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  • Python turtle module confusion

    - by John
    Hi, I'm trying to to add more lines to the triangle, so instead of 3 leading off there will be 5 depending on the parameter given but I really have no idea what to do at this stage and any help would be very welcome. Thanks in advance!:) def draw_sierpinski_triangle(tracer_on, colour, initial_modulus, line_width, initial_heading,initial_x, initial_y, steps): turtle=Turtle() turtle.name = 'Mother of all turtles' turtle.reset () turtle.tracer (tracer_on) turtle.speed ('fastest') turtle.color (colour) turtle.width (line_width) turtle.up() turtle.goto (initial_x, initial_y) turtle.down() turtle.set_heading (initial_heading) draw_sub_pattern (tracer_on, turtle, initial_modulus, 0, steps) def draw_sub_pattern (tracer_on, turtle, modulus, depth, steps): if (depth >= steps): return; x, y = turtle.position () heading = turtle.heading () # draw the pattern turtle.up() turtle.down() turtle.forward (modulus) draw_sub_pattern(tracer_on, turtle, modulus * 0.5, depth + 1, steps) turtle.up() turtle.goto(x, y) turtle.down() turtle.set_heading (heading + 120) turtle.forward (modulus) draw_sub_pattern(tracer_on, turtle, modulus * 0.5, depth + 1, steps) turtle.up() turtle.goto(x, y) turtle.down() turtle.set_heading (heading + 240) turtle.forward (modulus) draw_sub_pattern(tracer_on, turtle, modulus * 0.5, depth + 1, steps)

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  • Python Mindstorms RCX

    - by Kyle Schmidt
    I've got 30 unopened Lego Mindstorms kits that I'd love to use in my intro programming class to do some simple robotics stuff at the end of the year. We're using Python in the class, so I'd prefer there to be a way for the kids to write the programs in Python. Unfortunately, these are old kits with RCX bricks - not the newer NXT ones, so most of the projects like NXT_Python can't help me. Is there any way to make that happen?

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  • midi input in python

    - by Nicola Montecchio
    Hello I'm coding a demo in python and I need to read a MIDI file in python (no real-time stuff is needed). In particular, I'm looking for a library which preserves channel information. The most promising libraries I found are: http://code.google.com/p/midiutil/ http://www.mxm.dk/products/public/pythonmidi Any experience with those? Thanks a lot Nicola Montecchio

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  • Python code translation to JVM

    - by jldupont
    Is there such a thing as a "translator" (for lack of a better word in my mind now) that translates Python code directly to JVM / Dalvik bytecode? Would be great for writing Android applications in Python! NOTE: I know about the scripting capabilities of the Android platform but I am looking for something that would generate a '.apk' without having to install the 'scripting' package... annoying for end-users.

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  • Run python file -- what function is main?

    - by Jasie
    I have simple python script, 'first.py': #first.py def firstFunctionEver() : print "hello" firstFunctionEver() I want to call this script using : python first.py and have it call the firstFunctionEver(). But, the script is ugly -- what function can I put the call to firstFunctionEver() in and have it run when the script is loaded?

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  • Python editor with automatic code completion?

    - by netvope
    I have seen various articles about good Python editors/IDEs, like this. However, none of them points out whether the editors support automatic code completion. I tried notepad++, PyScript and Komodo Edit, but all of these requires a hotkey to invoke the code completion dialog. Do you know any Python editors with automatic code completion?

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  • Python - drag file into .exe to run script

    - by PPTim
    Hi, I have a Python script that takes the directory path of a text file and converts it into an excel file. Currently I have it running as a console application (compiled with py2exe) and prompts the user for the directory path through raw_input(). How do i make it such that I can drag & drop my text file directly into the .exe of the python script? Thanks,

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  • Exit to command line in Python

    - by fuenfundachtzig
    I have a script that I want to exit early under some condition: if not "id" in dir(): print "id not set, cannot continue" # exit here! # otherwise continue with the rest of the script... print "alright..." [ more code ] I run this script using execfile("foo.py") from the Python interactive prompt and I would like the script to exit going back to the command line. How do I do this? If I use sys.exit(), the Python interpreter exits completely.

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  • pdftotext can't find any of the files to convert when called within a python script

    - by hatorade
    i have a python script which keeps crashing on: subprocess.call(["pdftotext", pdf_filename]) the error being: OSError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory the absolute path to the filename (which i am storing in a log file as i debug) is fine; on the command line, if i type pdftotext <pdf_filename_goes_here> it works for any of the alledgedly bad file names. but when called using subprocess in python i keep getting that error. what is going on???

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  • Official multiple python versions on the same machine?

    - by drozzy
    Is there an official documentation on python website somewhere, on how to install and run multiple versions of python on the same machine? On linux? I can find gazillions of blog posts and answers - but I want to know if there is a "standard" official way of doing this? Or is this all dependent on OS?

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  • python: simple example for a python egg with a one-file source file?

    - by Jason S
    I'm not quite sure how to build a really simple one-file source module. Is there a sample module out there one the web somewhere which can be built as a python .egg? From the setuptools page it looks pretty simple, you just have your setup.py file and then at least one other .py file somewhere, and I can build an .egg file OK, and even install it using easy_install, but I can't seem to import the file from within python. (note: using 2.6.4)

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  • Alternative to zc.buildout that runs on Python3

    - by srid
    My project uses buildout to do primarily two things: automatically fetch dependencies and create scripts; and setup cron jobs (on deployment machines) using the usercrontab buildout recipe. But buildout is not yet available for Python 3. So I would like to consider alternatives for buildout. I know that both virtualenv and pip work on Python 3 - but what is the preferred tool to automate the build toolchain (of creating virtualenv, and automatically installing/upgrading deps)? There is fabric, paver, and so on. What is your preferred tool of choice in this case? It must work seamlessly on both Windows and *nix.

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  • Idiomatic Python: 'times' loop

    - by perimosocordiae
    Say I have a function foo that I want to call n times. In Ruby, I would write: n.times { foo } In Python, I could write: for _ in xrange(n): foo() But that seems like a hacky way of doing things. My question: Is there an idiomatic way of doing this in Python?

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  • Changing python interpreter for emacs

    - by sam
    Emacs uses an older version of python(2.3) i have for the default python mode, is there a way for me to tell emacs to use the newer version that i have in my home directory? btw I'm using a red hat distro and dont have root privileges.

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