<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf8"?>
<feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xml:lang="en"><title>unalog - latest from dchud - tag "python"</title><link href="/user/dchud/tag/python/" rel="alternate"></link><id>/user/dchud/tag/python/</id><updated>2010-02-19T01:57:01Z</updated><entry><title>Welcome to The Hitchhiker’s Guide to Packaging — The Hitchhiker's Guide to Packaging v1.0 documentation</title><link href="http://guide.python-distribute.org/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2010-02-19T01:57:01Z</updated><id>tag:guide.python-distribute.org,2010-02-19://</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="python"></category><category term="docs"></category></entry><entry><title>LeopardにバンドルされてるPythonでreadlineを有効にする方法を見つけた。 - Yのはてな</title><link href="http://d.hatena.ne.jp/jbking/20071222/readline_on_leopard" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2010-02-12T08:33:25Z</updated><id>tag:d.hatena.ne.jp,2010-02-12:/jbking/20071222/readline_on_leopard/</id><summary type="html">just proving a point to myself. nyah, self.</summary><category term="python"></category><category term="readline"></category><category term="osx"></category></entry><entry><title>Sean Gillies Blog / 995 / Plotting GIS shapes</title><link href="http://sgillies.net/blog/995/plotting-gis-shapes" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2010-02-11T08:36:10Z</updated><id>tag:sgillies.net,2010-02-11:/blog/995/plotting-gis-shapes/</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="python"></category></entry><entry><title>Book (Natural Language Toolkit) - Natural Language Processing with Python --- Analyzing Text with the Natural Language Toolkit</title><link href="http://www.nltk.org/book" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2010-02-08T10:20:28Z</updated><id>tag:www.nltk.org,2010-02-08:/book/</id><summary type="html">cool, must've forgot that this book is available under cc online. been meaning to read it since it came out. what snow days are for!</summary><category term="nlp"></category><category term="nltk"></category><category term="python"></category><category term="book"></category></entry><entry><title>Introducing MongoEngine | Harry Marr</title><link href="http://hmarr.com/2010/feb/04/introducing-mongoengine/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2010-02-07T13:48:48Z</updated><id>tag:hmarr.com,2010-02-07:/2010/feb/04/introducing-mongoengine//</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="mongodb"></category><category term="python"></category></entry><entry><title>Ian Bicking: a blog   ::  A Few Corrections To “On Packaging”</title><link href="http://blog.ianbicking.org/2008/12/14/a-few-corrections-to-on-packaging/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2010-01-29T01:30:58Z</updated><id>tag:blog.ianbicking.org,2010-01-29:/2008/12/14/a-few-corrections-to-on-packaging//</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="python"></category></entry><entry><title>bpython interpreter</title><link href="http://bpython-interpreter.org/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2010-01-29T01:15:13Z</updated><id>tag:bpython-interpreter.org,2010-01-29://</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="python"></category></entry><entry><title>Tools of the Modern Python Hacker: Virtualenv, Fabric and Pip</title><link href="http://clemesha.org/blog/2009/jul/05/modern-python-hacker-tools-virtualenv-fabric-pip/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2010-01-27T23:45:43Z</updated><id>tag:clemesha.org,2010-01-27:/blog/2009/jul/05/modern-python-hacker-tools-virtualenv-fabric-pip//</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="python"></category><category term="virtualenv"></category><category term="fabric"></category><category term="pip"></category></entry><entry><title>How we create and deploy sites fast with virtualenv and Django | Open Source at The Washington Times</title><link href="http://opensource.washingtontimes.com/blog/post/coordt/2010/01/how-we-create-and-deploy-sites-fast-virtualenv-and/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2010-01-27T23:37:18Z</updated><id>tag:opensource.washingtontimes.com,2010-01-27:/blog/post/coordt/2010/01/how-we-create-and-deploy-sites-fast-virtualenv-and//</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="python"></category><category term="django"></category><category term="virtualenv"></category></entry><entry><title>Aza’s Thoughts » A More Readable (Pythonic) Javascript Syntax?</title><link href="http://www.azarask.in/blog/post/making-javascript-syntax-not-suck/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2010-01-27T00:44:11Z</updated><id>tag:www.azarask.in,2010-01-27:/blog/post/making-javascript-syntax-not-suck//</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="python"></category><category term="pyscript"></category></entry><entry><title>h5py - Google Code</title><link href="http://code.google.com/p/h5py/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2008-09-15T04:26:40Z</updated><id>tag:code.google.com,2008-09-15:/p/h5py//</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="hdf5"></category><category term="python"></category></entry><entry><title>Fabric - user_guide</title><link href="http://www.nongnu.org/fab/user_guide.html" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2008-07-22T03:31:22Z</updated><id>tag:www.nongnu.org,2008-07-22:/fab/user_guide.html/</id><summary type="html">"Fabric is a tool that, at its core, logs into a number of hosts with SSH, and executes a set of commands, and possibly uploads or downloads files."</summary><category term="python"></category><category term="deployment"></category></entry><entry><title>Django snippets: Digg-like paginator, updated</title><link href="http://www.djangosnippets.org/snippets/773/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2008-06-04T17:04:17Z</updated><id>tag:www.djangosnippets.org,2008-06-04:/snippets/773//</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="python"></category></entry><entry><title>httplib2 - Google Code</title><link href="http://code.google.com/p/httplib2/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2008-04-25T22:19:00Z</updated><id>tag:code.google.com,2008-04-25:/p/httplib2//</id><summary type="html">"A comprehensive HTTP client library that supports many features left out of other HTTP libraries."</summary><category term="python"></category></entry><entry><title>mactorii - Trac</title><link href="http://trac.pictorii.com/mactorii/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2008-03-30T17:27:38Z</updated><id>tag:trac.pictorii.com,2008-03-30:/mactorii//</id><summary type="html">"mactorii is an image browser implemented in python"</summary><category term="python"></category></entry><entry><title>discorporate : Advanced SQLAlchemy Tutorial @ PyCon 2008</title><link href="http://blog.discorporate.us/2008/03/advanced-sqlalchemy-tutorial-pycon-2008/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2008-03-24T17:18:08Z</updated><id>tag:blog.discorporate.us,2008-03-24:/2008/03/advanced-sqlalchemy-tutorial-pycon-2008//</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="python"></category><category term="sql"></category><category term="slides"></category></entry><entry><title>My Name Rhymes - Pong in 30 Lines</title><link href="http://billmill.org/pong.html" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2008-03-20T14:21:34Z</updated><id>tag:billmill.org,2008-03-20:/pong.html/</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="nodebox"></category><category term="python"></category></entry><entry><title>FrontPage - Storm</title><link href="https://storm.canonical.com/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2008-03-20T06:36:21Z</updated><id>tag:storm.canonical.com,2008-03-20://</id><summary type="html">"Storm is an object-relational mapper (ORM) for Python developed at Canonical. The project has been in development for more than a year for use in Canonical projects such as [WWW] Launchpad, and has recently been released as an open-source product."</summary><category term="python"></category><category term="orm"></category></entry><entry><title>PEP 3101 -- Advanced String Formatting</title><link href="http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-3101/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2008-03-18T22:32:23Z</updated><id>tag:www.python.org,2008-03-18:/dev/peps/pep-3101//</id><summary type="html">"This PEP proposes a new system for built-in string formatting operations, intended as a replacement for the existing '%' string formatting operator."</summary><category term="python"></category></entry><entry><title>techspot.zzzeek.org » Blog Archive » Advanced SQLAlchemy Slides Available</title><link href="http://techspot.zzzeek.org/?p=21" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2008-03-18T21:31:01Z</updated><id>tag:techspot.zzzeek.org,2008-03-18://</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="pycon"></category><category term="python"></category></entry><entry><title>techspot.zzzeek.org » Blog Archive » SQLAlchemy 0.4 and Beyond Slides</title><link href="http://techspot.zzzeek.org/?p=22" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2008-03-18T21:30:48Z</updated><id>tag:techspot.zzzeek.org,2008-03-18://</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="pycon"></category><category term="python"></category></entry><entry><title>Welcome // Werkzeug</title><link href="http://werkzeug.pocoo.org/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2008-03-18T05:16:20Z</updated><id>tag:werkzeug.pocoo.org,2008-03-18://</id><summary type="html">"Werkzeug started as simple collection of various utilities for WSGI applications and has become one of the most advanced WSGI utility modules. It includes a powerful debugger, full featured request and response objects, HTTP utilities to handle entity tags, cache control headers, HTTP dates, cookie handling, file uploads, a powerful URL routing system and a bunch of community contributed addon modules."</summary><category term="python"></category></entry><entry><title>Phil Hassey » Blog Archive » tinypy 1.0 - MIT License and swell OpenGL demo :)</title><link href="http://www.philhassey.com/blog/2008/02/28/tinypy-10-mit-license-and-swell-opengl-demo/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2008-03-17T22:39:49Z</updated><id>tag:www.philhassey.com,2008-03-17:/blog/2008/02/28/tinypy-10-mit-license-and-swell-opengl-demo//</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="tiny"></category><category term="python"></category><category term="woah"></category></entry><entry><title>Pyro - About</title><link href="http://pyro.sourceforge.net/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2008-03-17T21:39:17Z</updated><id>tag:pyro.sourceforge.net,2008-03-17://</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="python"></category><category term="remote"></category><category term="objects"></category></entry><entry><title>Dalke Scientific: python4ply</title><link href="http://dalkescientific.com/Python/python4ply.html" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2008-03-16T20:23:53Z</updated><id>tag:dalkescientific.com,2008-03-16:/Python/python4ply.html/</id><summary type="html">"python4ply is a Python parser for the Python language. The grammar definition uses PLY, a parser system for Python modelled on yacc/lex. The parser rules use the "compiler" module from the standard library to build a Python AST and to generate byte code for .pyc file.

You might use python4ply to experiment with variations in the Python language. The PLY-based lexer and parser are much easier to change than the C implementation Python itself uses or even the ones written in Python which are part of the standard library. This tutorial walks through examples of how to make changes in different levels of the system."</summary><category term="python"></category><category term="ply"></category></entry><entry><title>IPython1 - IPython</title><link href="http://ipython.scipy.org/moin/IPython1" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2008-03-14T22:13:52Z</updated><id>tag:ipython.scipy.org,2008-03-14:/moin/IPython1/</id><summary type="html">neato!  "Implement a system for interactive parallel computing."</summary><category term="python"></category><category term="interpreter"></category></entry><entry><title>django-profile - Google Code</title><link href="http://code.google.com/p/django-profile/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2008-03-10T17:14:55Z</updated><id>tag:code.google.com,2008-03-10:/p/django-profile//</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="django"></category><category term="python"></category><category term="user"></category><category term="profile"></category></entry><entry><title>Revision history [Universal Encoding Detector]</title><link href="http://chardet.feedparser.org/docs/history.html" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2008-03-09T15:06:38Z</updated><id>tag:chardet.feedparser.org,2008-03-09:/docs/history.html/</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="python"></category></entry><entry><title>Adnans Sysadmin/Scripting Blog: mysqldb on leopard</title><link href="http://sysadmin.adnanwasim.com/2007/10/mysqldb-on-leopard.html" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2008-02-18T20:48:05Z</updated><id>tag:sysadmin.adnanwasim.com,2008-02-18:/2007/10/mysqldb-on-leopard.html/</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="python"></category><category term="mysql"></category><category term="leopard"></category><category term="osx"></category></entry><entry><title>Recipe of the week: Pyline - O'Reilly ONLamp Blog</title><link href="http://www.oreillynet.com/onlamp/blog/2007/07/recipe_of_the_week_pyline.html" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2008-01-25T19:25:18Z</updated><id>tag:www.oreillynet.com,2008-01-25:/onlamp/blog/2007/07/recipe_of_the_week_pyline.html/</id><summary type="html">wooh!  fawcett++ # heh, i went to save a link to the script itself, but apparently i already saved it on  2005-07-21. :)</summary><category term="python"></category><category term="tail"></category><category term="tip"></category></entry><entry><title>Cookbook/Matplotlib/mplot3D</title><link href="http://www.scipy.org/Cookbook/Matplotlib/mplot3D" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2008-01-15T21:02:14Z</updated><id>tag:www.scipy.org,2008-01-15:/Cookbook/Matplotlib/mplot3D/</id><summary type="html">wooh!</summary><category term="python"></category><category term="matplotlib"></category><category term="3d"></category></entry><entry><title>Why WSGI?</title><link href="http://brodierao.com/journal/why-wsgi/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2007-12-27T17:53:21Z</updated><id>tag:brodierao.com,2007-12-27:/journal/why-wsgi//</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="tutorial"></category><category term="yaro"></category><category term="memento"></category><category term="selector"></category><category term="python"></category></entry><entry><title>Collaborative filtering made easy</title><link href="http://www.serpentine.com/blog/2006/12/12/collaborative-filtering-made-easy/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2007-11-21T17:32:30Z</updated><id>tag:www.serpentine.com,2007-11-21:/blog/2006/12/12/collaborative-filtering-made-easy//</id><summary type="html">"slope one" implementation</summary><category term="python"></category><category term="tutorial"></category></entry><entry><title>Yould: the smart name generator - YGingras.net</title><link href="http://ygingras.net/yould" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2007-11-12T15:10:16Z</updated><id>tag:ygingras.net,2007-11-12:/yould/</id><summary type="html">"Yould is a generator for pronounceable random words. The text below was generated by Yould. Play with the parameters and regenerate as much as you want."</summary><category term="python"></category></entry><entry><title>SAGE: Open Source Mathematics Software</title><link href="http://www.sagemath.org/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2007-11-12T01:52:11Z</updated><id>tag:www.sagemath.org,2007-11-12://</id><summary type="html">"Use SAGE for studying a huge range of mathematics, including algebra, calculus, elementary to very advanced number theory, cryptography, numerical computation, commutative algebra, group theory, combinatorics, graph theory, and exact linear algebra."</summary><category term="python"></category></entry><entry><title>MayaVi - Enthought Trac - Trac</title><link href="https://svn.enthought.com/enthought/wiki/MayaVi" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2007-10-16T23:17:45Z</updated><id>tag:svn.enthought.com,2007-10-16:/enthought/wiki/MayaVi/</id><summary type="html">version 2</summary><category term="python"></category></entry><entry><title>Zeta-Puppis.com » An introduction to pyclutter (part two)</title><link href="http://zeta-puppis.com/2007/09/30/an-introduction-to-pyclutter-part-two/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2007-10-16T21:03:40Z</updated><id>tag:zeta-puppis.com,2007-10-16:/2007/09/30/an-introduction-to-pyclutter-part-two//</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="python"></category><category term="clutter"></category><category term="tutorial"></category></entry><entry><title>Zeta-Puppis.com » An introduction to pyclutter (part one)</title><link href="http://zeta-puppis.com/2007/09/23/an-introduction-to-pyclutter-part-one/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2007-10-16T21:03:28Z</updated><id>tag:zeta-puppis.com,2007-10-16:/2007/09/23/an-introduction-to-pyclutter-part-one//</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="python"></category><category term="clutter"></category><category term="tutorial"></category></entry><entry><title>Fac-Back-OPAC: An Open Source Interface to Your Library System</title><link href="http://www.infotoday.com/cilmag/oct07/Beccaria_Scott.shtml" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2007-10-02T03:55:11Z</updated><id>tag:www.infotoday.com,2007-10-02:/cilmag/oct07/Beccaria_Scott.shtml/</id><summary type="html">wow.</summary><category term="django"></category><category term="python"></category><category term="marc"></category><category term="opac"></category></entry><entry><title>reviewboard - Google Code</title><link href="http://code.google.com/p/reviewboard/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2007-08-03T17:43:56Z</updated><id>tag:code.google.com,2007-08-03:/p/reviewboard//</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="svn"></category><category term="python"></category><category term="django"></category></entry><entry><title>Zen Of Unicode - Cheesecake - Trac</title><link href="http://pycheesecake.org/wiki/ZenOfUnicode" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2007-07-16T03:56:51Z</updated><id>tag:pycheesecake.org,2007-07-16:/wiki/ZenOfUnicode/</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="python"></category></entry><entry><title>about:cmlenz - Announcing Babel</title><link href="http://www.cmlenz.net/blog/2007/06/announcing_babe.html" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2007-06-20T20:14:01Z</updated><id>tag:www.cmlenz.net,2007-06-20:/blog/2007/06/announcing_babe.html/</id><summary type="html">/me wants to use this with genshi in django...</summary><category term="python"></category><category term="i18n"></category><category term="l10n"></category></entry><entry><title>Unicode HOWTO</title><link href="http://www.amk.ca/python/howto/unicode" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2007-05-09T20:12:39Z</updated><id>tag:www.amk.ca,2007-05-09:/python/howto/unicode/</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="python"></category></entry><entry><title>pybonjour - O2S Wiki</title><link href="http://o2s.csail.mit.edu/o2s-wiki/pybonjour" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2007-04-27T21:10:23Z</updated><id>tag:o2s.csail.mit.edu,2007-04-27:/o2s-wiki/pybonjour/</id><summary type="html">"pybonjour provides a pure-Python interface to [WWW] Apple Bonjour and compatible [WWW] DNS-SD libraries (such as [WWW] Avahi). It allows [WWW] Python scripts to take advantage of [WWW] Zero Configuration Networking (Zeroconf) to register, discover, and resolve services on both local and wide-area networks. Since pybonjour is implemented in pure Python, scripts that use it can easily be ported to Mac OS X, Windows, Linux, and other systems that run Bonjour. pybonjour is [WWW] free software, distributed under the [WWW] MIT license."</summary><category term="python"></category><category term="bonjour"></category></entry><entry><title>Plush</title><link href="http://public.dev.nuxeo.com/~ben/plush/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2007-04-13T11:42:26Z</updated><id>tag:public.dev.nuxeo.com,2007-04-13:/~ben/plush//</id><summary type="html">"Plush is PyLUcene SHell to play with a Lucene indexes interactively."</summary><category term="python"></category><category term="lucene"></category></entry><entry><title>Amazon S3 tools - Command line S3 client</title><link href="http://s3tools.logix.cz/s3cmd" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2007-03-05T11:35:22Z</updated><id>tag:s3tools.logix.cz,2007-03-05:/s3cmd/</id><summary type="html">does just what it says, just what i need</summary><category term="python"></category><category term="s3"></category></entry><entry><title>The Bank: an example of a SimPy Simulation</title><link href="http://simpy.sourceforge.net/SimPyDocs/TheBank.html" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2007-02-06T20:14:12Z</updated><id>tag:simpy.sourceforge.net,2007-02-06:/SimPyDocs/TheBank.html/</id><summary type="html"></summary><category term="python"></category><category term="simpy"></category><category term="simulation"></category><category term="tutorial"></category></entry><entry><title>python-dateutil - Labix</title><link href="http://labix.org/python-dateutil" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2007-02-06T04:56:26Z</updated><id>tag:labix.org,2007-02-06:/python-dateutil/</id><summary type="html">ALL HAIL DATEUTIL</summary><category term="python"></category><category term="date"></category><category term="library"></category></entry><entry><title>duplicity: Main</title><link href="http://duplicity.nongnu.org/" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2007-01-16T04:02:55Z</updated><id>tag:duplicity.nongnu.org,2007-01-16://</id><summary type="html">"Duplicity backs directories by producing encrypted tar-format volumes and uploading them to a remote or local file server. Because duplicity uses librsync, the incremental archives are space efficient and only record the parts of files that have changed since the last backup. Because duplicity uses GnuPG to encrypt and/or sign these archives, they will be safe from spying and/or modification by the server."</summary><category term="python"></category><category term="s3"></category></entry><entry><title>PythonTidy-1.9</title><link href="http://www.lacusveris.com/PythonTidy/PythonTidy-1.9.python" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2007-01-12T02:35:50Z</updated><id>tag:www.lacusveris.com,2007-01-12:/PythonTidy/PythonTidy-1.9.python/</id><summary type="html">'''PythonTidy.py cleans up, regularizes, and reformats the text of Python scripts.'''</summary><category term="python"></category><category term="tidy"></category></entry></feed>
