Search Results

Search found 19863 results on 795 pages for 'python subprocess module'.

Page 223/795 | < Previous Page | 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230  | Next Page >

  • Search backward through a string using a regex (in Python)?

    - by John Mulder
    I'm parsing some code and want to match the doxygen comments before a function. However, because I want to match for a specific function name, getting only the immediately previous comment is giving me problems. Is there a way to search backward through a string using the Python Regex library? Is there a better (easier) approach that I'm missing?

    Read the article

  • taking a character input in python from a file?

    - by mekasperasky
    in python , suppose i have file data.txt . which has 6 lines of data . I want to calculate the no of lines which i am planning to do by going through each character and finding out the number of '\n' in the file . How to take one character input from the file ? Readline taken the whole line .

    Read the article

  • What does a b prefix before a python string means ?

    - by kriss
    In a python source code I stumbled upon I've seen a small b before a string like in: b"abcdef" I know of u prefix that means unicode and r prefix that means raw. What does the b stand for and in which kind of source code is it useful as it seems to be exactly like a plain string without any prefix ?

    Read the article

  • Is there Perl's YAPE::Regex::Explain alternative to python?

    - by S.Mark
    Is there Perl's YAPE::Regex::Explain alternative to python? For example, which could do following regex \w+=\d+|\w+='[^']+' to explanations like this NODE EXPLANATION -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- \w+ word characters (a-z, A-Z, 0-9, _) (1 or more times (matching the most amount possible)) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- = '=' -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- \d+ digits (0-9) (1 or more times (matching the most amount possible)) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | OR -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- \w+ word characters (a-z, A-Z, 0-9, _) (1 or more times (matching the most amount possible)) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- =' '=\'' -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- [^']+ any character except: ''' (1 or more times (matching the most amount possible)) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ' '\''

    Read the article

  • Exercise 7.9 in "How to Think Like a Computer Scientist (python)" measuring occurrences of a character in a string

    - by Abie
    The question is how to write a program that measures how many times a character appears in a string in a generalizable way in python. The code that I wrote: def countLetters(str, ch): count=0 index=0 for ch in str: if ch==str[index]: count=count+1 index=index+1 print count when I use this function, it measures the length of the string instead of how many times the character occurs in the string. What did I do wrong? What is the right way to write this code?

    Read the article

  • Function from other module not detecting

    - by Lethi
    I two modules in same src folder. mod1 declares function I wish to use in module mod2: -module(mod1). -export([myfunc/1]). myfunc(A) -> {ok}. In other module I not import mod1: -module(mod2). If I do "mod1:" in mod2 it recognizes "myfunc", problem is at run-time when I call mod1:myfunc(A) I get "undefined function mod1:myfunc/1" I not understand why I get error if intellisense detect my mod1 function in mod2?

    Read the article

  • How do I simulate a progress counter in a command line application in Python?

    - by CRP
    My Python program does a series of things and prints some diagnostic output. I would also like to have a progress counter like this: Percentage done: 25% where the number increases "in place". If I use only string statements I can write separate numbers, but that would clutter the screen. Is there some way to achieve this, for example using some escape char for backspace in order to clear a number and write the next one? Thanks

    Read the article

  • How is Magento using the module_name tag elements in the module config file

    - by zokibtmkd
    I found here that Magento is using these tags as custom config variables, but I still cannot understand where are they used and how. For example the Wishlist module has wishlist (same name as the module) xml tag in the config.xml file in which it defines: <item> <product_attributes> <visibility/> <url_path/> <url_key/> </product_attributes> </item> Where is this module using these configurations? Also if I was to build payment method, I have to add in my custom module config.xml a tag for sales and then for quote and so on... I also found other related questions, but most of the answers were that these tags can be anything, but I need to know how they are used by the system. Thank you in advance

    Read the article

  • Printing Variable names and contents as debugging tool; looking for emacs/Python shortcut

    - by Schof
    I find myself adding debugging "print" statements quite often -- stuff like this: print("a_variable_name: %s" % a_variable_name) How do you all do that? Am I being neurotic in trying to find a way to optimize this? I may be working on a function and put in a half-dozen or so of those lines, figure out why it's not working, and then cut them out again. Have you developed an efficient way of doing that? I'm coding Python in Emacs.

    Read the article

  • Making a python script run at a set rate.

    - by Matt1024
    How can I make a python loop run at a set rate regardless of how long it takes to execute commands in the loop (providing the commands take less time to run than the loop is allowed)? How can I make this run every 0.25 seconds, for example? while True: print("OK")

    Read the article

< Previous Page | 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230  | Next Page >