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  • Python - How is this snippet working?

    - by orokusaki
    For some reason this function confused me: def protocol(port): return port == "443" and "https://" or "http://" Can somebody explain the order of what's happening behind the scenes to make this work the way it does. I understood it as this until I tried it: Either A) def protocol(port): if port == "443": if bool("https://"): return True elif bool("http://"): return True return False Or B) def protocol(port): if port == "443": return True + "https://" else: return True + "http://" Is this some sort of special case in Python, or am I completely misunderstanding how statements work?

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  • doing arithmetic upto two significant figures in Python?

    - by user248237
    I have two floats in Python that I'd like to subtract, i.e. v1 = float(value1) v2 = float(value2) diff = v1 - v2 I want "diff" to be computed upto two significant figures, that is compute it using %.2f of v1 and %.2f of v2. How can I do this? I know how to print v1 and v2 up to two decimals, but not how to do arithmetic like that. thanks.

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  • Cross platform /dev/null in Python

    - by Tristan
    I'm using the following code to hide stderr on Linux/OSX for a Python library I do not control that writes to stderr by default: f = open("/dev/null","w") zookeeper.set_log_stream(f) Is there an easy cross platform alternative to /dev/null? Ideally it would not consume memory since this is a long running process.

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  • [Embedded Python] Invoking a method on an object

    - by jmucchiello
    Given a PyObject* pointing to a python object, how do I invoke one of the object methods? The documentation never gives an example of this: PyObject* obj = .... PyObject* args = Py_BuildValue("(s)", "An arg"); PyObject* method = PyWHATGOESHERE(obj, "foo"); PyObject* ret = PyWHATGOESHERE(obj, method, args); if (!ret) { // check error... } This would be the equivalent of >>> ret = obj.foo("An arg")

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  • Restrictons of Python compared to Ruby: lambda's

    - by Shyam
    Hi, I was going over some pages from WikiVS, that I quote from: because lambdas in Python are restricted to expressions and cannot contain statements I would like to know what would be a good example (or more) where this restriction would be, preferably compared to the Ruby language. Thank you for your answers, comments and feedback!

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  • Can I Force A ASP.Net Website to Show Time in A Specific Time Zone?

    - by KevDog
    I have a client request that all times be displayed in Pacific Time Zone, regardless of client settings. I'd like to avoid a scenario where I have to call a function for every time display and instead have a single point where I can make the switch. I'm thinking a custom culture might do the trick, but I wanted to ask before I set off down a potentially blind alley (or miss something trivially easy).

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  • Python-mode import problem

    - by smith
    I'm trying to use Emacs as a python editor and it works fine when I evaluate(C-c C-c) only single files but when I evaluate a file that imports another file in the same directory, I get an error saying that the file could not be imported. Does anyone know of a workaround? Thanks in advance

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  • Built in python hash() function

    - by sm1
    Windows XP, Python 2.5: hash('http://stackoverflow.com') Result: 1934711907 Google App Engine (http://shell.appspot.com/): hash('http://stackoverflow.com') Result: -5768830964305142685 Why is that? How can I have a hash function which will give me same results across different platforms (Windows, Linux, Mac)?

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  • Writing a file shredder in python or ruby?

    - by pmilb21
    In the effort to learn python and/or ruby, I was wondering how a file shredder would be implemented? I would like it to take in a file as an argument and then employ an algorithm to make that file unrecoverable. Would possibly add the support for multiple files or even whole directories later.

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  • Emacs bulk indent for Python

    - by Vernon
    Working with Python in Emacs if I want to add a try/catch to a block of code, I often find that I am having to indent the whole block, line by line. In Emacs, how do you indent the whole block at once. I am not an experienced Emacs user, but just find it is the best tool for working through ssh. I am using Emacs on the command line(Ubuntu), not as a gui, if that makes any difference.

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  • Best (or appropriate) WSGI server for this Python script? - Python

    - by RadiantHex
    Hi folks, I'm having quite a problem deciding how to serve a few Python scripts. The problem is that the basic functionality could be generalized by this: do_something() time.sleep(3) do_something() I tried various WSGI servers, but they have all been giving me concurrency limitations, as in I have to specify how many threads to use and so on. I only wish that the resources on the server be used efficiently and liberally. Any ideas?

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  • Which logging library to use for cross-language (Java, C++, Python) system

    - by recipriversexclusion
    I have a system where a central Java controller launches analysis processes, which may be written in C++, Java, or Python (mostly they are C++). All these processes currently run on the same server. What are you suggestions to Create a central log to which all processes can write to What if in the future I push some processes to another server. How can I support distributed logging? Thanks!

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  • How to make a simple clipboard monitor in python

    - by envy
    Hi! I was wondering how to make a simple Clipboard Monitor in python, for GUI I'm using PyGTK. I found gtk.clipboard class and all that but I couldn't find any solution to get the "signals" to trigger the event when the clipboard content has changed :( Any ideas? Thanks you! :)

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  • How to create temporary files in memory visible for other process, using python

    - by LazyMiha
    Hello! I`m trying to write simple batch file generator in python. Batch file consist of about 30-50 lines of text and is passed to other applications. During the execution of script there a lot of calls to external applications. I want to create file in memory (like named pipes in win32). Is there any platform independ way? p.s. sorry for possible mistakes in text, I'm still learning English

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  • Limiting the size of a python dictionary

    - by anthony
    I'd like to work with a dict in python, but limit the number of key/value pairs to X. In other words, if the dict is currently storing X key/value pairs and I perform an insertion, I would like one of the existing pairs to be dropped. It would be nice if it was the least recently inserted/accesses key but that's not completely necessary. If this exists in the standard library please save me some time and point it out!

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  • minutes to time in sql server

    - by Luca Romagnoli
    i've created a function for convert minutes (smallint) in time (varchar(5)) like 58 - 00:58 set QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON GO Create FUNCTION [dbo].[IntToMinutes] ( @m smallint ) RETURNS nvarchar(5) AS BEGIN DECLARE @c nvarchar(5) SET @c = CAST((@m / 60) as varchar(2)) + ':' + CAST((@m % 60) as varchar(2)) RETURN @c END The problem is when there are minutes < 10 in time like 9 the result of this function is 0:9 i want that the format is 00:09 how can i do that?

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