Yes, the issue was the "print()". In my earlier post, I used Python version 3.4 (Anaconda on Windows 7) where print() is a function. Your version is 2.7 where print is a statement. The syntax is different in versions 3 and less-than-3.
More information here:
And the fix for version less than 3 (this is on Cygwin on Windows 7):
This User Gave Thanks to durden_tyler For This Post:
hey guys, need ur expert help. m a core banker got stuck in someting techie and cant find a solution
have manged to extract a file from oracle apps in a format that looks something like this...
REC- A b c d x
INV- A b... (6 Replies)
Hi All,
I am trying to manipulate a text file in a csh script I am writing. I just started scripting a few months ago and have NO idea how to get this to work. My ultimate goal is to turn a text file that looks like this:
4 ep2d_diff_mddw_20_p2-MOD err 128 128 64 62 52611737
2 ... (3 Replies)
I have 100+ python files in a single directory. I need to replace a specific path occurrence with a variable name.
Following are the find and the replace strings:
Findstring--"projects\\Debugger\\debugger_dp8051_01\\debugger_dp8051_01.cywrk"
Replacestring--self.projpath
I tried... (5 Replies)
I have 2 text files:
cities.txt
San Francisco
Los Angeles
Seattle
Dallas
master.txt
Atlanta is chill and laid-back.
I love Los Angeles.
Coming to Dallas was the right choice.
New York is so busy!
San Francisco is fun.
Moving to Boston soon!
Go to Seattle in the summer.
... (0 Replies)
Hello, I have a pretty simple question, but I am new to Python and am trying to write a simple program. Put simply, I want to take a text file that looks like this:
11111 22222
33333 44444
55555 66666
77777 88888
and produce two lists, one containing the contents of the left column, one the... (0 Replies)
Greetings!
After some cut-and-try, I've cobbled together the following bit of basic code:#!/usr/bin/python
import gtk
class PyApp(gtk.Window):
def __init__(self):
super(PyApp, self).__init__()
self.set_size_request(250, 250)
... (0 Replies)
I need to substitute only comma with dot in string like this:
<strong>5,4</strong>but not sure how to do this.
This does not work:
text = sub('<strong>(,)</strong>', '<strong>(.)</strong>', text) (1 Reply)
Hello all,
I have a verilog file as following (part of it):
old.v:
bw_r_rf16x32 AUTO_TEMPLATE (
1957 // .rst_tri_en (mem_write_disable),
1958 .rclk (clk),
1959 .bit_wen (dva_bit_wr_en_e),
1960 .din ... (5 Replies)
In a python script I have 2 files printing side by side on the same line. I want to have 1 of the files to be already displayed at once while the other file print down the list in the file and it still will produce new lines. I want to do it like that to reduce printing a lot of lines and... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: bigvito19
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
isympy
isympy(1)isympy(1)NAME
isympy - interactive shell for SymPy
SYNOPSIS
isympy [-c | --console]
isympy [ {-h | --help} | {-v | --version} ]
DESCRIPTION
isympy is a Python shell for SymPy. It is just a normal python shell (ipython shell if you have the ipython package installed) that exe-
cutes the following commands so that you don't have to:
>>> from __future__ import division
>>> from sympy import *
>>> x, y, z = symbols("xyz")
>>> k, m, n = symbols("kmn", integer=True)
So starting isympy is equivalent to starting python (or ipython) and executing the above commands by hand. It is intended for easy and
quick experimentation with SymPy. For more complicated programs, it is recommended to write a script and import things explicitly (using
the "from sympy import sin, log, Symbol, ..." idiom).
OPTIONS -c shell, --console=shell
Use the specified shell (python or ipython) as console backend instead of the default one (ipython if present or python otherwise).
Example: isympy -c python
FILES
${HOME}/.sympy-history
Saves the history of commands when using the python shell as backend.
BUGS
The upstreams BTS can be found at <http://code.google.com/p/sympy/issues/list> Please report all bugs that you find in there, this will
help improve the overall quality of SymPy.
SEE ALSO ipython(1), python(1)
2007-10-8 isympy(1)