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Groups > comp.lang.python > #25761 > unrolled thread

My first ever Python program, comments welcome

Started byLipska the Kat <lipska@lipskathekat.com>
First post2012-07-21 20:08 +0100
Last post2012-07-23 09:12 +0200
Articles 20 on this page of 23 — 13 participants

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  My first ever Python program, comments welcome Lipska the Kat <lipska@lipskathekat.com> - 2012-07-21 20:08 +0100
    Re: My first ever Python program, comments welcome Ian Foote <ian@feete.org> - 2012-07-21 20:34 +0100
    Re: My first ever Python program, comments welcome MRAB <python@mrabarnett.plus.com> - 2012-07-21 20:40 +0100
      Re: My first ever Python program, comments welcome Steven D'Aprano <steve+comp.lang.python@pearwood.info> - 2012-07-22 00:32 +0000
        Re: My first ever Python program, comments welcome MRAB <python@mrabarnett.plus.com> - 2012-07-22 02:56 +0100
        Re: My first ever Python program, comments welcome Chris Angelico <rosuav@gmail.com> - 2012-07-22 11:59 +1000
        Re: My first ever Python program, comments welcome Dave Angel <d@davea.name> - 2012-07-21 22:01 -0400
    Re: My first ever Python program, comments welcome Dave Angel <d@davea.name> - 2012-07-21 16:10 -0400
      Re: My first ever Python program, comments welcome Steven D'Aprano <steve+comp.lang.python@pearwood.info> - 2012-07-22 00:56 +0000
      Re: My first ever Python program, comments welcome rusi <rustompmody@gmail.com> - 2012-07-21 19:55 -0700
        Re: My first ever Python program, comments welcome Mark Lawrence <breamoreboy@yahoo.co.uk> - 2012-07-22 09:14 +0100
        Re: My first ever Python program, comments welcome Lipska the Kat <lipska@lipskathekat.com> - 2012-07-22 10:20 +0100
          Re: My first ever Python program, comments welcome rusi <rustompmody@gmail.com> - 2012-07-22 09:18 -0700
            Re: My first ever Python program, comments welcome Lipska the Kat <lipska@lipskathekat.com> - 2012-07-22 18:23 +0100
              Re: My first ever Python program, comments welcome rusi <rustompmody@gmail.com> - 2012-07-23 22:13 -0700
                Re: My first ever Python program, comments welcome Lipska the Kat <lipskathekat@yahoo.co.uk> - 2012-07-24 12:34 +0100
      Re: My first ever Python program, comments welcome Lipska the Kat <lipska@lipskathekat.com> - 2012-07-22 09:37 +0100
        Re: My first ever Python program, comments welcome Andrew Berg <bahamutzero8825@gmail.com> - 2012-07-22 03:49 -0500
        Re: My first ever Python program, comments welcome Chris Angelico <rosuav@gmail.com> - 2012-07-22 20:17 +1000
          Re: My first ever Python program, comments welcome Lipska the Kat <lipska@lipskathekat.com> - 2012-07-22 13:36 +0100
        Re: My first ever Python program, comments welcome David <bouncingcats@gmail.com> - 2012-07-22 20:46 +1000
    Re: My first ever Python program, comments welcome Peter Otten <__peter__@web.de> - 2012-07-22 09:56 +0200
    Re: My first ever Python program, comments welcome "Ivan@work" <ivan.cvetkovic@pakel.hr> - 2012-07-23 09:12 +0200

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#25761 — My first ever Python program, comments welcome

FromLipska the Kat <lipska@lipskathekat.com>
Date2012-07-21 20:08 +0100
SubjectMy first ever Python program, comments welcome
Message-ID<pZqdnadVUa-EY5fNnZ2dnUVZ7rednZ2d@bt.com>
Greetings Pythoners

A short while back I posted a message that described a task I had set 
myself. I wanted to implement the following bash shell script in Python

Here's the script

sort -nr $1 | head -${2:-10}

this script takes a filename and an optional number of lines to display
and sorts the lines in numerical order, printing them to standard out.
if no optional number of lines are input the script prints 10 lines

Here's the file.

50	Parrots
12	Storage Jars
6	Lemon Currys
2	Pythons
14	Spam Fritters
23	Flying Circuses
1	Meaning Of Life
123	Holy Grails
76	Secret Policemans Balls
8	Something Completely Differents
12	Lives of Brian
49	Spatulas


... and here's my very first attempt at a Python program
I'd be interested to know what you think, you can't hurt my feelings
just be brutal (but fair). There is very little error checking as you 
can see and I'm sure you can crash the program easily.
'Better' implementations most welcome

#! /usr/bin/env python3.2

import fileinput
from sys import argv
from operator import itemgetter

l=[]
t = tuple
filename=argv[1]
lineCount=10

with fileinput.input(files=(filename)) as f:
	for line in f:
		t=(line.split('\t'))
		t[0]=int(t[0])
		l.append(t)
	l=sorted(l, key=itemgetter(0))

	try:	
		inCount = int(argv[2])
		lineCount = inCount
	except IndexError:
		#just catch the error and continue		
		None

	for c in range(lineCount):
		t=l[c]
		print(t[0], t[1], sep='\t', end='')

Thanks

Lipska


-- 
Lipska the Kat: Troll hunter, Sandbox destroyer
and Farscape dreamer of Aeryn Sun.

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#25763

FromIan Foote <ian@feete.org>
Date2012-07-21 20:34 +0100
Message-ID<mailman.2394.1342899297.4697.python-list@python.org>
In reply to#25761
On 21/07/12 20:08, Lipska the Kat wrote:
> Greetings Pythoners
>
> A short while back I posted a message that described a task I had set 
> myself. I wanted to implement the following bash shell script in Python
>
> Here's the script
>
> sort -nr $1 | head -${2:-10}
>
> this script takes a filename and an optional number of lines to display
> and sorts the lines in numerical order, printing them to standard out.
> if no optional number of lines are input the script prints 10 lines
>
> Here's the file.
>
> 50    Parrots
> 12    Storage Jars
> 6    Lemon Currys
> 2    Pythons
> 14    Spam Fritters
> 23    Flying Circuses
> 1    Meaning Of Life
> 123    Holy Grails
> 76    Secret Policemans Balls
> 8    Something Completely Differents
> 12    Lives of Brian
> 49    Spatulas
>
>
> ... and here's my very first attempt at a Python program
> I'd be interested to know what you think, you can't hurt my feelings
> just be brutal (but fair). There is very little error checking as you 
> can see and I'm sure you can crash the program easily.
> 'Better' implementations most welcome
>
> #! /usr/bin/env python3.2
>
> import fileinput
> from sys import argv
> from operator import itemgetter
>
> l=[]
> t = tuple
What is this line supposed to do? If you're trying to make an empty 
tuple, you can write:
     t = ()
But I don't think this is needed at all.
> filename=argv[1]
> lineCount=10
>
> with fileinput.input(files=(filename)) as f:
>     for line in f:
>         t=(line.split('\t'))
>         t[0]=int(t[0])
>         l.append(t)
>     l=sorted(l, key=itemgetter(0))
>
>     try:
>         inCount = int(argv[2])
>         lineCount = inCount
I don't think you need to split this into two lines here.
         try:
             lineCount = int(argv[2])
should work.
>     except IndexError:
>         #just catch the error and continue
>         None
I would use pass instead of None here - I want to "do nothing" rather 
than create a None object.
>     for c in range(lineCount):
>         t=l[c]
>         print(t[0], t[1], sep='\t', end='')
>
> Thanks
>
> Lipska
>

My only other point is that you might find it helpful to use slightly 
more verbose names than l or t - its not immediately obvious to the 
reader what these are intended to represent.

Regards,
Ian

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#25764

FromMRAB <python@mrabarnett.plus.com>
Date2012-07-21 20:40 +0100
Message-ID<mailman.2395.1342899651.4697.python-list@python.org>
In reply to#25761
On 21/07/2012 20:08, Lipska the Kat wrote:
> Greetings Pythoners
>
> A short while back I posted a message that described a task I had set
> myself. I wanted to implement the following bash shell script in Python
>
> Here's the script
>
> sort -nr $1 | head -${2:-10}
>
> this script takes a filename and an optional number of lines to display
> and sorts the lines in numerical order, printing them to standard out.
> if no optional number of lines are input the script prints 10 lines
>
> Here's the file.
>
> 50	Parrots
> 12	Storage Jars
> 6	Lemon Currys
> 2	Pythons
> 14	Spam Fritters
> 23	Flying Circuses
> 1	Meaning Of Life
> 123	Holy Grails
> 76	Secret Policemans Balls
> 8	Something Completely Differents
> 12	Lives of Brian
> 49	Spatulas
>
>
> ... and here's my very first attempt at a Python program
> I'd be interested to know what you think, you can't hurt my feelings
> just be brutal (but fair). There is very little error checking as you
> can see and I'm sure you can crash the program easily.
> 'Better' implementations most welcome
>
> #! /usr/bin/env python3.2
>
> import fileinput
> from sys import argv
> from operator import itemgetter
>
> l=[]
> t = tuple
What's the purpose of this line?

> filename=argv[1]
> lineCount=10
>
> with fileinput.input(files=(filename)) as f:
> 	for line in f:
> 		t=(line.split('\t'))
> 		t[0]=int(t[0])
> 		l.append(t)
> 	l=sorted(l, key=itemgetter(0))
Short is:

     l.sort(key=itemgetter(0))

>
> 	try:	
> 		inCount = int(argv[2])
> 		lineCount = inCount
You may as well say:

     lineCount = int(argv[2])

> 	except IndexError:
> 		#just catch the error and continue		
> 		None
The do-nothing statement is:

     pass

>
> 	for c in range(lineCount):
> 		t=l[c]
If there are fewer than 'lineCount' lines, this will raise IndexError.
You could do this instead:

     for t in l[ : lineCount]:

> 		print(t[0], t[1], sep='\t', end='')
>

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#25782

FromSteven D'Aprano <steve+comp.lang.python@pearwood.info>
Date2012-07-22 00:32 +0000
Message-ID<500b4a27$0$29978$c3e8da3$5496439d@news.astraweb.com>
In reply to#25764
On Sat, 21 Jul 2012 20:40:46 +0100, MRAB wrote:

> On 21/07/2012 20:08, Lipska the Kat wrote:
>> 	l=sorted(l, key=itemgetter(0))
>
> Short is:
> 
>      l.sort(key=itemgetter(0))

Shorter, and the semantics are subtly different.

The sorted function returns a copy of the input list.

The list.sort method sorts the list in place.



-- 
Steven

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#25790

FromMRAB <python@mrabarnett.plus.com>
Date2012-07-22 02:56 +0100
Message-ID<mailman.2413.1342922179.4697.python-list@python.org>
In reply to#25782
On 22/07/2012 01:32, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On Sat, 21 Jul 2012 20:40:46 +0100, MRAB wrote:
>
>> On 21/07/2012 20:08, Lipska the Kat wrote:
>>> 	l=sorted(l, key=itemgetter(0))
>>
>> Short is:
>>
>>      l.sort(key=itemgetter(0))
>
> Shorter, and the semantics are subtly different.
>
> The sorted function returns a copy of the input list.
>
> The list.sort method sorts the list in place.
>
Since the result is bound to the original name, the
result is the same.

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#25791

FromChris Angelico <rosuav@gmail.com>
Date2012-07-22 11:59 +1000
Message-ID<mailman.2414.1342922381.4697.python-list@python.org>
In reply to#25782
On Sun, Jul 22, 2012 at 11:56 AM, MRAB <python@mrabarnett.plus.com> wrote:
> Since the result is bound to the original name, the
> result is the same.

Yes, assuming there are no other refs.

>>> a=[3,2,1]
>>> b=a
>>> a=sorted(a)
>>> a
[1, 2, 3]
>>> b
[3, 2, 1]

ChrisA

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#25792

FromDave Angel <d@davea.name>
Date2012-07-21 22:01 -0400
Message-ID<mailman.2415.1342922527.4697.python-list@python.org>
In reply to#25782
On 07/21/2012 09:56 PM, MRAB wrote:
> On 22/07/2012 01:32, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
>> On Sat, 21 Jul 2012 20:40:46 +0100, MRAB wrote:
>>
>>> On 21/07/2012 20:08, Lipska the Kat wrote:
>>>>     l=sorted(l, key=itemgetter(0))
>>>
>>> Short is:
>>>
>>>      l.sort(key=itemgetter(0))
>>
>> Shorter, and the semantics are subtly different.
>>
>> The sorted function returns a copy of the input list.
>>
>> The list.sort method sorts the list in place.
>>
> Since the result is bound to the original name, the
> result is the same.
>

In this particular program, yes.  But if there's another variable bound
to the same list, then the fact that there's a new object from sorted()
makes a difference.



-- 

DaveA

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#25765

FromDave Angel <d@davea.name>
Date2012-07-21 16:10 -0400
Message-ID<mailman.2396.1342901474.4697.python-list@python.org>
In reply to#25761
On 07/21/2012 03:08 PM, Lipska the Kat wrote:
> Greetings Pythoners
>
> A short while back I posted a message that described a task I had set
> myself. I wanted to implement the following bash shell script in Python
>

You already have comments from Ian and MRAB, and I'll try to point out
only things that they did not.

Congratulations on getting your first program running.  And when reading
the following, remember that getting it right is more important than
getting it pretty.

> Here's the script
>
> sort -nr $1 | head -${2:-10}
>
> this script takes a filename and an optional number of lines to display
> and sorts the lines in numerical order, printing them to standard out.
> if no optional number of lines are input the script prints 10 lines
>
> Here's the file.
>
> 50    Parrots
> 12    Storage Jars
> 6    Lemon Currys
> 2    Pythons
> 14    Spam Fritters
> 23    Flying Circuses
> 1    Meaning Of Life
> 123    Holy Grails
> 76    Secret Policemans Balls
> 8    Something Completely Differents
> 12    Lives of Brian
> 49    Spatulas
>
>
> ... and here's my very first attempt at a Python program
> I'd be interested to know what you think, you can't hurt my feelings
> just be brutal (but fair). There is very little error checking as you
> can see and I'm sure you can crash the program easily.
> 'Better' implementations most welcome
>
> #! /usr/bin/env python3.2
>
> import fileinput
> from sys import argv
> from operator import itemgetter
>
> l=[]

I prefer to initialize an empty collection just before the loop that's
going to fill it.  Then if you later decide to generalize some other
part of the code, it's less likely to break.  So i'd move this line to
right-before the for loop.

> t = tuple

Even if you were going to use this initialization later, it doesn't do
what you think it does.  It doesn't create a tuple, it just makes
another reference to the class.  If you had wanted an empty tuple, you
should either do  t=tuple(), or better  t=()

> filename=argv[1]
> lineCount=10
>

I'd suggest getting into the habit of doing all your argv parsing in one
place.  So check for argv[2] here, rather than inside the loop below. 
Eventually you're going to have code complex enough to use an argument
parsing library.  And of course, something to tell your use what the
arguments are supposed to be.

> with fileinput.input(files=(filename)) as f:

fileinput is much more general than you want for processing a single
file.  That may be deliberate, if you're picturing somebody using
wildcards on their input.  But if so, you should probably use a
different name, something that indicates plural.

>     for line in f:
>         t=(line.split('\t'))
>         t[0]=int(t[0])
>         l.append(t)


>     l=sorted(l, key=itemgetter(0))
>

Your sample data has duplicate numbers.  So you really ought to decide
how you'd like such lines sorted in the output.  Your present code
simply preserves the present order of such lines.  But if you remove the
key parameter entirely, the default sort order will sort with t[0] as
primary key, and t[1] as tie-breaker.  That'd probably be what I'd do,
after trying to clarify with the client what the desired sort order was.

>     try:   
>         inCount = int(argv[2])
>         lineCount = inCount
>     except IndexError:
>         #just catch the error and continue       
>         None
>
>     for c in range(lineCount):
>         t=l[c]
>         print(t[0], t[1], sep='\t', end='')
>
> Thanks
>
> Lipska
>
>

A totally off-the-wall query.  Are you using a source control system,
such as git ?  It can make you much braver about refactoring a working
program.

-- 

DaveA

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#25785

FromSteven D'Aprano <steve+comp.lang.python@pearwood.info>
Date2012-07-22 00:56 +0000
Message-ID<500b4fd6$0$29978$c3e8da3$5496439d@news.astraweb.com>
In reply to#25765
On Sat, 21 Jul 2012 16:10:51 -0400, Dave Angel wrote:

>> with fileinput.input(files=(filename)) as f:
> 
> fileinput is much more general than you want for processing a single
> file.  That may be deliberate, if you're picturing somebody using
> wildcards on their input.  But if so, you should probably use a
> different name, something that indicates plural.

Also, fileinput is more a convenience module than a serious production 
quality tool. It works, it does the job, but it can be slow. From the 
source:

    Performance: this module is unfortunately one of the slower ways of
    processing large numbers of input lines.


-- 
Steven

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#25794

Fromrusi <rustompmody@gmail.com>
Date2012-07-21 19:55 -0700
Message-ID<fdd2487c-c4b1-49d1-a5b5-e8a78f57f979@km7g2000pbc.googlegroups.com>
In reply to#25765
On Jul 22, 1:10 am, Dave Angel <d...@davea.name> wrote:

> A totally off-the-wall query.  Are you using a source control system,
> such as git ?  It can make you much braver about refactoring a working
> program.

Question in a similar vein: What development environment do you use?
My impression is that the majority of pythonistas use a non-ide editor
like vi or emacs
Ive been using emacs for 20 years and python-mode of emacs is very
useful but I am increasingly concerned that emacs is refusing to move
with the times.

Which is why I am particularly curious how an ol Java-head finds
eclipse+python (http://pydev.org/ )

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#25799

FromMark Lawrence <breamoreboy@yahoo.co.uk>
Date2012-07-22 09:14 +0100
Message-ID<mailman.2422.1342944844.4697.python-list@python.org>
In reply to#25794
On 22/07/2012 03:55, rusi wrote:
> On Jul 22, 1:10 am, Dave Angel <d...@davea.name> wrote:
>
>> A totally off-the-wall query.  Are you using a source control system,
>> such as git ?  It can make you much braver about refactoring a working
>> program.
>
> Question in a similar vein: What development environment do you use?
> My impression is that the majority of pythonistas use a non-ide editor
> like vi or emacs
> Ive been using emacs for 20 years and python-mode of emacs is very
> useful but I am increasingly concerned that emacs is refusing to move
> with the times.
>
> Which is why I am particularly curious how an ol Java-head finds
> eclipse+python (http://pydev.org/ )
>

Wouldn't describe myself as "an ol Java-head" but I disliked eclipse 10 
years ago.  I tried it again earlier this year and still disliked it. 
It's like entering a legless cart horse for the Derby or the Grand National.

YMMV.

-- 
Cheers.

Mark Lawrence.

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#25802

FromLipska the Kat <lipska@lipskathekat.com>
Date2012-07-22 10:20 +0100
Message-ID<WLKdnWQLXqd7WJbNnZ2dnUVZ8nSdnZ2d@bt.com>
In reply to#25794
On 22/07/12 03:55, rusi wrote:
> On Jul 22, 1:10 am, Dave Angel<d...@davea.name>  wrote:
>
>> A totally off-the-wall query.  Are you using a source control system,
>> such as git ?  It can make you much braver about refactoring a working
>> program.
>
> Question in a similar vein: What development environment do you use?
> My impression is that the majority of pythonistas use a non-ide editor
> like vi or emacs
> Ive been using emacs for 20 years and python-mode of emacs is very
> useful but I am increasingly concerned that emacs is refusing to move
> with the times.

My current 'Python development environment' is gedit with line numbering 
turned on and a terminal window to run chmodded scripts :-)

>
> Which is why I am particularly curious how an ol Java-head finds
> eclipse+python (http://pydev.org/ )

Python and eclipse ... Noooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo ;-)

Well I have to say that I've used Eclipse with the myEclipse plugin for 
a number of years now and although it has it's moments it has earned me 
LOADS of MONEY so I can't really criticise it. I have Eclipse installed 
on a Windows box so I may try the plugin ... but actually I'm really 
enjoying doing things the 'old fashioned way' again.

I'm going to do 'proper OO' version of the shell script to learn about 
wiring different modules together ... I find the official documentation 
hard to navigate though.

Lipska


-- 
Lipska the Kat: Troll hunter, Sandbox destroyer
and Farscape dreamer of Aeryn Sun.

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#25820

Fromrusi <rustompmody@gmail.com>
Date2012-07-22 09:18 -0700
Message-ID<37a37376-18ff-46af-97f0-36fd764a8c26@m2g2000pbv.googlegroups.com>
In reply to#25802
On Jul 22, 2:20 pm, Lipska the Kat <lip...@lipskathekat.com> wrote:

> Well I have to say that I've used Eclipse with the myEclipse plugin for
> a number of years now and although it has it's moments it has earned me
> LOADS of MONEY so I can't really criticise it.

Ive probably tried to use eclipse about 4 times in the last 8 years.
Always run away in terror.
Still I'm never sure whether eclipse is stupid or I am...

First time I'm hearing of myEclipse. Thanks. What does it have/do that
standard eclipse (JDT?) does not?


> Python and eclipse ... Noooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo ;-)


Very curious about this.  You made 'Loads of money' with eclipse but
want to stay away from it?
Simply cannot make out this thing called 'java-programmer-culture'...

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#25826

FromLipska the Kat <lipska@lipskathekat.com>
Date2012-07-22 18:23 +0100
Message-ID<gtGdnfcD3aqNqpHNnZ2dnUVZ7oWdnZ2d@bt.com>
In reply to#25820
On 22/07/12 17:18, rusi wrote:
> On Jul 22, 2:20 pm, Lipska the Kat<lip...@lipskathekat.com>  wrote:
>
>> Well I have to say that I've used Eclipse with the myEclipse plugin for
>> a number of years now and although it has it's moments it has earned me
>> LOADS of MONEY so I can't really criticise it.
>
> Ive probably tried to use eclipse about 4 times in the last 8 years.
> Always run away in terror.
> Still I'm never sure whether eclipse is stupid or I am...
>
> First time I'm hearing of myEclipse. Thanks. What does it have/do that
> standard eclipse (JDT?) does not?

Eclipse for Java supports development of 'standard' Java applications
that is applications that use the standard Java Distributions (JDK). 
MyEclipse adds support for J2EE and a bunch of other stuff. I used it 
mainly for jsp syntax highlighting, HTML syntax highlighting and Servlet 
development. It's marketed as a J2EE and web development IDE. It comes 
with an embedded Tomcat server and some versions support common 
frameworks such as Spring and Hibernate. Struts is supported by default 
I think although I always stayed away from frameworks when I could. I 
preferred to write Java rather than XML :-) Check out 
http://www.myeclipseide.com/ for an example of marketing bling.

>> Python and eclipse ... Noooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo ;-)

> Very curious about this.  You made 'Loads of money' with eclipse but
> want to stay away from it?
> Simply cannot make out this thing called 'java-programmer-culture'...

How dare you sir, I'm not a Java programmer I am a 'retired' software 
engineer ;-)

Heh heh, Nothing to do with Eclipse, just another thing to get my head 
around. For work and Java IMHO you can't beat eclipse... at the moment 
I'm getting my head around git, reminding myself of C, learning Python 
and re-learning make. Enough already; but if there's a python plugin I 
guess I'll get around to it eventually

Lipska

-- 
Lipska the Kat: Troll hunter, Sandbox destroyer
and Farscape dreamer of Aeryn Sun.

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#25952

Fromrusi <rustompmody@gmail.com>
Date2012-07-23 22:13 -0700
Message-ID<273a9070-c0b0-4b64-9741-9327f37c07fe@d6g2000pbt.googlegroups.com>
In reply to#25826
On Jul 22, 10:23 pm, Lipska the Kat <lip...@lipskathekat.com> wrote:

> Heh heh, Nothing to do with Eclipse, just another thing to get my head
> around. For work and Java IMHO you can't beat eclipse...
> at the moment I'm getting my head around git,

Bumped into this yesterday. Seems like a good aid to git-comprehension
https://github.com/git/git/blob/master/contrib/completion/git-prompt.sh

> reminding myself of C, learning Python
> and re-learning make. Enough already; but if there's a python plugin I
> guess I'll get around to it eventually

Seems like a strange combo. It should be
(C&make)|(python&X)|(Java&Ant)
where X could range from
Setup http://docs.python.org/distutils/setupscript.html
to distribute http://guide.python-distribute.org/
to scons http://www.scons.org/

Why burden yourself by making the '|'s into '&'s?

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#25978

FromLipska the Kat <lipskathekat@yahoo.co.uk>
Date2012-07-24 12:34 +0100
Message-ID<RKKdnfgMnLmkFZPNnZ2dnUVZ7oSdnZ2d@bt.com>
In reply to#25952
On 24/07/12 06:13, rusi wrote:
> On Jul 22, 10:23 pm, Lipska the Kat<lip...@lipskathekat.com>  wrote:
>
>> Heh heh, Nothing to do with Eclipse, just another thing to get my head
>> around. For work and Java IMHO you can't beat eclipse...
>> at the moment I'm getting my head around git,
>
> Bumped into this yesterday. Seems like a good aid to git-comprehension
> https://github.com/git/git/blob/master/contrib/completion/git-prompt.sh

eek ... now that's a shell script to be proud of isn't it .. and it 
works [lipska@ubuntu fileio (master)]$ impressive. Good find, thanks.

>> reminding myself of C, learning Python
>> and re-learning make. Enough already; but if there's a python plugin I
>> guess I'll get around to it eventually
>
> Seems like a strange combo. It should be
> (C&make)|(python&X)|(Java&Ant)
> where X could range from

%-}

> Setup http://docs.python.org/distutils/setupscript.html
> to distribute http://guide.python-distribute.org/
> to scons http://www.scons.org/

Well that's the joy of life in semi-retirement. I can do as I please
I read something somewhere the other day about living longer if you 
retire early, well I retired early but if I live another 50 years it 
won't be long enough to learn everything I want to.

Java&Ant everyday
C&make	 a while back

python& well I sort of got sidetracked by python
... and then I got sidetracked by git !!!

Lipska

-- 
Lipska the Kat: Troll hunter, Sandbox destroyer
and Farscape dreamer of Aeryn Sun.

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#25800

FromLipska the Kat <lipska@lipskathekat.com>
Date2012-07-22 09:37 +0100
Message-ID<ioWdnR9fivMqJpbNnZ2dnUVZ8sSdnZ2d@bt.com>
In reply to#25765
On 21/07/12 21:10, Dave Angel wrote:
> On 07/21/2012 03:08 PM, Lipska the Kat wrote:
>> Greetings Pythoners
>>
>> A short while back I posted a message that described a task I had set
>> myself. I wanted to implement the following bash shell script in Python
>>

snip

>>
>>
>
> A totally off-the-wall query.  Are you using a source control system,
> such as git ?  It can make you much braver about refactoring a working
> program.

Thanks for your comments, I've taken them on board,
I'm most familiar with with cvs and svn for source control. I've also 
used Microsoft source safe. I generally just use what's given to me by 
whoever is paying me and don't worry too much about the details. Many in 
the Linux world seem to use git. Seeing as I've been using Linux at home 
since the early days of slackware I suppose I'd better look into it. 
Strangely enough I've never had a paid job using Linux. I've worked on 
multiuser UNIX systems and Sun Workstations but never Linux so I guess 
the need has never arisen.

The Java world seems to largely use Maven to manage their code. It's a 
bit of a headbanger and I've never used it. Ant and FTP are my current 
faves at home. Primitive but good enough for my personal and business sites.

Lipska



-- 
Lipska the Kat: Troll hunter, Sandbox destroyer
and Farscape dreamer of Aeryn Sun.

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#25801

FromAndrew Berg <bahamutzero8825@gmail.com>
Date2012-07-22 03:49 -0500
Message-ID<mailman.2424.1342946965.4697.python-list@python.org>
In reply to#25800
On 7/22/2012 3:37 AM, Lipska the Kat wrote:
> Many in 
> the Linux world seem to use git. Seeing as I've been using Linux at home 
> since the early days of slackware I suppose I'd better look into it.
There are Mercurial (aka Hg) and Bazaar as well for DVCS. AFAIK, git,
Mercurial, and Bazaar are all fine choices and the one to use will
mainly boil down to personal preference. I prefer Mercurial myself.
-- 
CPython 3.3.0b1 | Windows NT 6.1.7601.17803

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#25806

FromChris Angelico <rosuav@gmail.com>
Date2012-07-22 20:17 +1000
Message-ID<mailman.2428.1342952242.4697.python-list@python.org>
In reply to#25800
On Sun, Jul 22, 2012 at 6:49 PM, Andrew Berg <bahamutzero8825@gmail.com> wrote:
> On 7/22/2012 3:37 AM, Lipska the Kat wrote:
>> Many in
>> the Linux world seem to use git. Seeing as I've been using Linux at home
>> since the early days of slackware I suppose I'd better look into it.
> There are Mercurial (aka Hg) and Bazaar as well for DVCS. AFAIK, git,
> Mercurial, and Bazaar are all fine choices and the one to use will
> mainly boil down to personal preference. I prefer Mercurial myself.

Agreed. I poked around with Bazaar a bit this year, and it seems to
lack some features. But certainly hg and git are both excellent
choices, with bzr not significantly far behind. I prefer git,
personally; on Windows, though, I would recommend hg.

Probably the best feature of any of them (one which, I believe, is now
standard in all three) is 'bisect' with a command. It's "git bisect
run", or "hg bisect -c", or "bzr bisect run". You can search back
through a huge time period without any human interaction. I did that a
while ago with a docs-building problem; the current state wouldn't
successfully generate its docs from a fresh start, even though it
could update them from a previous state. It took 45 minutes (!) of
chuggity-chug compilation to find the actual cause of the problem, and
no effort from me (since "make doc" already gave the right exit
codes). Use source control now; you'll reap the benefits later!

ChrisA

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#25808

FromLipska the Kat <lipska@lipskathekat.com>
Date2012-07-22 13:36 +0100
Message-ID<SoadnSAVHIJ7bpbNnZ2dnUVZ8nGdnZ2d@bt.com>
In reply to#25806
On 22/07/12 11:17, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Sun, Jul 22, 2012 at 6:49 PM, Andrew Berg<bahamutzero8825@gmail.com>  wrote:
>> On 7/22/2012 3:37 AM, Lipska the Kat wrote:
>>> Many in
>>> the Linux world seem to use git.

snip

> Use source control now; you'll reap the benefits later!


from sudo apt-get install git to git add *.py was about 5 minutes
and that included reading the basic documentation. POSITIVELY the 
fastest install and the least trouble from any source control app ever

Lipska

-- 
Lipska the Kat: Troll hunter, Sandbox destroyer
and Farscape dreamer of Aeryn Sun.

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