2020 at 12:01 PM dn via Python-list
mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
On 05/12/2020 07:57, Arthur R. Ott wrote:
...
> Microsoft Windows [Version 10.0.19042.630]
> (c) 2020 Microsoft Corp
Good day,"
I purchased a book for my son and followed the directions to a T. (Coding Games
in Python)
Whenever I got to the point of of moving the "hello" file over to pgzrun is
where my trouble began.
Its not finding a path because I'm getting this "pgzrun is not reco
t;notes.err", "a") as err:
> traceback.print_exc(file=err)
> raise
>
> since print_exc() can go fetch the exception via sys.exc_info().
... but even if you do think you want "except BaseException:" or
"except:", you almost never actually do - you almost certainly want
"except Exception:", because the former two will stop sys.exit()
from working, or the user from pressing ctrl-C.
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
s, it
unwinds easily and only in low probability cases look for an abrupt exit.
And for a really abrupt exit, there is a way to shut down the program very
abruptly perhaps even too abruptly.
-Original Message-
From: Python-list On
Behalf Of Dieter Maurer
Sent: Saturday, December 12, 2020
else default. Nothing in that docstring
suggests that the default value is evaluated even if the key exists, and I
can't think of any good reason to do so.
Am I missing something?
Thanks,
Mark
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Storchaka
wrote:
15.12.20 19:07, Mark Polesky via Python-list пише:
> # Running this script
>
> D = {'a':1}
> def get_default():
> print('Nobody expects this')
> return 0
> print(D.get('a', get_default()))
>
>
environment and may use
different functions/methods if on one kind of machine or OS or version of
python than another. Ideally you would need to know the profile for the
build you are on. And with interpreted languages, some are not so much built
ahead of time as assembled as they go. Loading an alternate
can change your code to specifically handle only those you have some
idea what to do about. As mentioned, you have traceback info that may help you
figure out where the exceptions come from or even why.
Good luck.
-Original Message-
From: Python-list On
Behalf Of Chris Green
Sent
strings but, of course, as noted by Chris, to
really validate that an address works might require sending something and
validating a human replied and that can be quite task.
-Original Message-
From: Python-list On
Behalf Of Chris Angelico
Sent: Monday, December 28, 2020 2:24 PM
To
.
Dropping out, ...
-Original Message-
From: Python-list On
Behalf Of Chris Angelico
Sent: Monday, December 28, 2020 8:02 PM
To: Python
Subject: Re: Which method to check if string index is queal to character.
On Tue, Dec 29, 2020 at 10:08 AM Avi Gross via Python-list
wrote:
>
> This
On 1/1/21 11:46 AM, Bob van der Poel wrote:
> When I run python from the command line and generate an error I get the
> following:
>
> Python 3.8.5 (default, Jul 28 2020, 12:59:40)
> [GCC 9.3.0] on linux
> Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or &q
a guess as to why I had a .local tree (nope, I did
>> not create
>> it ... I don't think!).
>>
>
> That is where "python3.8 -m pip install --user" puts the packages
> you install.
>
> Barry
>
>
>
> Okay ... I'll
On 1/2/21 9:39 AM, Bob van der Poel wrote:
>
>
> On Fri, Jan 1, 2021 at 12:17 PM DL Neil via Python-list
> mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>
> On 1/2/21 6:35 AM, Bob van der Poel wrote:
> > Found it!
>
> Well done!
>
>
> &
Hi,
This is a python app I was working on, can you help making it a beautiful
looking app like bleachbit or ccleaner?
The whole code below (what it does: it lists all folders and files from a
specified path and tells some infos like size in mb or gb... and export it to a
csv file for further
any way to attach a file because I loose indentation?
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
n.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
ray5",highlightbackground="HoneyDew3",
highlightcolor="HoneyDew3", highlightthickness=1)
frm22.place(width=150, height=40, x=820, y=220)
### button
btn_FileRen = tk.Button(frm22, text="Files rename", bg='lightblue4',
font=("Verdana", 10,"normal"))
btn_FileRen.pack(expand = 1, fill ="both",padx=0, pady=0)
### BUTTON BROWSE entry fx BASIC LISTING
btn_FileRen['command'] = fx_FileRen
###
### FRAME 23 LABEL FOLDERS RENAME
frm23 = tk.Frame(frm20, bg="gray5",highlightbackground="HoneyDew3",
highlightcolor="HoneyDew3", highlightthickness=1)
frm23.place(width=775, height=100, x=20, y=320)
# Top label title
tk.Label(frm23,text ="Rename folders only from csv file below", font=("Tahoma",
14, "normal"), fg='gray80', bg='gray5').place(x=20, y=10)
### LABEL PATH entry box
tk.Label(frm23, text="CSV file path", fg='gray80', bg='gray5').place(x=20, y=55)
# TEST FOLDER
full_path = os.path.realpath(__file__)
new_text = os.path.dirname(full_path) + os.sep + 'csv_folder' + os.sep +
"csvtxt_1_foldernamelisting.csv"
# vtxt_path2.set(new_text)
### PATH ENTRY BOX
vtxt_path3=tk.StringVar(root, value=new_text) # Value saved here
txt_path3 = tk.Entry(frm23,width=43, textvariable=vtxt_path3,
fg='brown').place(width=620, height=30, x=140, y=50)
# TEST FOLDER zzz
###
### FRAME 24 BUTTON FOLDERS RENAME
frm24 = tk.Frame(frm20, bg="gray5",highlightbackground="HoneyDew3",
highlightcolor="HoneyDew3", highlightthickness=1)
frm24.place(width=150, height=40, x=820, y=345)
### button
btn_FoldRen = tk.Button(frm24, text="Folders rename", bg='brown',
font=("Verdana", 10,"normal"))
btn_FoldRen.pack(expand = 1, fill ="both",padx=0, pady=0)
### BUTTON BROWSE entry fx BASIC LISTING
btn_FoldRen['command'] = fx_FoldRen
###///...///...///...///...///###
# TAB 3 #
###///...///...///...///...///###
###///...///...///...///...///###
# zZZZz #
###///...///...///...///...///###
if __name__ == '__main__':
root.mainloop()
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
ray5",highlightbackground="HoneyDew3",
highlightcolor="HoneyDew3", highlightthickness=1)
frm22.place(width=150, height=40, x=820, y=220)
### button
btn_FileRen = tk.Button(frm22, text="Files rename", bg='lightblue4',
font=("Verdana", 10,"normal"))
btn_FileRen.pack(expand = 1, fill ="both",padx=0, pady=0)
### BUTTON BROWSE entry fx BASIC LISTING
btn_FileRen['command'] = fx_FileRen
###
### FRAME 23 LABEL FOLDERS RENAME
frm23 = tk.Frame(frm20, bg="gray5",highlightbackground="HoneyDew3",
highlightcolor="HoneyDew3", highlightthickness=1)
frm23.place(width=775, height=100, x=20, y=320)
# Top label title
tk.Label(frm23,text ="Rename folders only from csv file below", font=("Tahoma",
14, "normal"), fg='gray80', bg='gray5').place(x=20, y=10)
### LABEL PATH entry box
tk.Label(frm23, text="CSV file path", fg='gray80', bg='gray5').place(x=20, y=55)
# TEST FOLDER
full_path = os.path.realpath(__file__)
new_text = os.path.dirname(full_path) + os.sep + 'csv_folder' + os.sep +
"csvtxt_1_foldernamelisting.csv"
# vtxt_path2.set(new_text)
### PATH ENTRY BOX
vtxt_path3=tk.StringVar(root, value=new_text) # Value saved here
txt_path3 = tk.Entry(frm23,width=43, textvariable=vtxt_path3,
fg='brown').place(width=620, height=30, x=140, y=50)
# TEST FOLDER zzz
###
### FRAME 24 BUTTON FOLDERS RENAME
frm24 = tk.Frame(frm20, bg="gray5",highlightbackground="HoneyDew3",
highlightcolor="HoneyDew3", highlightthickness=1)
frm24.place(width=150, height=40, x=820, y=345)
### button
btn_FoldRen = tk.Button(frm24, text="Folders rename", bg='brown',
font=("Verdana", 10,"normal"))
btn_FoldRen.pack(expand = 1, fill ="both",padx=0, pady=0)
### BUTTON BROWSE entry fx BASIC LISTING
btn_FoldRen['command'] = fx_FoldRen
###///...///...///...///...///###
# TAB 3 #
###///...///...///...///...///###
###///...///...///...///...///###
# zZZZz #
###///...///...///...///...///###
if __name__ == '__main__':
root.mainloop()
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
e').place(width=620, height=30, x=140, y=50)
# TEST FOLDER zzz
###
### FRAME 22 TOP BUTTON FILE RENAME
frm22 = tk.Frame(frm20, bg="gray5",highlightbackground="HoneyDew3",
highlightcolor="HoneyDew3", highlightthickness=1)
frm22.place(width=150, height=40, x=820, y=220)
### button
btn_FileRen = tk.Button(frm22, text="Files rename", bg='lightblue4',
font=("Verdana", 10,"normal"))
btn_FileRen.pack(expand = 1, fill ="both",padx=0, pady=0)
### BUTTON BROWSE entry fx BASIC LISTING
btn_FileRen['command'] = fx_FileRen
###
### FRAME 23 LABEL FOLDERS RENAME
frm23 = tk.Frame(frm20, bg="gray5",highlightbackground="HoneyDew3",
highlightcolor="HoneyDew3", highlightthickness=1)
frm23.place(width=775, height=100, x=20, y=320)
# Top label title
tk.Label(frm23,text ="Rename folders only from csv file below", font=("Tahoma",
14, "normal"), fg='gray80', bg='gray5').place(x=20, y=10)
### LABEL PATH entry box
tk.Label(frm23, text="CSV file path", fg='gray80', bg='gray5').place(x=20, y=55)
# TEST FOLDER
full_path = os.path.realpath(__file__)
new_text = os.path.dirname(full_path) + os.sep + 'csv_folder' + os.sep +
"csvtxt_1_foldernamelisting.csv"
# vtxt_path2.set(new_text)
### PATH ENTRY BOX
vtxt_path3=tk.StringVar(root, value=new_text) # Value saved here
txt_path3 = tk.Entry(frm23,width=43, textvariable=vtxt_path3,
fg='brown').place(width=620, height=30, x=140, y=50)
# TEST FOLDER zzz
###
### FRAME 24 BUTTON FOLDERS RENAME
frm24 = tk.Frame(frm20, bg="gray5",highlightbackground="HoneyDew3",
highlightcolor="HoneyDew3", highlightthickness=1)
frm24.place(width=150, height=40, x=820, y=345)
### button
btn_FoldRen = tk.Button(frm24, text="Folders rename", bg='brown',
font=("Verdana", 10,"normal"))
btn_FoldRen.pack(expand = 1, fill ="both",padx=0, pady=0)
### BUTTON BROWSE entry fx BASIC LISTING
btn_FoldRen['command'] = fx_FoldRen
###///...///...///...///...///###
# TAB 3 #
###///...///...///...///...///###
###///...///...///...///...///###
# zZZZz #
###///...///...///...///...///###
if __name__ == '__main__':
root.mainloop()
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
ks, I'm going to try
As alternative, I pasted it into github and pasted it back into this page, it's
ok when pasting but when posting it fails keeping spaces... Until I can find a
way to do it, this is the github link
https://github.com/barpasc/listfiles/blob/main/pyFilesGest_6B18.py
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
tried
sending a few times and it seemed it didn't work when refreshing the google
group discussion page. However, just looking now at the discussion through
emails, shows indentation right. I'm using firefox. I'll try using chromium for
later posts if that makes things easier.
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Monday, January 11, 2021 at 2:07:03 PM UTC, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 12, 2021 at 1:01 AM pascal z via Python-list
> wrote:
> >
> > On Monday, January 11, 2021 at 1:45:31 PM UTC, Greg Ewing wrote:
> > > On 12/01/21 1:12 am, pascal z wrote:
> >
c = (n ^ (n - 1)).bit_count() - 1
return bc, n >> bc
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
owers_of_2_in(n // 2)
return 1 + s, r
--8<---cut here---end--->8---
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
>> --8<---cut here---end--->8---
>
> for n = 0 your function get stack overflow
That's right. Let's say ``assert n > 0'' before we say ``if''.
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Sun, 3 Dec 2023 at 10:25, Julieta Shem via Python-list
wrote:
>
> Alan Bawden writes:
> >
> > def powers_of_2_in(n):
> > bc = (n ^ (n - 1)).bit_count() - 1
> > return bc, n >> bc
>
> That's pretty fancy and likely the fastest.
It might b
without `bound_arg`
* `getfullargspec` to `follow_wrapper_chains`
* `signature` to include `bound_arg`.
Regards,
DG
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
> On 4 Dec 2023, at 02:29, Dom Grigonis via Python-list
> wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> I have a request.
>
> Would it be possible to include `follow_wrapper_chains` and `skip_bound_arg`
> arguments to higher level functions of `inspect` module?
>
> Would expos
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hacker%27s_Delight>.
- Alan
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
he program readability point of view it would be good to have a
Python module with the values in it but using a Python program to
write/update a Python module sounds a bit odd somehow.
I could simply write the values to a file (or a database) and I
suspect that this may be the best answer but it
On 12/5/23 07:37, Chris Green via Python-list wrote:
Is there a neat, pythonic way to store values which are 'sometimes'
changed?
My particular case at the moment is calibration values for ADC inputs
which are set by running a calibration program and used by lots of
programs which d
> On 5 Dec 2023, at 14:37, Chris Green via Python-list
> wrote:
>
> Are there any Python modules aimed specifically at this sort of
> requirement?
I tend to use JSON for this type of thing.
Suggest that you use the options to pretty print the json that is saved so that
a hu
On 12/6/23 03:37, Chris Green via Python-list wrote:
Is there a neat, pythonic way to store values which are 'sometimes'
changed?
My particular case at the moment is calibration values for ADC inputs
which are set by running a calibration program and used by lots of
programs which d
Apologies: neglected suggested web.refs:
https://datagy.io/python-environment-variables/
https://pypi.org/project/json_environ/
--
Regards =dn
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 12/5/2023 11:50 AM, MRAB via Python-list wrote:
On 2023-12-05 14:37, Chris Green via Python-list wrote:
Is there a neat, pythonic way to store values which are 'sometimes'
changed?
My particular case at the moment is calibration values for ADC inputs
which are set by running a c
Thomas Passin wrote:
> On 12/5/2023 11:50 AM, MRAB via Python-list wrote:
> > On 2023-12-05 14:37, Chris Green via Python-list wrote:
> >> Is there a neat, pythonic way to store values which are 'sometimes'
> >> changed?
> >>
> >> My part
27;t like the proliferation of markup formats
> of this type. So while I don't know exactly what TOML is, I figure it
> must be bad.
>
> I sometimes use ast.literal_eval though it is Python specific.
>
That's interesting, I'll add it to my armoury anyway. :-)
> Of c
Thank you everyone for all the suggestions, I now have several
possibilities to follow up. :-)
--
Chris Green
·
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 2023-12-06 at 09:32:02 +,
Chris Green via Python-list wrote:
> Thomas Passin wrote:
[...]
> > Just go with an .ini file. Simple, well-supported by the standard
> > library. And it gives you key/value pairs.
> >
> My requirement is *slightly* more complex t
> On 6 Dec 2023, at 09:32, Chris Green via Python-list
> wrote:
>
> My requirement is *slightly* more complex than just key value pairs,
> it has one level of hierarchy, e.g.:-
>
>KEY1:
> a: v1
> c: v3
> d: v4
>KEY2:
>
n application-specific configuration directory).
Or an .ini file with two sections (although I don't think you can re-use
key-names in a single ini file)
--
|_|O|_|
|_|_|O| Github: https://github.com/dpurgert
|O|O|O| PGP: DDAB 23FB 19FA 7D85 1CC1 E067 6D65 70E5 4CE7 2860
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 12/6/2023 6:35 AM, Barry Scott via Python-list wrote:
On 6 Dec 2023, at 09:32, Chris Green via Python-list
wrote:
My requirement is *slightly* more complex than just key value pairs,
it has one level of hierarchy, e.g.:-
KEY1:
a: v1
c: v3
d: v4
KEY2:
a
On 12/6/2023 1:12 PM, MRAB via Python-list wrote:
On 2023-12-06 12:23, Thomas Passin via Python-list wrote:
On 12/6/2023 6:35 AM, Barry Scott via Python-list wrote:
On 6 Dec 2023, at 09:32, Chris Green via Python-list
wrote:
My requirement is *slightly* more complex than just key value
Python 3.12.1 is now available.
https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-3121/
This is the first maintenance release of Python 3.12
Python 3.12 is the newest major release of the Python programming language,
and it contains many new features and optimizations. 3.12.1 is the latest
er valid sensor test strip Reading.")
I converted the variable to int along with the if statement comparison and it
works as expected.
See if it fails for you...
Steve
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
user can enter any text, they might enter ".01" or "hello" or al kinds of
nonsense.
If you converted to numbers and tested whether it failed, ...
-Original Message-
From: Python-list On
Behalf Of Steve GS via Python-list
Sent: Saturday, December 9, 2023 9:42 PM
To: pyth
On 12/9/2023 9:42 PM, Steve GS via Python-list wrote:
If I enter a one-digit input or a three-digit number, the code works but if I
enter a two digit number, the if statement fails and the else condition
prevails.
tsReading = input(" Enter the " + Brand + " tes
;:0, 'name':'BowProp Volts'}
It's effectively a 'table' with columns named 'dev', 'input' and
'name' and I want to access the values of the table using the variable
name.
I could, obviously, store the data in a database (sqlite), I have some
similar data in a database already but the above sort of format in
Python source is more human readable and accessible. I'm just looking
for a less laborious way of entering it really.
--
Chris Green
·
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
', 'dev':'bbb', 'input':'0', 'name':'Starter volts'},
{'abbr':'la', 'dev':'bbb', 'input':'2', 'name':'Leisure Amps'},
{'abbr':'sa', 'dev':'bbb', 'input':'3', 'name':'Starter Amps'},
{'abbr':'bv', 'dev':'adc2', 'input':0, 'name':'BowProp Volts'}
]
This pickles nicely, I just want an easy way to enter the data!
> I could, obviously, store the data in a database (sqlite), I have some
> similar data in a database already but the above sort of format in
> Python source is more human readable and accessible. I'm just looking
> for a less laborious way of entering it really.
>
--
Chris Green
·
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 2023-12-11, Chris Green via Python-list wrote:
> Is there a way to abbreviate the following code somehow?
>
> lv = {'dev':'bbb', 'input':'1', 'name':'Leisure volts'}
> sv = {'dev':'bbb',
#x27;input':'1', 'name':'Leisure volts'},
> {'abbr':'sv', 'dev':'bbb', 'input':'0', 'name':'Starter volts'},
> {'abbr':'la', 'dev':'bbb', 'input':'2', 'name':'Leisure Amps'},
> {'abbr':'sa', 'dev':'bbb', 'input':'3', 'name':'Starter Amps'},
> {'abbr':'bv', 'dev':'adc2', 'input':0, 'name':'BowProp Volts'}
> ]
>
> This pickles nicely, I just want an easy way to enter the data!
adccfg = [
dict(zip(('abbr', 'dev', 'input', 'name'), row))
for row in (
('lv', 'bbb', '1', 'Leisure volts'),
('sv', 'bbb', '0', 'Starter volts'),
('la', 'bbb', '2', 'Leisure Amps'),
('sa', 'bbb', '3', 'Starter Amps'),
('bv', 'adc2', 0, 'BowProp Volts'),
)
]
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
', 'name':'Starter volts'},
> > {'abbr':'la', 'dev':'bbb', 'input':'2', 'name':'Leisure Amps'},
> > {'abbr':'sa', 'dev':'bbb', 'input':'3', 'name':'Starter Amps'},
> > {'abbr':'bv', 'dev':'adc2', 'input':0, 'name':'BowProp Volts'}
> > ]
> >
> > This pickles nicely, I just want an easy way to enter the data!
>
> adccfg = [
> dict(zip(('abbr', 'dev', 'input', 'name'), row))
> for row in (
> ('lv', 'bbb', '1', 'Leisure volts'),
> ('sv', 'bbb', '0', 'Starter volts'),
> ('la', 'bbb', '2', 'Leisure Amps'),
> ('sa', 'bbb', '3', 'Starter Amps'),
> ('bv', 'adc2', 0, 'BowProp Volts'),
> )
> ]
Neat, I like that, thank you.
--
Chris Green
·
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
#x27;dev':'adc2', 'input':0, 'name':'BowProp Volts'}
It's effectively a 'table' with columns named 'dev', 'input' and
'name' and I want to access the values of the table using the variable
name.
I could
now more of a
curiosity as I did use the
integer comparisons.
SGA
-Original Message-
From: Python-list
On
Behalf Of dn via Python-list
Sent: Sunday, December 10,
2023 12:53 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: A problem with
str VS int.
On 10/12/23 15:42, Steve GS
via Python-list
it every time.
If this is inappropriate to
post this here, please tell me
where to go.
Life should be so
complicated.
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Op 12/12/2023 om 9:22 schreef Steve GS via Python-list:
With all these suggestions on
how to fix it, no one seems to
answer why it fails only when
entering a two-digit number.
One and three work fine when
comparing with str values. It
is interesting that the
leading 0 on a two digit
worked
Roel,
I sent a similar reply in private to someone who may not be listening as their
mind is made up. This points to a serious problem with people not testing
hypotheses adequately.
Perhaps for homework, we can assign a request for a Python program that creates
a random sample of quite a few
Hi!
Am Di., 12. Dez. 2023 um 09:28 Uhr schrieb Steve GS via Python-list
:
>
> Maybe this already exists but
> I have never seen it in any
> editor that I have used.
You might want to choose Microsoft Code from its Visual Studio family
of software, or, if you're ready for a dee
On 2023-12-12 08:22, Steve GS via Python-list wrote:
> Maybe this already exists but
> I have never seen it in any
> editor that I have used.
>
> It would be nice to have a
> pull-down text box that lists
> all of the searches I have
> used during this session. It
&g
On 12/12/23 13:50, Thomas Passin via Python-list wrote:
On 2023-12-12 08:22, Steve GS via Python-list wrote:
> Maybe this already exists but
> I have never seen it in any
> editor that I have used.
>
> It would be nice to have a
> pull-down text box that lists
> all o
Does anything from the Visual Studio family of software have a pull down menu
that lists previous searches so that I don’t have to enter them every time?
SGA
-Original Message-
From: Friedrich Romstedt
Sent: Tuesday, December 12, 2023 12:52 PM
To: Steve GS
Cc: [email protected]
'DbParams']). But I would still like
an answer to the original question, as I am sure similar situations will
occur without such a simple solution.
Thanks
Frank Millman
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
ince I imagine config_database() would accept any kind of mapping
(dicts, etc etc).
Cheers,
Cameron Simpson
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
during test.
* Fix #208: handle deprecation removals in Python 3.13.
* Fix #209: use legacy version implementation for Python versions.
A more detailed change log is available at [2].
Please try it out, and if you find any problems or have any suggestions for
improvements, please give some
ource code repository is at [1].
Documentation is available at [5].
As always, your feedback is most welcome (especially bug reports [3],
patches and suggestions for improvement, or any other points via this group).
Enjoy!
Cheers
Vinay Sajip
[1] https://github.com/vsajip/python-gnupg
[2]
On 12/13/23 00:19, Frank Millman via Python-list wrote:
I have to add 'import configparser' at the top of each of these modules
in order to type hint the method.
This seems verbose. If it is the correct way of doing it I can live with
it, but I wondered if there was an easier way.
ke a TLS
> syslog handler but don’t seem to have been maintained for a long time. For a
> feature like this, it makes sense to have it in core python rather than an
> unmaintained package.
Feedback and bug reports are very welcome.
Thanks,
Tammy
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hello,
I would like to point to my Python Packaging Tutorial explaining several
common use cases using minimal demo projects.
<https://codeberg.org/buhtz/tech-demo-python-packaging>
I am not an expert and assume that some of my solutions might not be the
best. So I would appreciate
On 12/13/2023 11:17 AM, Mats Wichmann via Python-list wrote:
On 12/13/23 00:19, Frank Millman via Python-list wrote:
I have to add 'import configparser' at the top of each of these
modules in order to type hint the method.
This seems verbose. If it is the correct way of doing it
Hello,
I always install Python on Windows in the same manner:
- Python is not on the path,
- it is installed for all users,
- the Python Launcher is installed for all users,
- the file types .py, .pyw etc. are associated with Python.
My shebang line is usually "#!/usr/bin/env python3&qu
Am 22.12.2023 um 14:13 schrieb Barry:
On 22 Dec 2023, at 12:39, Sibylle Koczian via Python-list
wrote:
Hello,
I always install Python on Windows in the same manner:
- Python is not on the path,
- it is installed for all users,
- the Python Launcher is installed for all users,
- the file
On 22/12/2023 13.36, Sibylle Koczian wrote:
Hello,
I always install Python on Windows in the same manner:
- Python is not on the path,
- it is installed for all users,
- the Python Launcher is installed for all users,
- the file types .py, .pyw etc. are associated with Python.
My shebang line
What is the "command line" on your Windows 11?
On Windows 10 it usually is "cmd.exe" (Windows Command Prompt).
On Windows 11 it usually is the "Terminal" which is different from
cmd.exe.
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
ks parameter in the is_dir, is_file, ... methods.
--
Antoon Pardon.
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Antoon,
On 12/23/23 01:00, Antoon Pardon via Python-list wrote:
I am writing a program that goes through file hierarchies and I am mostly
using scandir for that which produces DirEntry instances.
At times it would be usefull if I could make my own DirEntry for a specific
path, however when I
On 12/22/2023 7:36 AM, Sibylle Koczian via Python-list wrote:
Hello,
I always install Python on Windows in the same manner:
- Python is not on the path,
- it is installed for all users,
- the Python Launcher is installed for all users,
- the file types .py, .pyw etc. are associated with Python
On 12/22/2023 9:29 AM, Sibylle Koczian via Python-list wrote:
Am 22.12.2023 um 14:13 schrieb Barry:
On 22 Dec 2023, at 12:39, Sibylle Koczian via Python-list
wrote:
Hello,
I always install Python on Windows in the same manner:
- Python is not on the path,
- it is installed for all
On 12/22/23 11:42, Thomas Passin via Python-list wrote:
> There is some important context that is missing here. Python on Windows
> does not normally install to that location. That is not even a Windows
> path, neither by directory name nor by path separators.
No, that's just
On 12/22/23 07:02, Thomas Passin via Python-list wrote:
> On my Windows 10 machine, Python scripts run without a shebang line.
> Perhaps Windows 11 has added the ability to use one, but then you would
> need to use the actual location of your Python executable.
Yes if you associate .p
On 12/22/2023 7:19 PM, Barry wrote:
On 23 Dec 2023, at 00:15, Thomas Passin via Python-list
wrote:
In neither case is the shebang line used.
As i understand it, not in front of my windows box to check.
The handler for .py file extension is set to be the py.exe
It is py.exe that
4801 - 4900 of 6693 matches
Mail list logo