I have list of programs which I have created during the past few days, all the programs are attached in txt files, and if anyone can do favor, and double check if they work, and what changes I can make to make it look different, or to improve it.
I have a function definition in a Python 2.x script which take a tuple as one of its arguments, but 2to3 has no answers nor any of my searching on how to represent the same in Python 3.x
I want that I click with the mouse on the video, it paused.I notice that there is "BaconVideoWidget" which I guess is the video rendering widget but it don't have signal named "clicked":
I have a python script I wrote a while ago and now I would like to call that script from inside C. I know how to do one command from C, but how would you execute an entire script from C, and passing arguments? Like:
I have decided to learn python as it seems to be powerful not just for web development (like php) but also a clean powerful language for other puposes.
Q: Can someone suggest a tutorial or book, on learning python (beginner to intermediate) which has as its focus for learning, web development?
In order of preference: 1. Comprehensive, 2. Online, 3. Free
Making an awk script. If you tell me to read the documentation.. I know.. you're right.
By the way, here is some input
Code:
My awk program has to work in this way:
until the end of the document if the beginning of the line is "START11" while the beginning of the line is different form "END11" print the whole line (print the "END11" line too)
I have a bash script that I want to import in to Python, mainly just to see if I can or not. However in the script I do use some piping of commands into sed to trim it down to what I need. When I tried doing it with the os.system() call, it didn't work. The exact error is
I am using Centos. I have written some scipts in python that access my routers and fetch the configuration, etc. Now i was thinking of creating a web interface which i can access from my windows XP. I want it to have good look n feel :-),
I've been loosely following this:http://norvig.com/lispy.htmlAnd I have a problem: the parsing function throws an array out of bounds exception. I thought that maybe I'm doing it wrong, so I copy and pasted the code from the page, and still the same error
I found an interesting screencast online about how to make gtk Pyton apps. The thing is, though, the guy was using the interactive shell. I've been trying to get his code into a script, and have been having troubles.
Here's what I got:
Code:
It spits out the error "NameError: global name 'browser' is not defined"
I know I'm doing something wrong with how I'm telling it where to find "browser" and "text", but I can't figure out how to point it to the right place.
But it's been hell finding an answer, or I just don't know what to look for..I have a prompt that asks for a float, and if the user doesn't put in a valid number, then it should die with an error message.
Code: def die_with_error(): print 'ERROR: You didn't specify a valid number!'
For a work project, I've got a bunch of python code from about a year ago that controls the movement of our EVI-D30 camera over a ttyUSB connection. It used to work fine on a 32-bit Fedora box, but recently we moved our whole project over to a 64-bit Gentoo server, and the same code seems to be worthless on the new platform. I didn't write the code, so I'm have trouble figuring out how to fix it. Error messages usually look like this:
Code:
File "./CameraController.py", line 172, in pan turn_callback(cmdStruct[0], cmdStruct[1]) File "./CameraController.py", line 147, in turn_callback cameras[camera].TiltUp()
I'm writing a command-line flash card program in Python. I've tried many existing applications, but none fit my specialized needs.
All of the words I'd like to study are manually added to a text file (study.txt). Each time the software is loaded, it checks for new words in that file and also compares them to a dictionary (a tab-separated file, dictionary.txt), and adds that to a matrix. The flash cards are thus automatically generated from study.txt and dictionary.txt.
Now, the software must manage lots of information about each word I'd like to study and add new information made while interacting with the program (such as when that word should be studied next).
That seems easy to put into a matrix. But what is the best way to put that information in a place where I can pull it back when I run the software tomorrow? Do I need to save the matrix to a CSV file, then convert the CSV file back to a matrix the next time the application is run?
Ive been learning bash over the past 6 months or so and have written a few scripts etc and i have just downloaded julius to execute my scripts and a few commands with speech recognition, the example script that comes with julius to execute commands is written in python and the example works fine when executed but i would like to further extend and customize it but i dont know anything about python, so ideally i would like to translate it to bash as that is what i am learning/using at the minute and would like to learn/use one language at a time, translating it as i think im a little out of my league, i look at the script and sort of understand how it works but i dont know anything about python and my knowledge of bash is limited for use of translating languages.
the python script is:
Code: #! /usr/bin/python -u # How to use it: # julius -quiet -input mic -C julian.jconf 2>/dev/null | ./command.py import sys
i made a program to read from a specific site whats on tv in that day.My question is if some of you have an idee how can i figure it out,what are movies,what are sports,what are shows ?