Hello,
I have 3 panels and I want to make drags on them.
The problem is that when I do a drag on one this happens:
How can I refresh the frame to happear its color when the panel is no longer there?
I've searched around other threads with similar questions, but I'm not finding the answer. Basically, I have a class:
import Android_Class
class Android_Revision(object):
def __init__(self):
# dict for storing the classes in this revision
# (format {name : classObject}):
self.Classes = {}
self.WorkingClass = Android_Class()
self.RevisionNumber = ''
def __call__(self):
print "Called"
def make_Class(self, name):
newClass = Android_Class(name)
self.Classes.update({name : newClass})
self.WorkingClass = newClass
def set_Class(self, name):
if not(self.Classes.has_key(name)):
newClass = Android_Class(name)
self.Classes.update({name : newClass})
self.WorkingClass = self.Classes.get(name)
I'm trying to make an instance of this class:
Revision = Android_Revision()
and that's when I'm getting the error. I'm confused because I have another situation where I'm doing almost the exact same thing, and it's working fine. I can't figure out what differences between the two would lead to this error. Thanks.
MYMESSAGE = "<div>Hello</div><p></p>Hello"
send_mail("testing",MYMESSAGE,"[email protected]",['[email protected]'],fail_silently=False)
However, this message doesn't get the HTML mime type when it is sent. In my outlook, I see the code...
I have the following models in my Django app. How can I from the Team model find all the User objects who have accepted as True in the Membership model? I know I need to use Team.objects.filter(), but I'm not sure how to check the value of the accepted field.
from django.contrib.auth.models import User
class Team(models.Model):
members = models.ManyToManyField(User, through="Membership")
class Membership(models.Model):
user = models.ForeignKey(User)
team = models.ForeignKey(Team)
accepted = models.BooleanField(default=False)
I want get the details of the wave such as its frames into a array of integers.
Using fname.getframes we can ge the properties of the frame and save in list or anything for writing into another wav or anything,but fname.getframes gives information not in integers some thing like a "/xt/x4/0w' etc..
But i want them in integer so that would be helpful for manupation and smoothening join of 2 wav files
let's say I have a list
li = [{'q':'apple','code':'2B'},
{'q':'orange','code':'2A'},
{'q':'plum','code':'2A'}]
What is the most efficient way to return the count of unique "codes" in this list?
In this case, the unique codes is 2, because only 2B and 2A are unique.
I could put everything in a list and compare, but is this really efficient?
Currently, i am querying with this code: meta.Session.query(Label).order_by(Label.name).all()
and it returns me objects sorted by Label.name in this manner ['1','7','1a','5c']. Is there a way i can have the objects returned in the order with their Label.name sorted like this ['1','1a','5c','7']
Thanks!
I have around 20 functions (is_func1, is_fucn2, is_func3...) returning boolean
I assume there is only one function which returns true and I want that!
I am doing:
if is_func1(param1, param2):
# I pass 1 to following
abc(1) # I pass 1
some_list.append(1)
elif is_func2(param1, param2):
# I pass 2 to following
abc(2) # I pass 1
some_list.append(2)
...
.
.
elif is_func20(param1, param2):
...
Please note: param1 and param2 are different for each, abc and some_list take parameters depending on the function.
The code looks big and there is repetition in calling abc and some_list, I can pull this login in a function! but is there any other cleaner solution?
I can think of putting functions in a data structure and loop to call them.
If I have an entity derived from db.Expando I can write Dynamic property by just assigning a value to a new property, e.g. "y" in this example:
class MyEntity(db.Expando):
x = db.IntegerProperty()
my_entity = MyEntity(x=1)
my_entity.y = 2
But suppose I have the name of the dynamic property in a variable... how can I (1) read and write to it, and (2) check if the Dynamic variable exists in the entity's instance? e.g.
class MyEntity(db.Expando):
x = db.IntegerProperty()
my_entity = MyEntity(x=1)
# choose a var name:
var_name = "z"
# assign a value to the Dynamic variable whose name is in var_name:
my_entity.property_by_name[var_name] = 2
# also, check if such a property esists
if my_entity.property_exists(var_name):
# read the value of the Dynamic property whose name is in var_name
print my_entity.property_by_name[var_name]
Thanks...
import inspect
class Test:
def test(self, p, d={}):
d.update(p)
return d
print inspect.getargspec(getattr(Test, 'test'))[3]
print Test().test({'1':True})
print inspect.getargspec(getattr(Test, 'test'))[3]
I would expect the argspec for Test.test not to change but because of dict.update it does. Why?
For formatting a date using date filter you must use the following format :
{{ my_date|date:"Y-m-d" }}
If you use strftime from the standard datetime, you have to use the following :
my_date.strftime("%Y-%m-%d")
So my question is ... isn't it ugly (I guess it is because of the % that is used also for tags, and therefore is escaped or something) ?
But that's not the main question ... I would like to use the same DATE_FORMAT parametrized in settings.py all over the project, but it therefore seems that I cannot ! Is there a work around (for example a filter that removes the % after the date has been formatted like {{ my_date|date|dream_filter }}, because if I just use DATE_FORMAT = "%Y-%m-%d" I got something like %2001-%6-%12)?
Suppose I have my models set up already.
class books(models.Model):
title = models.CharField...
ISBN = models.Integer...
What if I want to add this column to my table?
user = models.ForeignKey(User, unique=True)
How would I write the raw SQL in my database so that this column works?
Using the pysnmp framework i get some values doing a snmp walk. Unfortunately for the oid
1.3.6.1.21.69.1.5.8.1.2 (DOCS-CABLE-DEVICE-MIB)
i get a weird result which i cant correctly print here since it contains ascii chars like BEL ACK
When doing a repr i get:
OctetString('\x07\xd8\t\x17\x03\x184\x00')
But the output should look like:
2008-9-23,3:24:52.0
the format is called "DateAndTime". How can i translate the OctetString output to a "human readable" date/time ?
I want to have a class named ProjectDirectory and a class named MetaDirectory. Each project has a MetaDirectory which contains some meta data. Is it the good way to write the classes like this:
class ProjectDirectory(object):
def __init__(self, directory=None):
self.directory = directory
self.meta_directory = MetaDirectory(self)
def __repr__(self):
return self.directory
class MetaDirectory(object):
def __init__(self, project_directory=None):
self.project_directory = project_directory
self.directory = "%s/.meta/" % project_directory
ProjectDirectory has a reference to MetaDirectory and MetaDirectory has a reference to ProjectDirectory.
Is there an other solution or this solution is good ?
More specifically I'm looking for something, perhaps an add-on for firefox, once enabled it logs all of this information as it's passed to and from the server. I'm doing some web scripting and this would be really handy.
If anyone is wondering specifically what I'm doing currently I'm trying to make a script to repost my craigslist ad every 2 days since I handle a few things on there. Might even go so far as to make a simple gui to manage the submissions.
I do suspect this goes against the ToS, for that reason I don't plan to release the code. Besides cl is already bad enough with spam, I'm not trying to contribute further to it, figured I'd say what I'm doing for the sake of being honest though. I don't have any bad intentions with this, just some things I've been trying to sell an ad for my pc repair business. I've been reposting some things for months now and so often I just forget to do it.
Hi everyone.
This question is in continuation to my previous question, in which I asked about passing around an ElementTree.
I need to read the XML files only and to solve this, I decided to create a global ElementTree and then parse it wherever required.
My question is:
Is this an acceptable practice? I heard global variables are bad. If I don't make it global, I was suggested to make a class. But do I really need to create a class? What benefits would I have from that approach. Note that I would be handling only one ElementTree instance per run, the operations are read-only. If I don't use a class, how and where do I declare that ElementTree so that it available globally? (Note that I would be importing this module)
Please answer this question in the respect that I am a beginner to development, and at this stage I can't figure out whether to use a class or just go with the functional style programming approach.
I know this title look familiar to some old questions, but i've looked at every single one of them, none of them solves.
And here is my codes:
class Island (object):E,W,R,P
def __init__(self, x, y):
self.init_animals(y)
def init_animals(y):
pass
isle = Island(x,y)
However, i got the following error:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "<stdin>", line 3, in __init__
TypeError: init_animals() takes 1 positional arguments but 2 were given
Please tell me if i got any mistakes, im so confused by this.
Best regards
I am trying to add a feature to my app that would allow me to enable/disable the "Call Me" button based on whether or not I am at [home|the office]. I created a model in the database called setting, it looks like this:
class setting(models.Model):
key = models.CharField(max_length=200)
value = models.CharField(max_length=200)
Pretty simple. There is currently one row, available, the value of it is the string True. I want to be able to transparently pass variables to the templates like this:
{% if available %}
<!-- Display button -->
{% else %}
<!-- Display grayed out button -->
{% endif %}
Now, I could add logic to every view that would check the database, and pass the variable to the template, but I am trying to stay DRY.
What is the best way to do this?
UPDATE
I created a context processor, and added it's path to the TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS, but it is not being passed to the template
def available(request):
available = Setting.objects.get(key="available")
if open.value == "True":
return {"available":True}
else:
return {}
UPDATE TWO
If you are using the shortcut render_to_response, you need to pass an instance of RequestContext to the function.
from the django documentation:
If you're using Django's render_to_response() shortcut to populate a template with the contents of a dictionary, your template will be passed a Context instance by default (not a RequestContext). To use a RequestContext in your template rendering, pass an optional third argument to render_to_response(): a RequestContext instance. Your code might look like this:
def some_view(request):
# ...
return render_to_response('my_template.html',
my_data_dictionary,
context_instance=RequestContext(request))
Many thanks for all the help!
I'm trying to better understand the concept of 'autocommit' when working with a Postgres (psycopg) connection. Let's say I have a fresh connection, set its isolation level to ISOLATION_LEVEL_AUTOCOMMIT, then run this SQL directly, without using the cursor begin/rollback methods (as an exercise; not saying I actually want to do this):
INSERT A
INSERT B
BEGIN
INSERT C
INSERT D
ROLLBACK
What happens to INSERTs C & D?
Is autocommit is purely an internal setting in psycopg that affects how it issues BEGINs? In that case, the above SQL is unafected; INSERTs A & B are committed as soon as they're done, while C & D are run in a transaction and rolled back. What isolation level is that transaction run under?
Or is autocommit a real setting on the connection itself? In that case, how does it affect the handling of BEGIN? Is it ignored, or does it override the autocommit setting to actually start a transaction? What isolation level is that transaction run under?
Or am I completely off-target?
The title says it all. The objective is to have two simple ways to source some code, say func.R, containing a function. Calling R CMD BATCH func.R initializes the function and evaluates is. Within a session, issuing source("func.R") simply initializes the function.
Any idea?
I've a model called broadcastinfo, It has fields viz.. info,userid...userid is excluded. when i add an new info, my broadcastinfo table should get the records of all userid from user table and the given message. Im trying this via signal.Any idea is highly appreciated.
Thanks
I've been assigned a task to create a game that generates 4 digits and the user has to guess the digits one at a time to get the correct result. If the number is correct a Y is displayed and if not, a N.
This was easy, now the next step was to implement another two responses. If the answer is too high, a H is displayed and too low, an N.
Again, was easy - now the third is to use the same design as game 2 but if the number is 3 higher than a H is displayed and same if it's 3 lower than a L is displayed - otherwise an X is displayed.
I can't figure out how to do this.
Here's my test code for game 2 for just one of the digits - any help is appreciated.
(5 was used just for a test.)
def guess():
x = 5
g= int(input("Guess the number: "))
if g == x:
print("Y")
elif g < x:
print("L")
else:
print("H")
I have two wxListCtrl and want to process the Ctrl+Enter keyboard event without letting wx change the focus to the other ListCtrl.
I have event handlers for wx.EVT_KEY_DOWN, wx.EVT_KEY_UP, wx.EVT_CHAR and KillFocus, but KillFocus is always called first, then the focus changes and the the keyboard handlers are called for the wrong ListCtrl.
Is there a way to prevent wx from changing the focus, when Ctrl+Enter is pressed ?