On 24/03/13 12:18, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On 24/03/13 10:31, Phil wrote:
Actually, I didn't think there was any need to make any guesses since
"echo -e" is exclusively a Linux command.
Nonsense. Not only does echo exist as a command on any Unix, including
Apple Mac OS, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, Solar
Hi,
I'm looking for a tool like PySMB which can provide support for SMB 2.1.
Any references will be appreciated.
Thanks,
Pankaj
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On 24/03/13 10:31, Phil wrote:
Actually, I didn't think there was any need to make any guesses since "echo -e"
is exclusively a Linux command.
Nonsense. Not only does echo exist as a command on any Unix, including Apple
Mac OS, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, Solaris and others, it also exists on Windows
On 24/03/13 03:42, Bod Soutar wrote:
On Mar 23, 2013 2:24 AM, "Steven D'Aprano" mailto:st...@pearwood.info>> wrote:
>
> On 23/03/13 12:48, Phil wrote:
>>
>> Just out of curiosity how can a beep sound be generated?
>>
>> My interest in this came about because echo -e '\a' no longer works.
A
On 23/03/13 22:35, Edythe Thompson wrote:
Using Python 2.6.5
Mac OS X version 10.6.8
I want to run the PyNomo package that uses python.
This list is for learning core Python so you are probably better off
asking on a PyNomo forum or mailing list. Or at the very least the
MacPython list.
Ho
Using Python 2.6.5
Mac OS X version 10.6.8
I want to run the PyNomo package that uses python. I have followed the
instructions shown.
Install newest python (2.6.5 tested) [1]
Download and install latest Numpy for python 2.6.
Download and install latest Scipy
Install PIL (or skip, probably you w
On Mar 23, 2013 2:24 AM, "Steven D'Aprano" wrote:
>
> On 23/03/13 12:48, Phil wrote:
>>
>> Just out of curiosity how can a beep sound be generated?
>>
>> My interest in this came about because echo -e '\a' no longer works.
Also print '\a' doesn't work, presumably for the same reason. The following
On 03/23/2013 10:35 AM, Robert Sjoblom wrote:
As I said, I don't really understand why a roulette outcome has a name in
the first place, but given that it does, I don't any problem with comparing
the names directly. Still, I would probably write it as an __eq__ method,
since it's easier to write
> As I said, I don't really understand why a roulette outcome has a name in
> the first place, but given that it does, I don't any problem with comparing
> the names directly. Still, I would probably write it as an __eq__ method,
> since it's easier to write a == b than a.name == b.name.
I figured
> Does this help?
THANKS!! Yes it definately helped. everything is so much clearer now. i always
used to wonder about the u"" syntax in python 2___
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On 03/23/2013 12:08 AM, Robert Sjoblom wrote:
You already got lots of good answers. But I want to explicitly point
out a bug in your code (2 places) that was only indirectly mentioned.
class Outcome():
def __init__(self, name): #Ignoring odds for now
self.name = name
def
On 23/03/13 04:08, Robert Sjoblom wrote:
However, if I were to create a class without the __eq__ and __ne__
definitions, what is to prevent me from doing: a.name == b.name ? Or
am I missing something in my implementation of the overrides? Is there
a reason why I shouldn't do .name comparisons?
It is also good to know that overriding the "comparison magic methods" in
your class can be very useful if you wish to apply sorting/searching
procedures available in python.
If you also implement __gt__, __lt__, __ge__, __le__ in your class, then
you can append each of your objects to a list an
On 23/03/13 15:08, Robert Sjoblom wrote:
Hi list. I'll preface this by saying that I am very grateful for all
of you, and thank you in advance to anyone that answers.
I'm currently working on a roulette simulator, because it seemed like
fun. I found out I needed a way to compare two different ou
On 23/03/13 15:22, Lolo Lolo wrote:
You can use bytes() function:
bytes('%d' % 3, 'utf-8')
b'3'
-m
thanks this has solved everything. can i ask if this is an issue only in python
3 where sockets cant send strings? the docs state the argument is a string, but
i believe that was for 2.7
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