On 14/06/14 22:06, street.swee...@mailworks.org wrote:
With the stat command in GNU coreutils, I can get a file's
modification time, with timezone offset.
gotten close with os.path.getmtime and os.stat, for example
2014-02-03T14:48:17. But, no timezone offset.
os.stat returns the mtime as s
On 14/06/14 13:53, diliup gabadamudalige wrote:
Say if I have a lot of Lists, strings and variables used to carry data
to and from various functions why can't I have a class with all these in
it?
You can but it should also have the functions that operate on the data
too. Thats the point of cl
With the stat command in GNU coreutils, I can get a file's
modification time, with timezone offset. For example, the
output of "stat -c %y *" looks like
2014-02-03 14:48:17.0 -0200
2014-05-29 19:00:05.0 -0100
What I want to do is get the mtime in ISO8601 format, and I've
On Friday, 13 June 2014, 12:45, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Fri, Jun 13, 2014 at 12:51:25PM +0530, diliup gabadamudalige wrote:
> Hi All!
> Hope everyone is
well.
>
> In my code there are many dictionaries and lists which are used in various
> functions. Is it better/pythonic/efficient
On Sat, Jun 14, 2014 at 06:23:08PM +0530, diliup gabadamudalige wrote:
> Say if I have a lot of Lists, strings and variables used to carry data to
> and from various functions why can't I have a class with all these in it?
Of course you *can*, but you *should not*. Read on...
[...]
> so I decla
Thank you all for those great clarifications. I learnt a lot from these.
My roots in programming are from the early 80s and with a gap of nearly 30
years till I restarted again last year in March with Python. :) So some of
the new concepts like classes are a bit alien to me but I am catching on.
I