Search Results

Search found 19662 results on 787 pages for 'python module'.

Page 102/787 | < Previous Page | 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109  | Next Page >

  • python programme.

    - by siva
    hi, i am siva this is frist time taken the python programming language i have a small problem please help me the question is **Write two functions, called countSubStringMatch and countSubStringMatchRecursive that take two arguments, a key string and a target string. These functions iteratively and recursively count the number of instances of the key in the target string. You should complete definitions for def countSubStringMatch(target,key): and def countSubStringMatchRecursive (target, key): **

    Read the article

  • mkdir -p functionality in python

    - by SetJmp
    Is there a way to get functionality similar to mkdir -p on the shell... from within python. I am looking for a solution other than a system call. I am sure the code is less than 20 lines... really I am wondering if someone has already written it?

    Read the article

  • Gnuplot python with 2 list

    - by devil night
    I've a python script that gives me 2 lists and another who is the reference(the time). How can I create a graphic with the representation of my first list by the time. And same question for the second list. I need them on the same graphic. list1 [12, 15, 17, 19] list2 [34, 78, 54, 67] list3 [10, 20, 30, 40] (time in minutes) How can I create a graphic in png format with these lists? Thanks

    Read the article

  • Financial Charts / Graphs in Ruby or Python

    - by Eric the Red
    What are my best options for creating a financial open-high-low-close (OHLC) chart in a high level language like Ruby or Python? While there seem to be a lot of options for graphing, I haven't seen any gems or eggs with this kind of chart. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open-high-low-close_chart (but I don't need the moving average or Bollinger bands) JFreeChart can do this in Java, but I'd like to make my codebase as small and simple as possible. Thanks!

    Read the article

  • Python: Converting legacy string dates to dates

    - by Eric
    We have some legacy string dates that I need to convert to actual dates that can be used to perform some date logic. Converting to a date object isn't a problem if I knew what the format were! That is, some people wrote 'dd month yy', othes 'mon d, yyyy', etc. So, I was wondering if anybody knew of a py module that attempts to guess date formats and rewrites them in a uniform way? Any other suggestions? Thanks! :) Eric

    Read the article

  • Python datetime to Unix timestamp

    - by Off Rhoden
    I have to create an "Expires" value 5 minutes in the future, but I have to supply it in UNIX Timestamp format. I have this so far, but it seems like a hack. def expires(): '''return a UNIX style timestamp representing 5 minutes from now''' epoch = datetime.datetime(1970, 1, 1) seconds_in_a_day = 60 * 60 * 24 five_minutes = datetime.timedelta(seconds=5*60) five_minutes_from_now = datetime.datetime.now() + five_minutes since_epoch = five_minutes_from_now - epoch return since_epoch.days * seconds_in_a_day + since_epoch.seconds Is there a module or function that does the timestamp conversion for me?

    Read the article

  • python regex of a date in some text

    - by Horace Ho
    How can I find as many date patterns as possible from a text file by python? The date pattern is defined as: dd mmm yyyy ^ ^ | | +---+--- spaces where: dd is a two digit number mmm is three-character English month name (e.g. Jan, Mar, Dec) yyyy is four digit year there are two spaces as separators Thanks!

    Read the article

  • Python vs. Java performance (runtime speed)

    - by Bijan
    Ignoring all the characteristics of each languages and focusing SOLELY on speed, which language is better performance-wise? You'd think this would be a rather simple question to answer, but I haven't found a decent one. I'm aware that some types of operations may be faster with python, and vice-versa, but I cannot find any detailed information on this. Can anyone shed some light on the performance differences?

    Read the article

  • download mbox files over https using python

    - by VenkatS
    I was trying to find the right module for downloading kernel patches from kernel.org site For example,to download the file at https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/62948/mbox/ I understand urlgrabber has a problem with https on debian. urllib2 seems to have problem with this url as well (says getaddrinfo failed, even though there are no problems reaching other urls) Any help would be appreciated

    Read the article

  • assigning a list in python

    - by mekasperasky
    pt=[2] pt[0]=raw_input() when i do this , and give an input suppose 1011 , it says list indexing error- " list assignment index out of range" . may i know why? i think i am not able to assign a list properly . how to assign an array of 2 elements in python then?

    Read the article

  • Code Analysis In Python

    - by Jerub
    What tools are good to use for code analysis in python? I have a large source repository split across multiple projects, and I would like to be able to run tools across the directories to see details like Cyclomatic Complexity, and perhaps be able to spot errors using static analysis. Ideally, I would like to be able to produce a report about the health of the source code, so we can spot problem areas that need to be addressed.

    Read the article

  • python hbase exception

    - by kula
    when i use client.mutateRow(self.tableName, row, mutations) to write data to hbase . there is a exception, IOError: IOError(message="Trying to contact region server Some server, retryOnlyOne=true, index=0, islastrow=true, tries=9, numtries=10, i=0, listsize=1, region=test,,1276665207312 for region test,,1276665207312, row 'hello', but failed after 10 attempts.\nExceptions:\n") i use http://pypi.python.org/pypi/hbase-thrift/0.20.4 to write hbase. seems it is a library bug. anyone can help me ?

    Read the article

  • get city, state or zip from a string in python

    - by Joe
    I'd like to be able to parse out the city, state or zip from a string in python. So, if I entered Boulder, Co 80303 Boulder, Colorado Boulder, Co 80303 ... any variation of these it would return the city, state or zip. This is all going to be user inputted data and inputted in one text field.

    Read the article

< Previous Page | 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109  | Next Page >