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  • Python Web Applications: What is the way and the method to handle Registrations, Login-Logouts and Cookies? [on hold]

    - by Phil
    I am working on a simple Python web application for learning purposes. I have chosen a very minimalistic and simple framework. I have done a significant amount of research but I couldn't find a source clearly explaining what I need, which is as follows: I would like to learn more about: User registration User Log-ins User Log-outs User auto-logins I have successfully handled items 1 and 3 due to their simple nature. However, I am confused with item 2 (log-ins) and item 4 (auto-logins). When a user enters username and password, and after hashing with salts and matching it in the DB; What information should I store in the cookies in order to keep the user logged in during the session? Do I keep username+password but encrypt them? Both or just password? Do I keep username and a generated key matching their password? If I want the user to be able to auto-login (when they leave and come back to the web page), what information then is kept in the cookies? I don't want to use modules or libraries that handle these things automatically. I want to learn basics and why something is the way it is. I would also like to point out that I do not mind reading anything you might offer on the topic that explains hows and whys. Possibly with algorithm diagrams to show the process. Some information: I know about setting headers, cookies, encryption (up to some level, obviously not an expert!), request objects, SQLAlchemy etc. I don't want any data kept in a single web application server's store. I want multiple app-servers to be handle a user, and whatever needs to be kept on the server to be done with a Postgres/MySQL via SQLAlchemy (I think, this is called stateless?) Thank you.

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  • How safe is it to rely on thirdparty Python libs in a production product?

    - by skyler
    I'm new to Python and come from the write-everything-yourself world of PHP (at least this is how I always approached it). I'm using Flask, WTForms, Jinja2, and I've just discovered Flask-Login which I want to use. My question is about the reliability of using thirdparty libraries for core functionality in a project that is planned to be around for several years. I've installed these libraries (via pip) into a virtualenv environment. What happens if these libraries stop being distributed? Should I back up these libraries (are they eggs)? Can I store these libraries in my project itself, instead of relying on pip to install them in a virtualenv? And should I store these separately? I'm worried that I'll rely on a library for core functionality, and then one day I'll download an incompatible version through pip, or the author or maintainer will stop distributing it and it'll no longer be available. How can I protect against this, and ensure that any thirdparty libraries that I use in my projects will always be available as they are now?

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  • Which Language Next? Python? Ruby? [closed]

    - by Ryan Craig
    I am a beginning Webmaster (relatively), with 2+ years of php experience. I also have some java training and a bit of .net. My company is now close to redeveloping the website that I work on, which is coded primarily in php, but has some poorly-written .net in part as well (it's confusing and ill-planned, but I didn't make any of those decisions. Can anyone say action-oriented .net and JScript?). So, I'm trying to decide which language I should learn next to quickly develop a new site. I will probably just redevelop it at first in php because I'm very comfortable with it. However, I'd like to migrate in the next year to something newer and more forward-thinking. This being said, .net is out of the question a little bit. We need cheap developers who are fast and can get pages up quickly. In this part of the country, part-time .net developers are hard to find. So, we need something that will be pretty standard in the next few years, but we have some .net SOAP 1.1 APIs that we use on our actual service (separate from the corporate website), that we will need to integrate part of the site with. Developing with php and SOAP is much more difficult than doing the same thing. So, I may have to develop the API collaborative part in .net just to be easy, and then I'd like to use something else that is fast, flexible, forward thinking, and will be relatively standard and easy to find developers for. So, any ideas? Python and Django? Ruby on Rails? Another framework? Thanks for your thoughts. Sorry, I know this was long, but it's all very convoluted and confusing so I needed to be slightly long-winded.

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  • Installing Django on Shared Server: No module named MySQLdb?

    - by Mark
    I'm getting this error Traceback (most recent call last): File "/home/<username>/flup/server/fcgi_base.py", line 558, in run File "/home/<username>/flup/server/fcgi_base.py", line 1116, in handler File "/home/<username>/python/django/django/core/handlers/wsgi.py", line 241, in __call__ response = self.get_response(request) File "/home/<username>/python/django/django/core/handlers/base.py", line 73, in get_response response = middleware_method(request) File "/home/<username>/python/django/django/contrib/sessions/middleware.py", line 10, in process_request engine = import_module(settings.SESSION_ENGINE) File "/home/<username>/python/django/django/utils/importlib.py", line 35, in import_module __import__(name) File "/home/<username>/python/django/django/contrib/sessions/backends/db.py", line 2, in ? from django.contrib.sessions.models import Session File "/home/<username>/python/django/django/contrib/sessions/models.py", line 4, in ? from django.db import models File "/home/<username>/python/django/django/db/__init__.py", line 41, in ? backend = load_backend(settings.DATABASE_ENGINE) File "/home/<username>/python/django/django/db/__init__.py", line 17, in load_backend return import_module('.base', 'django.db.backends.%s' % backend_name) File "/home/<username>/python/django/django/utils/importlib.py", line 35, in import_module __import__(name) File "/home/<username>/python/django/django/db/backends/mysql/base.py", line 13, in ? raise ImproperlyConfigured("Error loading MySQLdb module: %s" % e) ImproperlyConfigured: Error loading MySQLdb module: No module named MySQLdb when I try to run this script on my shared server #!/usr/bin/python import sys, os sys.path.insert(0, "/home/<username>/python/django") sys.path.insert(0, "/home/<username>/python/django/www") # projects directory os.chdir("/home/<username>/python/django/www/<project>") os.environ['DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE'] = "<project>.settings" from django.core.servers.fastcgi import runfastcgi runfastcgi(method="threaded", daemonize="false") But, my web host just installed MySQLdb for me a few hours ago. When I run python from the shell I can import MySQLdb just fine. Why would this script report that it can't find it?

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  • Python module that implements ftps

    - by David Turner
    Hi People, I was wondering if anybody could point me towards a free ftps module for python. I am a complete newbie to python, but this is something I need for a work project. I need an ftps client to connect to a 3rd party ftps server. thanks, David.

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  • Speex in Python

    - by iKarampa
    How can I use Speex to encode/decode from within python? Are there any wrappers? I found an old project pySpeex but it is obsolete now (requires Python 2.2).

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  • Python 3.1, trying to unescape html/unicode/xml characters

    - by Sho Minamimoto
    I found my problem here, but there is only an answer for Python 2.6. Basically, I need to unescape strings such as this: 'a altieri_joão' to show the proper characters. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/990169/how-do-convert-unicode-escape-sequences-to-unicode-characters-in-a-python-string I need to do this in 3.1, but when I try print (u'a altieri_jo&#xe3;o') if gives me invalid syntax. And when I try name.decode('latin-1') it says 'str' has no method 'decode'.

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  • Potential annoyances of tab delimited Python source?

    - by user86432
    I want to start a new project, and I want this to be my first Python project. I was looking through the style guide, http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/, which "strongly recommends" using a 4-spaces indentation style for new projects. But I just hate this idea! In my opinion, tabs are better for this purpose. What annoyances could crop up one day if another developer wanted to work on my tab-delimited files?

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  • Python - retrieving info from a syslog file

    - by Johnny
    Ive been asked to do a program using python for an assignment. Ive been given a syslog file and I have to find things out about it How do I find out how many attempts were made to login to the root account? Any advice would be highly appreciated as Im very new to python an completely lost!

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  • Arguments, local variables, and global variables coding convention in Python

    - by prosseek
    In python, there is no way to differentiate between arguments, local variables, and global variables. The easy way to do so might be have some coding convention such as Global variables start with _ and capital letter arguments end with with _ _Gvariable = 10 def hello(x_, y_): z = x_ + y_ Is this a Pythonian way to go? I mean, is there well established/agreed coding-standards to differentiate them in python?

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  • Arguments, local variables, and global variables in Python

    - by prosseek
    In python, there is no way to differentiate between arguments, local variables, and global variables. The easy way to do so might be have some coding convention such as Global variables start with _ and capital letter arguments end with with _ _Global variable = 10 def hello(x_, y_): z = x_ + y_ Is this a Pythonian way to go? I mean, is there well established/agreed coding-standards to differentiate them in python?

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  • Kill process by name in python

    - by user353064
    Hello, I'm trying to kill a process (specifically iChat) using python. I know how to use the command: ps -A | grep iChat Then: kill -9 PID However, I'm not exactly sure how to translate these commands over to python. My guess is that it's not very difficult but I just don't know. Any help would be greatly appreciated!

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  • Set attributes from dictionary in python

    - by Oscar Reyes
    Is it possible to create an object from a dictionary in python in such a way that each key is an attribute of that object? Something like this: dict = { 'name': 'Oscar', 'lastName': 'Reyes', 'age':32 } e = Employee( dict ) print e.name # Oscar print e.age + 10 # 42 I think it would be pretty much the inverse of this question: Python dictionary from an object's fields

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  • Python Class which checks input before passing to console (C) program

    - by Joseph Melettukunnel
    Hello, We are asked to write a web-frontend (in python) for a very complex (and old) console application, written in C. Since we have no access to the C Source Code, and we assume that there might be some unsafe methods, we'd like to check the input which will the passed to the console application. WebClient - Python Module - Console Application Do you have any suggestions or tips what we should check for? Right now we are only limiting the string length and filtering some (program specific) unallowed keywords. Thanks, Joseph EDIT: Will remove strings like %s because of format string attacks

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  • Python regex group clarification

    - by nkr1pt
    I have 0 experience with python, very little with regex and I'm trying to figure out what this small snippet of python regex would give back from a http response header Set-Cookie entry: REGEX_COOKIE = '([A-Z]+=[^;]+;)' resp = urllib2.urlopen(req) re.search(REGEX_COOKIE, resp.info()['Set-Cookie']).group(1) Can one give a simple example of a Set-Cookie value and explain what this would match on + return? Regards

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  • Jython and python modules

    - by Geo
    I've just started using the PythonInterpreter from within my Java classes, and it works great! However, if I try to include python modules (re, HTMLParser, etc.), I'm receiving the following exception (for re): Exception in thread "main" Traceback (innermost last): File "", line 1, in ? ImportError: no module named re How could I make the classes from the jython jar "see" the modules python has available?

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  • Python 3 Gui Development?

    - by bunnyBEARZ
    Are there any good gui libraries for python 3 (NOT 2)? I would love to use tkinter but it's widgets are not native and it is extremely ugly in my opinion. I was wondering if there were any other gui libraries for python 3.

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  • Any 'pretty' data visualization libraries for Python?

    - by int3
    There are plenty of 'pretty-printing' visualization libraries for Javascript. E.g. those listed here. Googling for 'python visualization libraries' only turns up stuff like VTK and mayavi, which are primarily more for no-nonsense scientific use. So, do you know of any Python libraries similar to those Javascript ones in the above link? I particularly like the Javascript Infovis Toolkit.

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