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Glade Survey

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Juan Pablo Ugarte

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Nov 18, 2013, 12:53:09 PM11/18/13
to pytho...@python.org

Hello everybody!

We (Glade Developers) are conducting a user survey which will help us take
informed decisions to improve the overall developer experience.

So please take a few minutes to complete the survey, we appreciate it!

https://glade.gnome.org/registration.html


Cheers

Juan Pablo, on behalf of the Glade team



What is Glade?

Glade is a RAD tool to enable quick & easy development of user
interfaces for the GTK+ [1] toolkit and the GNOME [2] desktop
environment.

The user interfaces designed in Glade are saved as XML, and by using the
GtkBuilder [3] GTK+ object these can be loaded by applications
dynamically as needed.

By using GtkBuilder, Glade XML files can be used in numerous programming
languages [4] including C, C++, C#, Vala, Java, Perl, Python,and others.

Glade is Free Software released under the GNU GPL License [5]

[1] http://www.gtk.org/
[2] http://www.gnome.org/
[3] http://library.gnome.org/devel/gtk/stable/GtkBuilder.html
[4] http://www.gtk.org/language-bindings.php
[5] http://www.fsf.org/licensing/licenses/gpl.html





Gene Heskett

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Nov 18, 2013, 4:04:51 PM11/18/13
to pytho...@python.org
On Monday 18 November 2013 16:04:14 Juan Pablo Ugarte did opine:

> Hello everybody!
>
> We (Glade Developers) are conducting a user survey which will help us
> take informed decisions to improve the overall developer experience.
>
> So please take a few minutes to complete the survey, we appreciate it!
>
> https://glade.gnome.org/registration.html

Your certificate for https is invalid. So I won't.
>
>
> Cheers
>
> Juan Pablo, on behalf of the Glade team
>
>
>
> What is Glade?
>
> Glade is a RAD tool to enable quick & easy development of user
> interfaces for the GTK+ [1] toolkit and the GNOME [2] desktop
> environment.
>
> The user interfaces designed in Glade are saved as XML, and by using the
> GtkBuilder [3] GTK+ object these can be loaded by applications
> dynamically as needed.
>
> By using GtkBuilder, Glade XML files can be used in numerous programming
> languages [4] including C, C++, C#, Vala, Java, Perl, Python,and others.
>
> Glade is Free Software released under the GNU GPL License [5]
>
> [1] http://www.gtk.org/
> [2] http://www.gnome.org/
> [3] http://library.gnome.org/devel/gtk/stable/GtkBuilder.html
> [4] http://www.gtk.org/language-bindings.php
> [5] http://www.fsf.org/licensing/licenses/gpl.html


Cheers, Gene
--
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author)

Communicate! It can't make things any worse.
A pen in the hand of this president is far more
dangerous than 200 million guns in the hands of
law-abiding citizens.

Chris Angelico

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Nov 18, 2013, 6:31:59 PM11/18/13
to pytho...@python.org
On Tue, Nov 19, 2013 at 8:04 AM, Gene Heskett <ghes...@wdtv.com> wrote:
> On Monday 18 November 2013 16:04:14 Juan Pablo Ugarte did opine:
>
>> Hello everybody!
>>
>> We (Glade Developers) are conducting a user survey which will help us
>> take informed decisions to improve the overall developer experience.
>>
>> So please take a few minutes to complete the survey, we appreciate it!
>>
>> https://glade.gnome.org/registration.html
>
> Your certificate for https is invalid. So I won't.

Invalid in what way? It looks fine to me. Or is it that you don't
trust its signer?

ChrisA

Gene Heskett

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Nov 18, 2013, 9:12:28 PM11/18/13
to pytho...@python.org
On Monday 18 November 2013 20:43:24 Chris Angelico did opine:
Firefox barked at me. So I backed away. And now it works. Phase of moon
sensitive? Chew in wrong side of mouth? Or you fixed it. :)

Cheers, Gene
--
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author)

If you give Congress a chance to vote on both sides of an issue, it
will always do it.
-- Les Aspin, D., Wisconsin

Juan Pablo Ugarte

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Nov 18, 2013, 10:34:50 PM11/18/13
to Gene Heskett, pytho...@python.org
On Mon, 2013-11-18 at 16:04 -0500, Gene Heskett wrote:
> On Monday 18 November 2013 16:04:14 Juan Pablo Ugarte did opine:
>
> > Hello everybody!
> >
> > We (Glade Developers) are conducting a user survey which will help us
> > take informed decisions to improve the overall developer experience.
> >
> > So please take a few minutes to complete the survey, we appreciate it!
> >
> > https://glade.gnome.org/registration.html
>
> Your certificate for https is invalid. So I won't.

I do not have control over the web server at gnome, I only have access
to glade.gnome.org

It is true that it is not supplying owner information I guess it should
say GNOME Foundation, in any case gnome.org has they same problem so I
will contact the web administrators to notify them about the situation.

thanks

Juan Pablo


Juan Pablo Ugarte

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Nov 19, 2013, 10:28:37 AM11/19/13
to Gene Heskett, pytho...@python.org
On Mon, 2013-11-18 at 21:12 -0500, Gene Heskett wrote:
[...]
> > Invalid in what way? It looks fine to me. Or is it that you don't
> > trust its signer?
> >
> > ChrisA
>
> Firefox barked at me. So I backed away. And now it works. Phase of moon
> sensitive? Chew in wrong side of mouth? Or you fixed it. :)

:) I did not fix anything, do you remember the exact warning?

cheers

JP


Gene Heskett

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Nov 19, 2013, 10:57:55 AM11/19/13
to Juan Pablo Ugarte, pytho...@python.org
On Tuesday 19 November 2013 10:56:49 Juan Pablo Ugarte did opine:
Something about an expired certificate, but not the exact message. Sorry.

> cheers
>
> JP


Cheers, Gene
--
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author)

In Nature there are neither rewards nor punishments, there are
consequences.
-- R. G. Ingersoll

Travis Griggs

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Nov 20, 2013, 1:55:08 AM11/20/13
to pytho...@python.org

OSX (Mavericks) has python2.7 stock installed. But I do all my own personal python stuff with 3.3. I just flushed my 3.3.2 install and installed the new 3.3.3. So I need to install pyserial again. I can do it the way I've done it before, which is:

  1. Download pyserial from pypi
  2. untar pyserial.tgz
  3. cd pyserial
  4. python3 setup.py install

But I'd like to do like the cool kids do, and just do something like pip3 install pyserial. But it's not clear how I get to that point. And just that point. Not interested (unless I have to be) in virtualenv yet.

Ned Deily

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Nov 20, 2013, 2:27:37 AM11/20/13
to pytho...@python.org
In article <6856A21C-57E8-4CDD...@gmail.com>,
> yet.---------------------------------------------------------------------

http://www.pip-installer.org/en/latest/installing.html

# download and install setuptools
curl -O https://bitbucket.org/pypa/setuptools/raw/bootstrap/ez_setup.py
python3 ez_setup.py
# download and install pip
curl -O https://raw.github.com/pypa/pip/master/contrib/get-pip.py
python3 get-pip.py
# use pip to install
python3 -m pip install pyserial
# Don't want it?
python3 -m pip uninstall pyserial

--
Ned Deily,
n...@acm.org

Craig Yoshioka

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Nov 20, 2013, 3:41:36 AM11/20/13
to Travis Griggs, pytho...@python.org
Mavericks?  Homebrew all the way.

Google Homebrew and install it
brew install python3
pip3 install pyserial


Craig reporting from the road
10550 N Torrey Pines Rd
La Jolla CA 92037

On Nov 19, 2013, at 10:55 PM, Travis Griggs <travis...@gmail.com> wrote:

OSX (Mavericks) has python2.7 stock installed. But I do all my own personal python stuff with 3.3. I just flushed my 3.3.2 install and installed the new 3.3.3. So I need to install pyserial again. I can do it the way I've done it before, which is:

  1. Download pyserial from pypi
  2. untar pyserial.tgz
  3. cd pyserial
  4. python3 setup.py install

But I'd like to do like the cool kids do, and just do something like pip3 install pyserial. But it's not clear how I get to that point. And just that point. Not interested (unless I have to be) in virtualenv yet.

Mark Lawrence

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Nov 20, 2013, 9:01:22 AM11/20/13
to pytho...@python.org
On 20/11/2013 06:55, Travis Griggs wrote:
> OSX (Mavericks) has python2.7 stock installed. But I do all my own
> personal python stuff with 3.3. I just flushed my 3.3.2 install and
> installed the new 3.3.3. So I need to install pyserial again.

Just idle curiosity but why do you have to do this? On Windows I just
whack 3.3.3 over the top of 3.3.2, job done.

--
Python is the second best programming language in the world.
But the best has yet to be invented. Christian Tismer

Mark Lawrence

Travis Griggs

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Nov 22, 2013, 3:10:23 PM11/22/13
to pytho...@python.org

On Nov 20, 2013, at 6:01 AM, Mark Lawrence <bream...@yahoo.co.uk> wrote:

> On 20/11/2013 06:55, Travis Griggs wrote:
>> OSX (Mavericks) has python2.7 stock installed. But I do all my own
>> personal python stuff with 3.3. I just flushed my 3.3.2 install and
>> installed the new 3.3.3. So I need to install pyserial again.
>
> Just idle curiosity but why do you have to do this? On Windows I just whack 3.3.3 over the top of 3.3.2, job done.

I think in this case, it was a chance to clean house, and maybe up the “tools” game (e.g. use pip) instead of what I had been doing. So you’re correct. The flushing of 3.3.2 was more that I *wanted* to, instead of *needing* to.

(aside. I do not use GoogleGroups, but have been accused of somehow sending email that looks like I do. Does this email look like that?)

Travis Griggs

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Nov 22, 2013, 3:23:39 PM11/22/13
to pytho...@python.org

On Nov 19, 2013, at 11:27 PM, Ned Deily <n...@acm.org> wrote:

> In article <6856A21C-57E8-4CDD...@gmail.com>,
> Travis Griggs <travis...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> OSX (Mavericks) has python2.7 stock installed. But I do all my own personal
>> python stuff with 3.3. I just flushed my 3.3.2 install and installed the new
>> 3.3.3. So I need to install pyserial again. I can do it the way I've done it
>> before, which is:
>>
>> Download pyserial from pypi
>> untar pyserial.tgz
>> cd pyserial
>> python3 setup.py install
>> But I'd like to do like the cool kids do, and just do something like pip3
>> install pyserial. But it's not clear how I get to that point. And just that
>> point. Not interested (unless I have to be) in virtualenv
>> yet.---------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> http://www.pip-installer.org/en/latest/installing.html
>
> # download and install setuptools
> curl -O https://bitbucket.org/pypa/setuptools/raw/bootstrap/ez_setup.py
> python3 ez_setup.py
> # download and install pip
> curl -O https://raw.github.com/pypa/pip/master/contrib/get-pip.py
> python3 get-pip.py
> # use pip to install
> python3 -m pip install pyserial
> # Don't want it?
> python3 -m pip uninstall pyserial
>
> --
> Ned Deily,
> n...@acm.org

Ned,

Thank you! Belatedly. I’ve had some fires to put out at work. And have gotten back to this, and this is exactly what I was looking for. I added the additional step of:

cd /usr/local/bin
ln -s ../../../Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.3/bin/pip pip

Works, like a charm.

xDog Walker

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Nov 22, 2013, 3:28:06 PM11/22/13
to pytho...@python.org
On Friday 2013 November 22 12:10, Travis Griggs wrote:
> (aside. I do not use GoogleGroups, but have been accused of somehow sending
> email that looks like I do. Does this email look like that?)

No.

--
Yonder nor sorghum stenches shut ladle gulls stopper torque wet
strainers.

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