One of my first self-imposed projects at my job was to recreate a certain annoying application that was a Frankenstein monster: a Microsoft Access file with a VBA GUI. For the most part, the application didn't even have a database. Anyway, part of the application allowed the user to type in an amount for a […]
Earlier this year, I was tasked with creating an application that would download information from our organization's website using Python. The tricky part was that it would be encrypted, gzipped and the payload would be JSON. Could Python do all that? Well, that's what I wanted to find out. Now it's time for you to […]
I've been working on an article about the various Python projects that took part in the 2010 Google Summer of Code for over a month. There are a lot of projects and people to contact and I would say of the ones that I did contact, only 50-60% responded back. So I'm going to go […]
Just an FYI for those of you who like this blog. I have recently opened a Mouse Vs. the Python Twitter account to make it even easier to follow updates to this blog. You can find it here: http://twitter.com/mousevspython I am experimenting with WordPress plugins that can auto-post to Twitter, but haven't had much luck […]
The wxPython project is one of the most popular and easy to use Python GUI toolkit. It wraps the popular C++ wxWidgets project using SWIG. It is also the only cross-platform toolkit that I am aware of that uses the native widgets on each platform wherever possible (for better or for worse). Some like to […]
Whether you're new to Python, been using it for a few years or you're an expert, knowing how to use Python's introspection capabilities can help your understanding of your code and that new package you just downloaded with the crappy documentation. Introspection is a fancy word that means to observe oneself and ponder one's thoughts, […]