I am wondering if there are any tips or tricks to converting perl into python. It would be nice if there was a script like python's 2to3. Or perhaps some compatibility libraries.
How to create simple web site with python?
I mean really simple, f.ex, you see text "Hello World", and there are button "submit", which (onClick) will show ajax box "submit successful".
I want to start develop some stuff with Python, and I don't know where to start :)
I'm trying to find a tool to check for coding style in python.
For php I've seen there is the Code Sniffer, and a small perl script used by Drupal. Is there such a tool for python code?
Thanks
A new web application may require adding Artificial Intelligence (AI) in the future, e.g. using ProLog. I know it can be done from a Java environment, but I am wondering about the opportunities with modern web languages like Ruby or Python. The latter is considered to be "more scientific" (at least used in that environment), but using Google there seems to be a preliminary ProLog implementation for both.
Any suggestions on modern (open source) web languages (like Python or Ruby) in combination with AI?
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.
I'm trying to compile Python 2.6 for 64bit, I tried various compile commands but not sure whether those are correct
./configure --with-universal-archs=32-bit --prefix="$HOME/python"
make
make install
What is the correct syntax ... ?
I've been reading a lot about python-way lately so my question is
How to do dependency injection python-way?
I am talking about usual scenarios when, for example, service A needs access to UserService for authorization checks.
I'm studying Python after a lot of PHP experience and it would be handy to have type-hinting in Python. Looks like eclipse + pydev doesn't support this. Any suggestions?
For example, I want my IDE to show function docstrings and types, when I use it, like:
def f(x: int) -> int:
r"""Adds 3 to x"""
return x + 3
f( #and now IDE shows everything about types
If Python had a macro facility similar to Lisp/Scheme (something like MetaPython), how would you use it?
If you are a Lisp/Scheme programmer, what sorts of things do you use macros for (other than things that have a clear syntactic parallel in Python such as a while loop)?
Is it possible in Python to run multiple counters in a single for loop as in C/C++? I would want something like -- for i,j in x,range(0,len(x)): I know Python interpretes this differently and why, but I would need to run two loop counters concurrently in a single for...?
Thanks,
Sayan
Hi.
I have a text file of URLs, about 14000. Below is a couple of examples:
http://www.domainname.com/pagename?CONTENT_ITEM_ID=100¶m2=123
http://www.domainname.com/images?IMAGE_ID=10
http://www.domainname.com/pagename?CONTENT_ITEM_ID=101¶m2=123
http://www.domainname.com/images?IMAGE_ID=11
http://www.domainname.com/pagename?CONTENT_ITEM_ID=102¶m2=123
I have loaded the text file into a Python list and I am trying to get all the URLs with CONTENT_ITEM_ID separated off into a list of their own. What would be the best way to do this in Python?
Cheers
How do I create a GUID in Python that is platform independent? I here there is a method using ActivePython on Windows but it's Windows only because it uses COM. Is there a method using plain Python?
Can someone please give the Java equivalent of the below python (which slices a given array into given parts) which was originally written by ChristopheD here:
def split_list(alist, wanted_parts=1):
length = len(alist)
return [ alist[i*length // wanted_parts: (i+1)*length // wanted_parts]
for i in range(wanted_parts) ]
I don't know any python but can really use the above code in my Java app. Thanks
Hi, I'm looking into using Lua in a web project. I can't seem to find any way of directly parsing in pure python and running Lua code in Python.
Does anyone know how to do this?
Joe
Hi
I using buzz-python-client from http://code.google.com/p/buzz-python-client/
In the example:
client.build_oauth_consumer('your-app.appspot.com', 'consumer_secret')
Where can I get a consumer_secret?
For a Bash completion script I need to get all the variables from an installed Python module that match a pattern. I want to use only Python-aware functionality, to avoid having to parse comments and such.
I'm writing a simple alarm utility in Python.
#!/usr/bin/python
import time
import subprocess
import sys
alarm1 = int(raw_input("How many minutes (alarm1)? "))
while (1):
time.sleep(60*alarm1)
print "Alarm1"
sys.stdout.flush();
doit = raw_input("Continue (Y/N)?[Y]: ")
print "Input",doit
if doit == 'N' or doit=='n':
print "Exiting....."
break
I want to flush or discard all the key strokes that were entered while the script was sleeping and only accept the key strokes after the raw_input() is executed.
So I've got plain python downloaded, so I can run .py files from the command line. Now I want to step it up, have a debugger, be able to call .net or other Windows things, etc...
What's my next step? What's a good Python environment for Windows?
I have just come across quantmod, and I would like to use it from Python. However I am not sure how to use quantmod from a Python script.
Has anyone done this before - any ideas or suggestions on how to get started?
Is there an application similar to Java's Checkstyle for Python?
By which I mean, I tool that analyzes Python code, and can be run as part of continuous integration (e.g. CruiseControl or Hudson). After analyzing it should produce an online accessible report which outlines any problems found in the code.
Thank you,
I am looking for python stubbing library. Something that could be used to create fake classes/methods in my unit tests.. Is there a simple way to achieve it in python..
Thanks
PS: I am not looking for mocking library where you would record and replay expectation.
Hi,
I wrote a python module. Running python filename.py, only checks for syntax errors. Is there a tool, which checks for runtime errors also, like concatenating int with string etc..
Thank you
Bala