Thank you, but is it possible to get the original string from this?
Sander Sweers wrote:
On Mon, Feb 16, 2009 at 14:12, Norman Khine wrote:
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
import base64, urllib
data = 'hL/FGNS40fjoTnp2zIqq73reK60%3D%0A'
data = urllib.unq
On Mon, Feb 16, 2009 at 8:24 PM, Wayne Watson
wrote:
> I suspect I'm in need of setattr for this in a GUI program I'm modifying.
>
> Initally, a variable. self.stop_time is created as type datetime.time, with
> the default value 06:00:00, a time stamp, during entry into the mainloop.
> self.stop_
Title: Signature.html
Thanks for the tips. It's a 2000 line program, written by someone else.
I'm not fluent in Python, yet, but making good progress in implementing
new features. The various 'attr' facilities are a bit esoteric, but
look useful. The often found, by Google "x.foobar=123", exa
Greetings Tutor:
I've managed to install Python 2.6 on my Ubuntu VM from source, however, it
looks as though I missed something important along the way. My 2.6
interpreter does not have readline support (example: I cant hit up arrow to
repeat the last command) Is there a way to add this functionali
On Mon, Feb 16, 2009 at 8:24 PM, Wayne Watson
wrote:
> I suspect I'm in need of setattr for this in a GUI program I'm modifying.
>
> Initally, a variable. self.stop_time is created as type datetime.time, with
> the default value 06:00:00, a time stamp, during entry into the mainloop.
> self.stop_t
Title: Signature.html
I suspect I'm in need of setattr for this in a GUI program I'm
modifying.
Initally, a variable. self.stop_time is created as type datetime.time,
with the default value 06:00:00, a time stamp, during entry into the
mainloop. self.stop_time = datetime.time(10,10,10). The us
I am looking for a little instruction on how one would process a set of
parameters being sent to it through CGI. I have a script that sends info to
another script that lives on another server. The second script would then
process the information that is passed to it through a parameters list in a
Title: Signature.html
Good to hear there's nothing deeper in terms of some Python OOP
feature.
Thanks the global tips.
I think I'll be replacing some that sdict code, so that it's less
dependent upon hard coding the "user" variables.
Of course, it took me a lot longer than 2 minutes to put t
Title: Signature.html
My limited repertoire. Actually, there wasn't much of a traceback. It
came up in a small OK dialog. I copied what I could. I see my image I
used above did make it to the list, so here's the skinny.
I see Marc covered it with setattr. How does one do it with a
dictionary
Le Mon, 16 Feb 2009 12:01:24 -0800,
Marc Tompkins a écrit :
> On Mon, Feb 16, 2009 at 11:58 AM, Wayne Watson > wrote:
>
> > Python doesn't like the code in the Subject (unqualified exec not allowed
> > in function). but easily likes self.abc="22". However, I'd like to assemble
> > the assignme
"Wayne Watson" wrote
Python doesn't like the code in the Subject (unqualified exec
not allowed in function). but easily likes self.abc="22".
We'd need to see the code and traceback to guess why...
However, I'd like to assemble the assignment as a string,
as shown in Subject, and execute it
On Mon, Feb 16, 2009 at 11:58 AM, Wayne Watson wrote:
> Python doesn't like the code in the Subject (unqualified exec not allowed
> in function). but easily likes self.abc="22". However, I'd like to assemble
> the assignment as a string, as shown in Subject, and execute it. Is there a
> way to d
Title: Signature.html
Python doesn't like the code in the Subject (unqualified exec not
allowed in function). but easily likes self.abc="22". However, I'd like
to assemble the assignment as a string, as shown in Subject, and
execute it. Is there a way to do this?
--
Wayne Watson (
Bill Campbell wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 16, 2009, David wrote:
>
>> Bill Campbell wrote:
>>
>>> The ``swatch'' program, written in perl, does this by using the
>>> gnu-tail program via a pipe using.
>>>
>>> gtail --follow=name --lines=1 file1 file2 ...
>>>
>>> Use the source Luke.
>>>
>>>
You should look into Numpy or ScientificPython.
http://numpy.scipy.org
http://dirac.cnrs-orleans.fr/plone/software/scientificpython
Also, the main Python Wiki has a page devoted to numeric/scientific topics:
http://wiki.python.org/moin/NumericAndScientific
Cheers
On Monday 16 February 2009 12:3
Hello There
Any body who has implemented Newton–Raphson's method for nonlinear systems
of equations in python. Consider the case where we want to solve
simultaneously
f(x,y) = 0
g(x,y) = 0
Please assist with the code.
Regards
Jojo.
___
Tutor maillis
"Wayne Watson" wrote
The question here is how is sdict being used here in terms
of its need within the GUI? Probably if I had written the
program from scratch, I would have made all these
variables global to Sentinel_GUI.
Most programmers try to avoid global variables as a
general principle
"Bill Campbell" wrote
There is information on regular expressions in any book on python,
perl,
and other scripting languages. O'Reilly has a book ``Mastering
Regular
Expressions'' which is probably pretty good, but I have never read
it.
It is pretty much the definitive reference on regex.
On Mon, Feb 16, 2009, David wrote:
>Bill Campbell wrote:
>>
>> The ``swatch'' program, written in perl, does this by using the
>> gnu-tail program via a pipe using.
>>
>> gtail --follow=name --lines=1 file1 file2 ...
>>
>> Use the source Luke.
>>
...
>That looks like the right tool for the job
Title: Signature.html
I'm looking at some Tkinter GUI code that I did not write. I've about
completed work to add a read/write a configuration file of data of
values the users
have access to. I'm somewhat familiar with the techniques of OOP from
prior
use of many years ago with Java, C++, and X
Bill Campbell wrote:
>
> The ``swatch'' program, written in perl, does this by using the
> gnu-tail program via a pipe using.
>
> gtail --follow=name --lines=1 file1 file2 ...
>
> Use the source Luke.
>
> Bill
>
Thanks Bill,
That looks like the right tool for the job at hand. Looking at se
On Mon, 2009-02-16 at 09:38 -0500, bob gailer wrote:
> Lie Ryan wrote:
> > On Sun, 2009-02-15 at 21:29 +0100, tutor-requ...@python.org wrote:
> >
> >
> >> Do you know about sequence unpacking? In an assignment statement, when
> >> the right side is a sequence, the left side can be a list of vari
Lie Ryan wrote:
On Sun, 2009-02-15 at 21:29 +0100, tutor-requ...@python.org wrote:
Do you know about sequence unpacking? In an assignment statement, when
the right side is a sequence, the left side can be a list of variables
of the same length as the sequence. Then each sequence element is
a
On Mon, Feb 16, 2009 at 14:12, Norman Khine wrote:
> Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
import base64, urllib
data = 'hL/FGNS40fjoTnp2zIqq73reK60%3D%0A'
data = urllib.unquote(data)
print base64.decodestring(data)
> ???Ը???Nzv̊??z?+?
>
>
On Sun, 2009-02-15 at 21:29 +0100, tutor-requ...@python.org wrote:
> Do you know about sequence unpacking? In an assignment statement, when
> the right side is a sequence, the left side can be a list of variables
> of the same length as the sequence. Then each sequence element is
> assigned to one
Hello,
Can someone point me in the right direction. I would like to return the
string for the following:
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import base64, urllib
>>> data = 'hL/FGNS40fjoTnp2zIqq73reK60%3D%0A'
>>> data = urllib.unquote(data)
>>> print base
"Wayne Watson" wrote
If you ever get a chance to try the Moz experiment above,
I'd be interested in your reaction.
I no longer have Mozilla loaded - far too resource hungry.
I use IE, Firefox and Chrome plus occasionally Safari on my Mac.
All of them move bookmarks using simple drag n drop
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