我们从Python开源项目中,提取了以下50个代码示例,用于说明如何使用operator.html()。
def group(s, n): # See http://www.python.org/doc/2.6/library/functions.html#zip return list(zip(*[iter(s)]*n))
def interleave_planes(ipixels, apixels, ipsize, apsize): """ Interleave (colour) planes, e.g. RGB + A = RGBA. Return an array of pixels consisting of the `ipsize` elements of data from each pixel in `ipixels` followed by the `apsize` elements of data from each pixel in `apixels`. Conventionally `ipixels` and `apixels` are byte arrays so the sizes are bytes, but it actually works with any arrays of the same type. The returned array is the same type as the input arrays which should be the same type as each other. """ itotal = len(ipixels) atotal = len(apixels) newtotal = itotal + atotal newpsize = ipsize + apsize # Set up the output buffer # See http://www.python.org/doc/2.4.4/lib/module-array.html#l2h-1356 out = array(ipixels.typecode) # It's annoying that there is no cheap way to set the array size :-( out.extend(ipixels) out.extend(apixels) # Interleave in the pixel data for i in range(ipsize): out[i:newtotal:newpsize] = ipixels[i:itotal:ipsize] for i in range(apsize): out[i+ipsize:newtotal:newpsize] = apixels[i:atotal:apsize] return out
def group(s, n): # See # http://www.python.org/doc/2.6/library/functions.html#zip return zip(*[iter(s)]*n)
def mycallersname(): """Returns the name of the caller of the caller of this function (hence the name of the caller of the function in which "mycallersname()" textually appears). Returns None if this cannot be determined.""" # http://docs.python.org/library/inspect.html#the-interpreter-stack import inspect frame = inspect.currentframe() if not frame: return None frame_,filename_,lineno_,funname,linelist_,listi_ = ( inspect.getouterframes(frame)[2]) return funname
def _enhex(s): """Convert from binary string (bytes) to hex string (str).""" import binascii return bytestostr(binascii.hexlify(s)) # Copies of PngSuite test files taken # from http://www.schaik.com/pngsuite/pngsuite_bas_png.html # on 2009-02-19 by drj and converted to hex. # Some of these are not actually in PngSuite (but maybe they should # be?), they use the same naming scheme, but start with a capital # letter.
def group(s, n): # See # http://www.python.org/doc/2.6/library/functions.html#zip return list(zip(*[iter(s)]*n))
def group(s, n): # See http://www.python.org/doc/2.6/library/functions.html#zip return zip(*[iter(s)]*n)
def isinteger(x): try: return int(x) == x except (TypeError, ValueError): return False # === Legacy Version Support === # :pyver:old: PyPNG works on Python versions 2.3 and 2.2, but not # without some awkward problems. Really PyPNG works on Python 2.4 (and # above); it works on Pythons 2.3 and 2.2 by virtue of fixing up # problems here. It's a bit ugly (which is why it's hidden down here). # # Generally the strategy is one of pretending that we're running on # Python 2.4 (or above), and patching up the library support on earlier # versions so that it looks enough like Python 2.4. When it comes to # Python 2.2 there is one thing we cannot patch: extended slices # http://www.python.org/doc/2.3/whatsnew/section-slices.html. # Instead we simply declare that features that are implemented using # extended slices will not work on Python 2.2. # # In order to work on Python 2.3 we fix up a recurring annoyance involving # the array type. In Python 2.3 an array cannot be initialised with an # array, and it cannot be extended with a list (or other sequence). # Both of those are repeated issues in the code. Whilst I would not # normally tolerate this sort of behaviour, here we "shim" a replacement # for array into place (and hope no-one notices). You never read this. # # In an amusing case of warty hacks on top of warty hacks... the array # shimming we try and do only works on Python 2.3 and above (you can't # subclass array.array in Python 2.2). So to get it working on Python # 2.2 we go for something much simpler and (probably) way slower.