Excellent all working good, thank you.
Regards, Jag BraveArt Multimedia
On Saturday, 2 May 2015, 22:28, Dave Angel wrote:
On 05/02/2015 04:36 AM, Peter Otten wrote:
> Jag Sherrington wrote:
> With that the calculation becomes
>
buns = 20
package_size = 8
whole_packa
Please use ReplyAll to include the list members.
Forwarded Message
Subject:Re: [Tutor] Adding consecutive numbers
Date: Wed, 6 May 2015 21:13:15 +1000
From: Whom Isac
To: Alan Gauld
Thanks for the reply. I am sorry that I did not notice the mail. I am
actu
Forwarded Message
Subject: Re: [Tutor] Adding consecutive numbers
Date: Wed, 6 May 2015 21:13:15 +1000
From: Whom Isac
To: Alan Gauld
I am actually using the latest version of python (3.5) in windows 7 operating
system.
Why are you using a version of Python
On 05/06/2015 12:02 AM, Jim Mooney Py3.4.3winXP wrote:
actually worked in windows instead of using their awful screen
copy. What a surprise:
Many people don't realize that you can turn on a better screen copy
feature for the CMD window (DOS box) in Windows.
I've given up Windows, and no lon
On 05/06/2015 07:51 AM, Alan Gauld wrote:
Please use ReplyAll to include the list members.
Forwarded Message
Subject: Re: [Tutor] Adding consecutive numbers
Date: Wed, 6 May 2015 21:13:15 +1000
From: Whom Isac
To: Alan Gauld
Thanks for the reply. I am sorr
Thanks, Steven. I think you are right about those mistake. But you could
tell that the code was incomplete so the interact() was not defined. I have
updated some parts (basically writing from the scratch). I am busy with a
new project and learning how to create GUI app in python, although there
are
On 06/05/15 15:01, Dave Angel wrote:
def adding_all(x):
total = 0
for num in x:
total +=num
return total
Good function.
Except for the fact that the built-in sum() function
does the same thing with a lot less typing...
--
Alan G
Author of the Learn to Program web si
I'm an admitted newb trying to enter the Python community and use Python
significantly (versus occassionally). dockets seems to be much more powerful
than I can figure out how to tap.
I have a function inside a file that's an embedded test that (currently) works
fine. However, the package has
On 5 May 2015 at 21:51, Mark Lawrence wrote:
> On 06/05/2015 05:30, Jim Mooney Py3.4.3winXP wrote:
>
>> On 5 May 2015 at 18:32, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
>>
>> https://code.activestate.com/recipes/577977-get-single-keypress/
>>>
>>
>>
>> That only has a stub for Linux, but I found one that does b
On 6 May 2015 at 10:41, Jim Mooney Py3.4.3winXP
wrote:
> I went a further step from the recipes linked to above and got here
>> https://pypi.python.org/pypi/readchar
>
>
> I think that's the one that failed for me
>
Addendum. That only failed in python 3.4. It worked fine in python 2.7 -
but I r
On 05/06/2015 01:41 PM, Jim Mooney Py3.4.3winXP wrote:
from msvcrt import *
while True:
if kbhit():
key = getch()
if key == b'\xe0' or key == b'\000':
print('special key follows')
key = getch()
print(str(key, encoding='utf-8')) #got
On 6 May 2015 at 14:08, Dave Angel wrote:
> I don't know why you would be expecting to get a utf-8 character for the
> second byte of a function key code. It's an entirely arbitrary byte
> sequence, and not equivalent to anything in Unicode, encoded or not
I just didn't think of accounting for
On Tue, May 05, 2015 at 09:30:12PM -0700, Jim Mooney Py3.4.3winXP wrote:
> On 5 May 2015 at 18:32, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
>
> > https://code.activestate.com/recipes/577977-get-single-keypress/
>
>
> That only has a stub for Linux,
Er, look again, more closely.
I happen to know the author ver
On Wed, May 06, 2015 at 03:24:20PM -0700, Jim Mooney Py3.4.3winXP wrote:
> On 6 May 2015 at 14:08, Dave Angel wrote:
>
> > I don't know why you would be expecting to get a utf-8 character for the
> > second byte of a function key code. It's an entirely arbitrary byte
> > sequence, and not equiva
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