"adam urbas" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in
> I'm not sure when to indent. I understand that it has to be done.
Ok, But you need to understand *why* it has to be done.
To do that you need to understand the basic constructs
of programming: sequences, branches, loops and modules.
(these are descri
"adam urbas" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
> Hi all,I was just wondering how I would go about
> performing a square root thing, for my radiacir.py program.
There is a sqrt function in the math module.
import math
print math.sqrt(9)
Math has a lot of other common mathematical functions
in it too
* adam urbas (Sun, 27 May 2007 23:42:01 -0500)
> You don't know what a Ti 83 is. Calculator. The most basic programming
> available. It already has so many functions built into it that it is much
> easier to tell it to do things. You don't have to do all this integer
> conversion and such wh
adam urbas wrote:
> Very frustrating. What is a non-int and what is 'str'? Why can't it
> multiply the sequence? I guess I should include the program I'm using
> for these things.
These are more examples of the same kinds of errors you have been having.
Values in Python have a type. Some ex
Is it possible to create a closed source project in Python? Like in C++
or something, where they can't view your code?
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* Sophie Marston (Mon, 28 May 2007 09:56:45 +0100)
> Is it possible to create a closed source project in Python? Like in C++
> or something, where they can't view your code?
Google for "Python code obfuscation" (web and comp.lang.python)
Thorsten
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On 5/28/07, Thorsten Kampe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Do you really think someone can or will read what you wrote? I've
> never seen something so horribly formatted like you emails - and I've
> seen lots of awful formatted emails...
Looks fine at my end.
--
- Rikard - http://bos.hack.org/cv/
* Rikard Bosnjakovic (Mon, 28 May 2007 17:55:42 +0200)
> On 5/28/07, Thorsten Kampe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Do you really think someone can or will read what you wrote? I've
> > never seen something so horribly formatted like you emails - and I've
> > seen lots of awful formatted emails...
>
"Sophie Marston" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
> Is it possible to create a closed source project in Python? Like in
> C++
> or something, where they can't view your code?
Partially. It is usually possible to reverse engineer the code
but it won''t look as pretty as the original nor will it necessa
Alan Gauld wrote:
> Most commercial mainframe programs are 'closed source'
> but they include a source code listing so that the
> operations teams can figfure out whats going wrong in
> the event of an abend (ABnormal END - mainframe speak
> for a crash!)
>
Ah that brings back fond memories. In
I would recomend you take a look at Alan Gauld's tutor. That is what got me
started and I was able to catch on fairly quick even with little to no
programming experience.
http://www.freenetpages.co.uk/hp/alan.gauld
On 5/28/07, Alan Gauld <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
"adam urbas" <[EMAIL PROTECT
Hi !
I've noticed I'm not the only total newbie around. I would suggest reading 'Beginning Python: from Novice to Professional'. It's available on the Net (somewhere in the python.org beginners forums). This book may be for beginners, but doesn't assume you're a moron. The author is very clear, pro
"Alan Gauld" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
> use Jython and compile to JVM code which is easily reverse
> engineered into Jaba, but not so easily into Python!
Erm, that would of course be Java and nothing to do
with Star Wars, no matter how much I may dislike
Java! :-)
Alan G.
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