Search Results

Search found 13534 results on 542 pages for 'python'.

Page 55/542 | < Previous Page | 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62  | Next Page >

  • python print end=' '

    - by Hath
    i have this python script where i need to run 'gdal_retile.py' but i get this an exception on this line: if Verbose: print(Building internam Index for %d tile(s) ..." % len(inputTiles), end=' ') the end='' is invalid syntax just curious as to why.. and what the author probably meant to do. I'm new to python if you haven't already guessed.

    Read the article

  • Python: Set window focus on terminal

    - by janoliver
    Hey, I have a python application that opens some plots for me and then asks the user for input. The problem is, that after opening the plot, the focus isn't on the terminal anymore, so you have to click or tab to it manually. I would like to set the focus to the terminal window with python - is that possible? I'm using gnuplot.py, maybe there is an option to open the plot in the background? Thanks!

    Read the article

  • Python | How to send a JSON response with name assign to it

    - by MMRUser
    How can I return an response (lets say an array) to the client with a name assign to it form a python script. echo '{"jsonValidateReturn":'.json_encode($arrayToJs).'}'; in this scenario it returns an array with the name(jsonValidateReturn) assign to it also this can be accessed by jsonValidateReturn[1],so I want to do the same using a python script. I tried it once but it didn't go well array_to_js = [vld_id, vld_error, False] array_to_js[2] = False jsonValidateReturn = simplejson.dumps(array_to_js) return HttpResponse(jsonValidateReturn, mimetype='application/json') Thanks.

    Read the article

  • Python package name conventions

    - by deamon
    Is there a package naming convention for Python like Java's com.company.actualpackage? Most of the time I see simple, potentially colliding package names like "web". If there is no such convention, is there a reason for it? What do you think of using the Java naming convention in the Python world?

    Read the article

  • Sending messages between two Python servers

    - by Will
    I have two servers - one Django, the other likely to be written in Python - and one is putting 'tasks' into a database and another is processing these tasks. They share a database, but I want the processor to react quickly to new tasks rather than polling periodically. Are there any straightforward ways for two Python servers to talk to one another, or does the task processor have to have web-hooks or something? It feels there ought to be a blessed way to do this...

    Read the article

  • python on 32 bit

    - by Mponnada
    Hi I am running Windows XP, on 32bit. How do I install python? When I run the installation file, it gives me an error saying "installation package not supported by processor type" does python need 64 bit to execute?

    Read the article

  • why am i getting an error SyntaxError : invalid syntax for this code

    - by eragon1189
    This is a code in python which calculates f (x) =? ((-1)*x)/(x*x+n*n) n from 1 to infinite.... correct to 0.0001, for the range 1 < x < 100 in steps of 0.1.But i am getting an syntax error,as i am new to programming in python... from scipy import * from matplotlib.pyplot import * x=arange(0.1,100,0.1) f=zeros(len(x)) s=-1 for n in range (1,10000): t=s*x/(x*x+n*n) f +=t s =-s if max(abs(t))< 1e-4 break for xx in c_[x,f]: print "%f %f" % (xx[0],xx[1])

    Read the article

  • getting previously typed commands in python

    - by womble
    I'm using python 2.5 in windows on a macbook pro with IDLE. How do I get previously typed commands in the python shell? In other operating systems I've managed to do this using 'ctrl' + 'up arrow' or a similar combination. I've tried all likely combinations without success. Thanks.

    Read the article

  • multi threading python/ruby vs java?

    - by fayer
    i wonder if the multi threading in python/ruby is equivalent to the one in java? by that i mean, is it as efficient? cause if you want to create a chat application that use comet technology i know that you have to use multi threading. does this mean that i can use python or ruby for that or is it better with java? thanks

    Read the article

  • Is it possible to use os.walk over SSH?

    - by LeoB
    I'm new to Python so forgive me if this is basic, I've searched but can't find an answer. I'm trying to convert a Perl script into Python (3.x) which connects to a remote server and copies the files in a given directory to the local machine. Integrity of the transfer is paramount and there are several steps built-in to ensure a complete and accurate transfer. The first step is to get a complete listing of the files to be passed to rsync. The Perl script has the following lines to accomplish this: @dir_list = `ssh user@host 'find $remote_dir -type f -exec /bin/dirname {} \\;'`; @file_list = `ssh user@host 'find $remote_dir -type f -exec /bin/basename {} \\;'`; The two lists are then joined to create $full_list. Rather than open two separate ssh instances I'd like to open one and use os.walk to get the information using: for remdirname, remdirnames, remfilesnames in os.walk(remotedir): for remfilename in remfilesnames: remfulllist.append(os.path.join(remdirname, remfilename)) Thank you for any help you can provide.

    Read the article

  • catch output from linux telnet to a python script

    - by sandra
    Hello. My problem is that i want to do something like this in linux console telnet 192.168.255.28 process.py i.e i would like to do some transformation with console telnet output using python script. I'm see Popen in python for this case, but i can't understand how can i get input from telnet if it do not stop all time.. Pleas any ideas.

    Read the article

  • XSD editor with the ability to write plugins in Python

    - by Tomasz Zielinski
    I'm writing a Python module for parsing XSD for very specific purpose. Currently it's a console program, but ideally I would see it plugged inside some XSD editor - not only for convenience of end users, but also for fetching XSD parsed into Python objects - this would save me days or weeks of work. Is there any such editor on the market?

    Read the article

  • Python and MySQL

    - by omfgroflmao
    Is there an easy way (without downloading any plugins) to connect to a MySQL database in Python? Also, what would be the difference from calling a PHP script to retrieve the data from the database and hand it over to Python and importing one of these third-parties plugins that requires some additional software in the server.

    Read the article

  • Python/Ruby IDE (Windows)?

    - by Lee Tang
    Are there any Windows IDEs that support both Ruby and Python? I'm talking about the type of IDE that has syntax suggestions (auto-completion feature). I've tried Netbeans but it only seems to support Ruby (maybe there's a way to add Python support?)

    Read the article

  • Why is i++++++++i valid in python?

    - by SysAdmin
    I "accidentally" came across this weird but valid syntax i=3 print i+++i #outputs 6 print i+++++i #outputs 6 print i+-+i #outputs 0 print i+--+i #outputs 6 (for every even no: of minus symbol, it outputs 6 else 0, why?) Does this do anything useful? Update (Don't take it the wrong way..I love python): One of Python's principle says There should be one-- and preferably only one --obvious way to do it. It seems there are infinite ways to do i+1

    Read the article

  • C++ Arrays manipulations (python-like operations)

    - by Linai
    Hi Guys, I'm trying to figure out the best C++ library/package for array manipulations in a manner of python. Basically I need a simplicity like this: values = numpy.array(inp.data) idx1 = numpy.where(values > -2.14) idx2 = numpy.where(values < 2.0) res1 = (values[idx1] - diff1)/1000 res1 = (values[idx2] - diff2)*1000 In python it's just 5 lines, but the simplest way in C++ i can think of is quite a number of nested loops. Pls advise..

    Read the article

  • python copytree with negated ignore pattern

    - by Chris H
    I'm trying to use python to copy a tree of files/directories. is it possible to use copytree to copy everything that ends in foo? There is an ignore_patterns patterns function, can I give it a negated regular expression? Are they supported in python? eg. copytree(src, dest, False, ignore_pattern('!*.foo')) Where ! means NOT anything that ends in foo. thanks.

    Read the article

< Previous Page | 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62  | Next Page >