Search Results

Search found 34110 results on 1365 pages for 'gdata python client'.

Page 110/1365 | < Previous Page | 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117  | Next Page >

  • python: sending information between two scripts

    - by Peter
    I have two Python scripts in two different locations and cannot be moved. What is the best way to send information between the two scripts? say for example in script1.py i had a string e.g. x = 'teststring' then i need variable 'x' passed to script2.py, which saves the variable 'x' to a text file? Any ideas?

    Read the article

  • Copy an entity in Google App Engine datastore in Python

    - by Gordon Worley
    In a Python Google App Engine app I'm writing, I have an entity stored in the datastore that I need to retrieve, make an exact copy of it (with the exception of the key), and then put this entity back in. How should I do this? In particular, are there any caveats or tricks I need to be aware of when doing this so that I get a copy of the sort I expect and not something else.

    Read the article

  • python set difference

    - by user1311992
    I'm doing a set difference operation in Python: from sets import Set from mongokit import ObjectId x = [ObjectId("4f7aba8a43f1e51544000006"), ObjectId("4f7abaa043f1e51544000007"), ObjectId("4f7ac02543f1e51a44000001")] y = [ObjectId("4f7acde943f1e51fb6000003")] print list(Set(x).difference(Set(y))) I'm getting: [ObjectId('4f7abaa043f1e51544000007'), ObjectId('4f7ac02543f1e51a44000001'), ObjectId('4f7aba8a43f1e51544000006')] I need to get the first element for next operation which is important. How can I retain the list x in original format?

    Read the article

  • quick and dirty client/server communication in Silverlight

    - by Mark
    I'm building a few small prototypes in Silverlight and have quite a bit of .NET experience, but Ive never had the need to contact the server from Silverlight. Im really just after a really quick solution for the purposes of prototyping and I'll be needing to call the server and do a few things, like server a generated image from the server, receive basic responses from the server, but nothing too fancy. Is .NET RIA Services the best way to do this or is it overkill? The documentation for RIA Services is huge, 1 hour long video introductions, 26-part series blogs, etc... seems like its overkill. Is there a quick REST based project I could create, or should RIA services be the way to go?

    Read the article

  • Python - Launch a Long Running Process from a Web App

    - by Greg
    I have a python web application that needs to launch a long running process. The catch is I don't want it to wait around for the process to finish. Just launch and finish. I'm running on windows XP, and the web app is running under IIS (if that matters). So far I tried popen but that didn't seem to work.

    Read the article

  • Determine precision and scale of particular number in Python

    - by jrdioko
    I have a variable in Python containing a floating point number (e.g. num = 24654.123), and I'd like to determine the number's precision and scale values (in the Oracle sense), so 123.45678 should give me (8,5), 12.76 should give me (4,2), etc. I was first thinking about using the string representation (via str or repr), but those fail for large numbers: >>> num = 1234567890.0987654321 >>> str(num) = 1234567890.1 >>> repr(num) = 1234567890.0987654

    Read the article

  • Problem with list slice syntax in python

    - by Dingle
    The extended indexing syntax is mentioned in python's doc. slice([start], stop[, step]) Slice objects are also generated when extended indexing syntax is used. For example: a[start:stop:step] or a[start:stop, i]. See itertools.islice() for an alternate version that returns an iterator. a[start:stop:step] works as described. But what about the second one? How is it used?

    Read the article

  • Python style: multiple-line conditions in IFs

    - by Eli Bendersky
    Hello, Sometimes I break long conditions in IFs to several lines. The most obvious way to do this is: if (cond1 == 'val1' and cond2 == 'val2' and cond3 == 'val3' and cond4 == 'val4'): do_something Isn't very very appealing visually, because the action blends with the conditions. However, it is the natural way using correct Python indentation of 4 spaces. Edit: By the way, for the moment I'm using: if ( cond1 == 'val1' and cond2 == 'val2' and cond3 == 'val3' and cond4 == 'val4'): do_something Not very pretty, I know :-) Can you recommend an alternative way ?

    Read the article

  • Proper indentation for Python multiline strings

    - by ensnare
    What is the proper indentation for Python multiline strings within a function? def method: string = """line one line two line three""" or def method: string = """line one line two line three""" or something else? It looks kind of weird to have the string hanging outside the function in the first example. Thanks.

    Read the article

  • python command line yes/no input

    - by h3
    Is there any short way to achieve what APT does in Python ? I mean, when the package manager prompts a yes/no question followed by "[Yes/no]". The scripts accepts YES/Y/yes/y or "enter" (defaults to Yes as hinted by the capital) The only thing I find in the official doc is input/raw_input.. I know it's not that hard to emulate, but it's annoying to rewrite :|

    Read the article

  • Print one word from a string in python

    - by Shai
    Hi, How can i print only certain words from a string in python ? lets say i want to print only the 3rd word (which is a number) and the 10th one while the text length may be different each time mystring = "You have 15 new messages and the size is 32000" thanks.

    Read the article

  • Abstract attributes in Python

    - by deamon
    What is the shortest / most elegant way to implement the following Scala code with an abstract attribute in Python? abstract class Controller { val path: String } A subclass of Controller is enforced to define "path" by the Scala compiler. A subclass would look like this: class MyController extends Controller { override val path = "/home" }

    Read the article

  • Start app from within python

    - by Aaron Hoffman
    Hello, I'm trying to start an application using Python. I've seen that some people use startfile but I also read that it only works with Windows. I'm using Mac systems and hoping for it to work with them. Thanks, Aaron

    Read the article

  • Python tkInter text entry validation

    - by meade
    I'm trying to validate the entry of text using Python/tkInter def validate_text(): return False text = Entry(textframe, validate="focusout", validatecommand=validate_text) where validate_text is the function - I've tried always returning False and always returning True and there's no difference in the outcome..? Is there a set of arguments in the function that I need to include? Edit - changed from NONE to focusout...still not working

    Read the article

  • in Python find number of same elements in 2 lists

    - by John
    Hi, In Python if I have 2 lists say: l1 = ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'] l2 = ['c', 'd', 'e'] is there a way to find out how many elements they have the same. In the case about it would be 2 (c and d) I know I could just do a nested loop but is there not a built in function like in php with the array_intersect function Thanks

    Read the article

  • python django automated data addition

    - by zubin71
    I have a script which reads data from a csv file. I need to store the data into a database which has already been created as $ python manage.py syncdb so, that automated data entry is possible in an easier manner, as available in the django shell.

    Read the article

  • symbols in command line argument.. python, bash

    - by Idlecool
    Hi, I am writing a python script on Linux for twitter post using API, Is it possible to pass symbols like "(" ")" etc in clear text without apostrophes.... % ./twitterupdate this is me #works fine % ./twitterupdate this is bad :(( #this leaves a error on bash. Is the only alternative is to enclose the text into -- "" ?? like.. % ./twitterupdate "this is bad :((" #this will reduce the ease of use for the script Is there any workaround?

    Read the article

  • What's the logical value of "string" in python?

    - by Kamran
    I erroneously wrote this code in python: name = input("what is your name?") if name == "Kamran" or "Samaneh": print("That is a nice name") else: print("You have a boring name ;)") It always prints out "That is a nice name" even when the input is neither "Kamran" nor "Samaneh". Am I correct in saying that it considers "Samaneh" as a true? why? By the way, I already noticed my mistake. The correct form is: if name == "Kamran" or name == "Samaneh":

    Read the article

  • python - remove string from words in an array

    - by tekknolagi
    #!/usr/bin/python #this looks for words in dictionary that begin with 'in' and the suffix is a real word wordlist = [line.strip() for line in open('/usr/share/dict/words')] newlist = [] for word in wordlist: if word.startswith("in"): newlist.append(word) for word in newlist: word = word.split('in') print newlist how would I get the program to remove the string "in" from all the words that it starts with? right now it does not work

    Read the article

< Previous Page | 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117  | Next Page >