-- Forwarded message --
From: "Rohan Ds"
Date: 2 Jan 2015 23:46
Subject: Newbie
To:
Cc:
Hello everybody :)
I am Rohan from India. I'm new to Python. I have a basic understanding as
to how Python works. I want to contribute to PSF. The information available
on
mentioning that. I'm pretty weak on bash, and had
monkeyed around with such things as set COLUMNS=500 on the previous line
in the shell program version, but hadn't actually looked up that syntax
yet, when I stumbled across the ps parameter that eventually I selected.
Thanks again.
ds
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;t know how to alter the set variable so
that it will stick long enough for the "ps ax" command to execute properly.
==
End of forwarded message part.
Finally, I have solved the problem, because I discovered a width option on the
ps command, which I hadn't been aware of before.
For example:
commands.getstatusoutput('ps ax -l --width 500')
works very well by over-riding any defaults.
Thanks for your help.
ds
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I've been trying to do something that I thought was going to be
relatively straight-forward, but so far I haven't found a good solution.
What I'm trying to do is discover a pid on a process and kill it. The
way that I thought that I could do it is something along the lines of:
import commands
p
Danny Yoo wrote:
>>I hate to admit it, but there are times when fear should be listened to,
>>and I think this is one of them. So, I guess I'll move on to parsing it
>>myself. Seems a shame though.
>>
>>
>
>Hi DS,
>
>Yeah, I'd reco
rexex and
>Bastion, became disabled as of python 2.3; that gives an indication of how
>difficult a problem it is to fix.
>
>http://www.python.org/doc/lib/restricted.html
>
>
>
I hate to admit it, but there are times when fear should be listened to,
and I think this is one
in some way that I don't understand.
Thanks for any guidance.
ds
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ntending to use, making it
seem a little wasteful. vmstat is much more focused on exactly the
information I want. Although I am using linux pretty much exclusively
these days, there's still a lot that I don't know and I wasn't aware
that it existed.
Thanks
ds
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so gnome libraries will not be an option.
At this point I'm going to go with vmstat.
Thanks
ds
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interesting idea to use that. Although if you have big jobs
and little jobs you might not know whether you can add another job to
that computer or not, because you would necessarily be attempting to
derive the utilization from those statistics.
Thank you both for your answers.
ds
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, I've been thinking I'd have the worker computer
shell out to perform the top command, parse the results, and report
those values to the job controller.
Is there a better way, or more pythonic, way to do this?
Thanks
ds
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You almost have it. Do this instead.
d = {'first':[]}
d['first'].append("string")
Append acts on the list, so assignment is unnecessary.
ds
Eric Walker wrote:
>All,
>I have a dictionary say:
>d = {'first':[]}
>I am going through another lis
All right! That's penetrated. Thanks very much.
ds
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l of the object
instances, if I ever had to do something like that. I just don't have a
clue as to why objects were designed this way.
Can anyone point me in the right direction?
Thanks
ds
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on't know 20 languages, computer or otherwise. I know
that I used some sort of thing like that in the 80's with Revelation, a
database/language derived from Pick. (That one is probably a little
obscure, it may not be on your list of 20). I also think you can do
that in Perl, but bear in
reading Python in a
>>Nutshell, prior to asking my questions here, I had thought that there
>>probably was, but I just wasn't grasping it.
>>
>>
>
>
>Hi DS,
>
>
>Modules can be thought of as containers for functions. As a concrete
>example, let
bob wrote:
> At 08:23 AM 9/29/2005, DS wrote:
>
>> bob wrote:
>>
>> > At 04:29 PM 9/28/2005, DS wrote:
>> >
>> >> What I'm hoping to avoid is an
>> >> explicit reference to any of the called functions within the program.
&g
bob wrote:
> At 04:29 PM 9/28/2005, DS wrote:
>
>> What I'm hoping to avoid is an
>> explicit reference to any of the called functions within the program.
>> By doing it that way, it would avoid a maintenance problem of having to
>> remember to put a refe
Danny Yoo wrote:
>
>
>>Thanks for answering my question. What I'm hoping to avoid is an
>>explicit reference to any of the called functions within the program.
>>By doing it that way, it would avoid a maintenance problem of having to
>>remember to put a reference for every new function in the
Thanks for answering my question. What I'm hoping to avoid is an
explicit reference to any of the called functions within the program.
By doing it that way, it would avoid a maintenance problem of having to
remember to put a reference for every new function in the calling program.
ds
function list,
3. executing the function
4. rinse, repeat.
I don't actually mind eval, but I would want to make sure I inspect
everything pretty thorougly before executing.
Thanks for any help you can give me.
ds
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xception handler that logs the
>>exception and continues. For example here is a loop that processes a list of
>>items, if there is an error processing an item a traceback is printed and the
>>processing continues:
I think yo
back to each called function until
it bubbles up to a point to be passed back to the user in some
meaningful way.
2. have a singleton error object updated.
3. ??
What do most people use? Is there any url that you could point me to
that would help educate me on this point?
Thanks
ds
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