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  • meaning of the returned list of python json

    - by fmsf
    Hey, I'm new to python so I really don't know the language very well. the following example was taken from here http://docs.python.org/library/json.html >>> import json >>> json.loads('["foo", {"bar":["baz", null, 1.0, 2]}]') [u'foo', {u'bar': [u'baz', None, 1.0, 2]}] what does the u mean? and how do i know which elements are available in the dictionary?

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  • Base 62 conversion in Python

    - by mikl
    How would you convert an integer to base 62 (like hexadecimal, but with these digits: '0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ'). I have been trying to find a good Python library for it, but they all seems to be occupied with converting strings. The Python base64 module only accepts strings and turns a single digit into four characters. I was looking for something akin to what URL shorteners use.

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  • More nest Python nested dictionaries.

    - by clutch
    After reading http://stackoverflow.com/questions/635483/what-is-the-best-way-to-implement-nested-dictionaries-in-python why is it wrong to do: c = collections.defaultdict(collections.defaultdict(int)) in python? I would think this would work to produce {key:{key:1}} or am I thinking about it wrong?

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  • How to read postgresql dump file in Python

    - by xorsyst
    I'd like my Python script to read some data out of a postgresql dump file. The Python will be running on a system without postgresql, and needs to process the data in a dump file. It looks fairly straightforward to parse the CREATE TABLE calls to find the column names, then the INSERT INTO rows to build the contents. But I'm sure there would be quite a few gotchas in doing this reliably. Does anyone know of a module which will do this?

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  • Equivalent of Backticks in Python

    - by Chris Bunch
    What is the equivalent of the backticks found in Ruby and Perl in Python? That is, in Ruby I can do this: foo = `cat /tmp/baz` What does the equivalent statement look like in Python? I've tried os.system("cat /tmp/baz") but that puts the result to standard out and returns to me the error code of that operation.

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  • How to pick a chunksize for python multiprocessing with large datasets

    - by Sandro
    I am attempting to to use python to gain some performance on a task that can be highly parallelized using http://docs.python.org/library/multiprocessing. When looking at their library they say to use chunk size for very long iterables. Now, my iterable is not long, one of the dicts that it contains is huge: ~100000 entries, with tuples as keys and numpy arrays for values. How would I set the chunksize to handle this and how can I transfer this data quickly? Thank you.

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  • python 'self' explained

    - by richzilla
    What is the purpose of the 'self' word in python. I understand it refers to the specific object created from that class, but i cant see why it explicitly needs to be added to very function as a parameter. To illustrate, in ruby, i could do this: class myClass def myFunc(name) @name = name end end Which i understand, quite easily, However in python i need to include self: class myClass: def myFunc(self, name): self.name = name Can anyone talk me through this? Any help would be appreciated.

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  • install python modules on shared web hosting

    - by Ali
    I am using a shared hosting environment that will not give me access to the command line. Can I download the python module on my computer, compile it using python setup.py installand then simply upload a .py file to the web host? If yes, where does the install statement place the compiled file?

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  • copy files to nework path or Drive using python

    - by user218976
    hi , Mine is similar to this question. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2042342/network-path-and-variables-in-python/2042376 The only difference is my network drive has a password protect with user name and password . I need to copy files to a samba share using python and verify it. if i manually login in then the code works but without logging in the shutil command does not work Thanks

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  • Matrix in python

    - by Werner
    Hi, I am very new to Python, I need to read numbers from a file and store them in a matrix like I would do it in fortran or C; for i for j data[i][j][0]=read(0) data[i][j][1]=read(1) data[i][j][2]=read(2) ... ... How can I do the same in Python? I read a bit but got confused with tuples and similar things If you could point me to a similar example it would be great thanks

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  • Eclipse Python Integration

    - by BCS
    I found this python plugin list but thought I'd ask if anyone has any experience with anything listed there? I'm totally new to both python and dynamic programming languages if that makes any difference.

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  • Python 3 with numpy and object refernces

    - by user963386
    I need to create a large matrix (array) structure (3 axis) and each element should store the reference to a Python object (myclass instance). Is it possible to use numpy to create such an array. Which data type should I use in order to store Python references? The advantage of numpy is the support of slicing at different levels. The alternativee is to create a nested (nested) list but it is a cumbersome solution.

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  • File encyption with Python

    - by Pinkie
    Is there a way to encrypt files (.zip, .doc, .exe, ... any type of file) with Python? I've looked at a bunch of crypto libraries for Python including pycrypto and ezpycrypto but as far as I see they only offer string encryption.

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  • Import a python module without the .py extension

    - by compie
    I have a file called foobar (without .py extension). In the same directory I have another python file that tries to import it: import foobar But this only works if I rename the file to foobar.py. Is it possible to import a python module that doesn't have the .py extension?

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  • Python: Is there a way to reflectivly list all attributes of a class

    - by hhafez
    Given a class such as def MyClass text = "hello" number = 123 Is there a way in python to inspect MyClass an determine that it has the two attributes text and number. I can not use something like inspect.getSource(object) because the class I am to get it's attributes for are generate using SWIG (so they are hidden in .so :) ). So I am really looking for something equivalant to Java's [Class.getDeclardFields][1] Any help would be appreciated, otherwise I'll have to solve this problem with SWIG + JAVA instead of SWIG + Python.

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  • programming language implemented in pure python

    - by iamgopal
    hi, i am creating ( researching possibility of ) a highly customizable python client and would like to allow users to actually edit the code in another language to customize the running of program. ( analogous to browser which itself coded in c/c++ and run another language html/js ). so my question is , is there any programming language implemented in pure python which i can see as a reference ( or use directly ? ) -- i need simple language ( simple statements and ifs can do )

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  • Using Python to add/remove Ubuntu login script items

    - by codebox_rob
    I have written a Python application and would like to give my users the option of having the app automatically launch itself when the user logs in. It is important that the user is able to toggle this option on/off from within the app itself, rather than having to manually edit login scripts, so this needs to be done from within the Python code rather than from a shell script. The app is deployed on Ubuntu Linux, any suggestions for the best way of doing this?

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  • How can I get the last-modified time with python3 urllib?

    - by Daenyth
    I'm porting over a program of mine from python2 to python3, and I'm hitting the following error: AttributeError: 'HTTPMessage' object has no attribute 'getdate' Here's the code: conn = urllib.request.urlopen(fileslist, timeout=30) last_modified = conn.info().getdate('last-modified') This section worked under python 2.7, and so far I haven't been able to find out the correct method to get this information in python 3.1. The full context is an update method. It pulls new files from a server down to its local database, but only if the file on the server is newer than the local file. If there's a smarter way to achieve this functionality than just comparing local and remote file timestamps, then I'm open to that as well.

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  • How to send raw XML in Python?

    - by davywahd
    Hi, I am trying to send raw xml to a service in Python. I have a the address of the service and my question is how would I wrap XML in python and send it to the service. The address is in the format below. 192.1100.2.2:54239 And say the XML is: <xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"><header/><body><code><body/> Anyone know what to do?

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  • Twitter API with urllib2 in python

    - by Dirk Nachbar
    I want to use the Twitter API in Python to lookup user ids from name using the lookup method. I have done similar requests simply using response = urllib2.urlopen('http://search.twitter.com...') but for this one I need authentication. I don't think I can do it through the Google python twitter API because it doesn't have the lookup method. Any ideas how can I can auth with urllib2??

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  • jar to python module

    - by iamrohitbanga
    I am using an API which provides a Java version but not a Python version. I can switch to Java as right now I am only prototyping. but is there a quick way to convert the functionality of API packaged in a jar to a python module?

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  • Parse (extract) DTMF in Python

    - by Joseph
    If I have a recorded audio file (MP3), is there any way to get the figure out the DTMF tones that were recorded in pure Python? (If pure python is not available, then Java is okay too. The point being that it should be able to run in Google Appengine)

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