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reckoner reckoner

[IPython-user] ipython1 and farm tasking - 0 views

  • [IPython-user] ipython1 and farm tasking Brian Granger ellisonbg.net@gmail.... Wed Feb 27 16:29:03 CST 2008 Previous message: [IPython-user] ipython1 and farm tasking Next message: [IPython-user] yet another leopard/readline question Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ] Alex, First, I would suggest updating your ipython1 install from our svn repository. We are about to push out a major new version and the documentation is _much_ better. Also, there are many new features that will hopefully help you. Here is a simple example (using the latest svn of ipython1): In [1]: from ipython1.kernel import client In [2]: mec = client.MultiEngineClient(('127.0.0.1',10105)) In [3]: tc = client.TaskClient(('127.0.0.1',10113)) In [4]: def fold_package(x): ...: return 2.0*x ...: In [5]: mec.push_function(dict(fold_package=fold_package)) Out[5]: [None, None, None, None] In [6]: tasks = [client.Task("y=fold_package(x)",push={'x':x},pull=('y',)) for x in range(128)] In [7]: task_ids = [tc.run(t) for t in tasks] In [8]: tc.barrier(task_ids) In [9]: task_results = [tc.get_task_result(tid) for tid in task_ids] In [10]: results = [tr.ns.y for tr in task_results] In [11]: print results [0.0, 2.0, 4.0, 6.0, 8.0, 10.0, 12.0, 14.0, 16.0, 18.0, 20.0, 22.0, 24.0, 26.0, 28.0, 30.0, 32.0, 34.0, 36.0, 38.0, 40.0, 42.0, 44.0, 46.0, 48.0, 50.0, 52.0, 54.0, 56.0, 58.0, 60.0, 62.0, 64.0, 66.0, 68.0, 70.0, 72.0, 74.0, 76.0, 78.0, 80.0, 82.0, 84.0, 86.0, 88.0, 90.0, 92.0, 94.0, 96.0, 98.0, 100.0, 102.0, 104.0, 106.0, 108.0, 110.0, 112.0, 114.0, 116.0, 118.0, 120.0, 122.0, 124.0, 126.0, 128.0, 130.0, 132.0, 134.0, 136.0, 138.0, 140.0, 142.0, 144.0, 146.0, 148.0, 150.0, 152.0, 154.0, 156.0, 158.0, 160.0, 162.0, 164.0, 166.0, 168.0, 170.0, 172.0, 174.0, 176.0, 178.0, 180.0, 182.0, 184.0, 186.0, 188.0, 190.0, 192.0, 194.0, 196.0, 198.0, 200.0, 202.0, 204.0, 206.0, 208.0, 210.0, 212.0, 214.0, 216.0, 218.0, 220.0, 222.0, 224.0, 226.0, 228.0, 230.0, 232.0, 234.0, 236.0, 238.0, 240.0, 242.0, 244.0, 246.0, 248.0, 250.0, 252.0, 254.0] Or if you don't need load balancing: # This sends the fold_package function for you! results = mec.map(fold_package, range(128)) Let us know if you run into other problems. Cheers, Brian
reckoner reckoner

profitpy -module for automated stock trading - 0 views

  • ProfitPy is a set of libraries and tools for the development, testing, and execution of automated stock trading systems Specifically, ProfitPy is a collection of Python packages, modules, and scripts that work together to help you implement an automated stock trading program (or programs). The package features: A library with classes for accounts, orders, tickers, and more A GUI program for executing and plotting trades in real-time A GUI tool to collect ticker data for off-line use A CLI tool to back-test trading strategies Dozens of technical indicators and plotting widgets to display them An X11 keystroke tool for automating the TWS application
reckoner reckoner

Most efficient unzip - inverse of zip? - 0 views

  • I'm declaring this one to be the winner! (Not that my opinion counts for anythin, but I'm just impressed: a1, b1 = zip(*ab) (or a1, b1 = apply(zip,ab)?) BTW: this process isn't 100% inverse. It has the side effect of turning lists or strings (non-tuple sequences) into tuples, if they are supplied as the original sequences.
reckoner reckoner

Charming Python: Inside Python's implementations - 0 views

  • To attempt to explain it in the simplest terms, a continuation is a representation, at a particular point in a program, of everything the program is capable of doing subsequently. A continuation is a potential that depends on initial conditions. Rather than loop in a traditional way, it is possible to invoke the same continuation recursively with different initial conditions. One broad claim I have read is that continuations, in a theoretical sense, are more fundamental and underlie every other control structure. Don't worry if these ideas cause your brain to melt; that is a normal reaction.
reckoner reckoner

Kill process based on window name (win32) - 0 views

  • Re: Kill process based on window name (win32) Thank you Roger. Your advice did the trick. For anyone interested, the basic code to terminate a process (politely) would be something like this (hwnd is retrieved using win32gui.EnumerateWindows): # Get the window's process id's t, p = win32process.GetWindowThreadProcessId(hwnd) # Ask window nicely to close win32gui.PostMessage(hwnd, win32con.WM_CLOSE, 0, 0) # Allow some time for app to close time.sleep(10) # If app didn't close, force close try: handle = win32api.OpenProcess(win32con.PROCESS_TERMINATE, 0, p) if handle: win32api.TerminateProcess(handle,0) win32api.CloseHandle(handle) except: pass:
reckoner reckoner

vimpdb - Google Code - 0 views

  • Tired of debugging Python using print statements? Don't like the cumbersome PDB (Python debugger) console? Prefer using Vim for coding your Python programs? VimPdb is the solution - allows debugging Python in an IDE-fashion, right within the Vim editor.
reckoner reckoner

Python anti-pitfalls - 0 views

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    Python anti-pitfalls The following are a quick (random, off the top of various heads) list of things that I think are anti-pitfalls in Python. That is, because the language has these features, it is harder to make programming mistakes.
reckoner reckoner

pyscripter - PyScripter Development Site - 0 views

  • PyScripter is a free and open-source Python Integrated Development Environment (IDE) created with the ambition to become competitive in functionality with commercial Windows-based IDEs available for other languages. Being built in a compiled language is rather snappier than some of the other Python IDEs and provides an extensive blend of features that make it a productive Python development environment. 
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    PyScripter is a free and open-source Python Integrated Development Environment (IDE) created with the ambition to become competitive in functionality with commercial Windows-based IDEs available for other languages. Being built in a compiled language is r
reckoner reckoner

TANGO Project - 0 views

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    This is the Python wrapper for the solver. It calls the optimization solver (GENCAN for bound-constrainted problems and ALGENCAN for general nonlinear programming problems).
reckoner reckoner

A Python interface to the cURL library - 0 views

  • The pycurl package is a Python interface to libcurl (http://curl.haxx.se/libcurl/). pycurl has been successfully built and tested with Python versions from 2.2 to the current 2.5.x releases.
reckoner reckoner

Charming Python: Functional programming in Python, Part 1 - 0 views

  • Document options Document options requiring JavaScript are not displayed Rate this pageHelp us improve this contentLevel: IntroductoryDavid Mertz (mertz@gnosis.cx), Applied Metaphysician, Gnosis Software, Inc. 01 Mar 2001Although users usually think of Python as a procedural and object-oriented language, it actually contains everything you need for a completely functional approach to programming. This article discusses general concepts of functional programming, and illustrates ways of implementing functional techniques in Python. We'd better start with the hardest question: "What is functional programming (FP), anyway?" One answer would be to say that FP is what you do when you program in languages like Lisp, Scheme, Haskell, ML, OCAML, Clean, Mercury, or Erlang (or a few others). That is a safe answer, but not one that clarifies very much. Unfortunately, it is hard to get a consistent opinion on just what FP is, even from functional programmers themselves. A story about elephants and blind men seems apropos here. It is also safe to contrast FP with "imperative programming" (what you do in languages like C, Pascal, C++, Java, Perl, Awk, TCL, and most others, at least for the most part).
reckoner reckoner

FrontPage - wxPyWiki - 0 views

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    Hello! Welcome to the wxPyWiki, (pronounced wix-pee-wi-kee) a collaborative document evolution system for the wxPython project, implemented using MoinMoin. Anyone can edit content here, you just have to follow TheRules or risk facing the RathOfRobin ;-) .
reckoner reckoner

taglist.vim - Source code browser (supports C/C++, java, perl, python, tcl, sql, php, e... - 0 views

  • The "Tag List" plugin is a source code browser plugin for Vim and provides an overview of the structure of source code files and allows you to efficiently browse through source code files for different programming languages.  You can visit the taglist plugin home page for more information
reckoner reckoner

Learning to program - 1 views

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    As much as I can. I will cover the basic theory of computer programming - what it is, some of its history and the basic techniques needed to solve problems. I will not be teaching esoteric techniques or the details of any particular programming language,
reckoner reckoner

Pyro - About - 0 views

  • Pyro is short for PYthon Remote Objects. It is an advanced and powerful Distributed Object Technology system written entirely in Python, that is designed to be very easy to use. Never worry about writing network communication code again, when using Pyro you just write your Python objects like you would normally. With only a few lines of extra code, Pyro takes care of the network communication between your objects once you split them over different machines on the network. All the gory socket programming details are taken care of, you just call a method on a remote object as if it were a local object!
seth kutcher

Remote Computer Assistance - 1 views

My computer often experiences trouble and I could hardly find someone to fix it for me, especially when it happens during the wee hours of the morning. My friend told me about Computer Assistance O...

started by seth kutcher on 13 Oct 11 no follow-up yet
amby kdp

Get The Best Python Programming Book For Beginners - 0 views

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    A programmer can start from scratch and become a professional with the help of James P. Long's "Python Programming For Beginners" book. Those who want to get a good grip of what programming language is should get from this Python book.
reckoner reckoner

scipy cluster example dendogram - 1 views

  • Now that we have a dendrogram from which to inspect, let's find a suitable color threshold. One can see roughly three major clusters formed by using a distance threshold of 1.2. Now, let's plot another dendrogram using this as the color threshold. The legend displays the predictions of each flat cluster formed by cutting with this threshold
Justin Pierce

Managing Finances Gets Easier - 1 views

started by Justin Pierce on 27 Nov 12 no follow-up yet
luke jenning

Learn the basics of Python and start coding today! - 0 views

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    The Python programming language is a high level programming language that is used in a wide spectrum of applications -- from web design and game programming to scientific research.
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