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On Fri, Sep 19, 2014 at 11:04 AM, Danny Yoo wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 4:36 PM, Art Pelletier wrote:
> >
> > I am a beginner with pythons programming I would like to see if their
> is a site that has samples programs that I can practice on
I have a custom class called Game, and it has a variable called "goals". I'd
like to make this a list of custom objects, with various information about the
goals.
class Game: goals = {} class Goal(object): def
__init__(self,time,goal_by,assist_by,team,is_powerplay ):
Kate Reeher Wrote in message:
> I have a custom class called Game, and it has a variable called "goals". I'd
> like
> to make this a list of custom objects, with various information about the
> goals.
> class Game:
> goals = {}
That's a class attribute; the others below are instance
a
I'm ramping slowly unfortunately. How does one go about knowing which module
to import to make certain functions work? I have a read() that fails because
there is no definition for it. I am using the Wing IDE. I have traversed
much of the developer's guide and can't find any certainty.
Secondar
Hey all, hope everyone is well.
I am trying to write a script that automates a certain task I have recently
found myself doing a lot lately.
The command I need to run is "BYPASSROOT=yes
./octosetupBROADCASTER-linux_i386.bin"
I know how to use subprocess to execute the "./octosetup..." command
> The command I need to run is "BYPASSROOT=yes
> ./octosetupBROADCASTER-linux_i386.bin"
Semantically, the command above means:
execute "./octosetupBROADCASTER-linux_i386.bin" in an environment
that binds BYPASSROOT to "yes".
The subprocess.Popen command takes in an optional "env" argument,
On Sat, Sep 20, 2014 at 3:20 PM, Clayton Kirkwood wrote:
> I’m ramping slowly unfortunately. How does one go about knowing which module
> to import to make certain functions work? I have a read() that fails because
> there is no definition for it.
Specific details may help here. Can you tell us
>> Secondarily, why can you import a module without it importing all of its
>> daughters?
>
> The act of importing a module is "recursive": if you import a module,
> and that module itself has import statements, then Python will do the
> import of the child modules too. And so forth.
Hi Deb,
Oh!
Hi Clayton, and welcome.
My responses are interleaved between your questions below.
On Sat, Sep 20, 2014 at 03:20:09PM -0700, Clayton Kirkwood wrote:
> I'm ramping slowly unfortunately. How does one go about knowing which module
> to import to make certain functions work?
Experience, practice, r
Hi Kate, and welcome!
My replies are interleaved between your questions.
On Fri, Sep 19, 2014 at 04:25:50PM -0500, Kate Reeher wrote:
> I have a custom class called Game, and it has a variable called
> "goals". I'd like to make this a list of custom objects, with various
> information about t
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