From andrewkubera at gmail.com Wed Jan 8 17:38:23 2020 From: andrewkubera at gmail.com (Andrew Kubera) Date: Wed, 8 Jan 2020 17:38:23 -0500 Subject: [CentralOH] Brazenhead-Dublin Closes after 20 years Message-ID: Well this makes choosing the post-meeting socializing location easier.? I assume management didn't like the dynamic new crowds coming in... they prefer the static types. https://www.10tv.com/article/brazenhead-restaurant-dublin-closes-2020-jan > A popular local restaurant that was in business for more than 20 years has closed permanently. > Mike Tibbets, the owner of Brazenhead in Dublin, says the restaurant closed on Dec. 29. > The pub, which was located at 56 North High Street, opened for business in 1998. > Tibbets did not say what led to the business' closure. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From zach at mailup.net Thu Jan 9 12:42:05 2020 From: zach at mailup.net (Zach Villers) Date: Thu, 09 Jan 2020 12:42:05 -0500 Subject: [CentralOH] Intern Job Postings at OCLC.org Message-ID: <60d46f3a-f7ea-4813-8ad2-7e4259229e07@www.fastmail.com> FYI - this is my personal email. OCLC is a great place to work. The Infrastructure Intern job posting , like many job postings, is sort of generic. Relative to python, we work extensively with Ansible and RHEL. We use python outside of Ansible for scripting/gluing tools together. We're looking for someone both to start at the end of the academic year and immediately (which should be the same person I think). Link to posting - https://oclc.wd1.myworkdayjobs.com/en-US/OCLC_Careers/job/Corporate-Office---Dublin/Infrastructure-Intern_R0001427 Off-list replies are welcome. Apologies if job postings are not allowed. Thanks, -- Zach Villers zach at mailup.net From jim.prior at accenture.com Mon Jan 27 09:38:56 2020 From: jim.prior at accenture.com (Prior, Jim) Date: Mon, 27 Jan 2020 14:38:56 +0000 Subject: [CentralOH] Meeting Tonight Message-ID: <637B7769-9309-4203-9CD4-22A67DCC8480@accenture.com> There is a monthly meeting tonight. Thanks to OliveAI for pizza and beverages! What: January Monthly (COhPy) Meeting[2] When: 2020-01-27 1800 to 2000 Where: Dublin Library I hope to give a little presentation on using property[1] [1] https://docs.python.org/3/library/functions.html#property [2] https://www.meetup.com/Central-Ohio-Python-Users-Group/events/268099199/ ________________________________ This message is for the designated recipient only and may contain privileged, proprietary, or otherwise confidential information. If you have received it in error, please notify the sender immediately and delete the original. Any other use of the e-mail by you is prohibited. Where allowed by local law, electronic communications with Accenture and its affiliates, including e-mail and instant messaging (including content), may be scanned by our systems for the purposes of information security and assessment of internal compliance with Accenture policy. Your privacy is important to us. Accenture uses your personal data only in compliance with data protection laws. For further information on how Accenture processes your personal data, please see our privacy statement at https://www.accenture.com/us-en/privacy-policy. ______________________________________________________________________________________ www.accenture.com From eric at intellovations.com Mon Jan 27 10:18:45 2020 From: eric at intellovations.com (Eric Floehr) Date: Mon, 27 Jan 2020 10:18:45 -0500 Subject: [CentralOH] Meeting Tonight In-Reply-To: <637B7769-9309-4203-9CD4-22A67DCC8480@accenture.com> References: <637B7769-9309-4203-9CD4-22A67DCC8480@accenture.com> Message-ID: Jim, Thanks for this note and reminder! Also thanks to OliveAI for sponsoring the pizza and drinks. And finally, thanks Jim for offering to talk about property... this is a "Bring Your Own Talk" night, so attendees will be bringing topics to talk about, be it 5 minutes or 15 or 50 minutes. -Eric On Mon, Jan 27, 2020 at 9:39 AM Prior, Jim via CentralOH < centraloh at python.org> wrote: > There is a monthly meeting tonight. > Thanks to OliveAI for pizza and beverages! > > What: January Monthly (COhPy) Meeting[2] > When: 2020-01-27 1800 to 2000 > Where: Dublin Library > > I hope to give a little presentation on using property[1] > > [1] https://docs.python.org/3/library/functions.html#property > [2] > https://www.meetup.com/Central-Ohio-Python-Users-Group/events/268099199/ > > > > ________________________________ > > This message is for the designated recipient only and may contain > privileged, proprietary, or otherwise confidential information. If you have > received it in error, please notify the sender immediately and delete the > original. Any other use of the e-mail by you is prohibited. Where allowed > by local law, electronic communications with Accenture and its affiliates, > including e-mail and instant messaging (including content), may be scanned > by our systems for the purposes of information security and assessment of > internal compliance with Accenture policy. Your privacy is important to us. > Accenture uses your personal data only in compliance with data protection > laws. For further information on how Accenture processes your personal > data, please see our privacy statement at > https://www.accenture.com/us-en/privacy-policy. > > ______________________________________________________________________________________ > > www.accenture.com > _______________________________________________ > CentralOH mailing list > CentralOH at python.org > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/centraloh > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From deeppunster at fastmail.com Tue Jan 28 18:03:34 2020 From: deeppunster at fastmail.com (Travis Risner) Date: Tue, 28 Jan 2020 18:03:34 -0500 Subject: [CentralOH] Regex Testers Message-ID: <10525F2E-BE7F-4FB2-BCA8-5C254EAE3460@fastmail.com> Hi, At last night?s monthly COhPy meeting I showed a number of regex testing web sites that I have stumbled across. Here is a list of them followed by IDE based testers, standalone testers, a list of ?cheat sheet? sites and the formal Python documentation. #### Web Based Regular Expression Testers * https://pythex.org/ * This is the one that Eric Floehr showed us. * Appears to be match only. * Includes cheat sheet style hints below the testing area. * http://www.pyregex.com/ * Can test match, findall, and search Python regexes. * This one has a handy cheat sheet below. * https://www.debuggex.com/ * Appears to be match only. * Change the dropdown on the left (part way down) to make it Python oriented. * Includes a link to a cheat sheet. * If you sign in, it has a library of example matches for SSN?s, ISBN?s, Credit Cards, etc. * https://regex101.com/ * Need to select Python on the left or set in settings. * Appears to be match only. * Has sample expressions submitted by others. * Has a quiz option. * http://www.regexplanet.com/advanced/python/index.html * Appears to provide match and replace options. * Has a cookbook of hundreds of examples, but you have to sign in first to see them. * https://regexr.com/ * Has options for Javascript and PCRE only - no Python. * Has both match and replace options. * Provides an explanation for each element of the regex syntax when you hover over the element. * Has option to explain all elements of the regex pattern. * https://rubular.com/ This is ruby oriented and is not Python-specific. This site inspired several of the sites above. #### IDE Based Regular Expression Testers * PyCharm * Has a plugin available called Regex Tester. Unfortunately it is Java oriented. * PyScripter * Has Python oriented regex feature. However, this IDE can only be installed on Windows. * Other IDE?s may have support for testing regexes, but I do not have any experience with them. #### Standalone Regular Expression Testers * Expresso (http://www.ultrapico.com/Expresso.htm) * I showed a link to this downloadable program for testing regular expressions. However, it will it only install and run on Windows, and it only uses the .net regular expression engine. * Regex Buddy (https://www.regexbuddy.com/index.html) * This is another program that can test regular expressions without needing the internet. Although it can convert Regexes from one flavor to another (e.g. Javascript to Python), it only runs on Windows ? and costs $40 to boot. #### Cheat Sheets * https://www.dataquest.io/blog/regex-cheatsheet/ * Has downloadable PDF cheat sheet as well as regex hints lower down on the page. * https://github.com/tartley/python-regex-cheatsheet/ * This is a GitHub repository that will build a PDF cheat sheet. * https://www.tutorialspoint.com/python/python_reg_expressions.htm * More of a list of all regex elements and a description of what each does. #### Formal Python re library documentation: https://docs.python.org/3/library/re.html Notes: * Al Sweigart?s book _Automate the Boring Stuff_, chapter 7, is an excellent tutorial on much of the regex syntax. * The book _The Python 3 Standard Library by Example_ by Doug Hellmann has examples of each regex element and how it can be used. Perhaps you can find it in the library as it is rather expensive. HTH, Travis -- Travis Risner -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From deeppunster at fastmail.com Tue Jan 28 18:28:51 2020 From: deeppunster at fastmail.com (Travis Risner) Date: Tue, 28 Jan 2020 18:28:51 -0500 Subject: [CentralOH] Regex Testers Message-ID: <212CC278-7F30-492C-99DC-8F103D71C223@fastmail.com> Hi, At last night?s monthly COhPy meeting I showed a number of regex testing web sites that I have stumbled across. Here is a list of them followed by IDE based testers, standalone testers, a list of ?cheat sheet? sites and the formal Python documentation. #### Web Based Regular Expression Testers * https://pythex.org/ * This is the one that Eric Floehr showed us. * Appears to be match only. * Includes cheat sheet style hints below the testing area. * http://www.pyregex.com/ * Can test match, findall, and search Python regexes. * This one has a handy cheat sheet below. * https://www.debuggex.com/ * Appears to be match only. * Change the dropdown on the left (part way down) to make it Python oriented. * Includes a link to a cheat sheet. * If you sign in, it has a library of example matches for SSN?s, ISBN?s, Credit Cards, etc. * https://regex101.com/ * Need to select Python on the left or set in settings. * Appears to be match only. * Has sample expressions submitted by others. * Has a quiz option. * http://www.regexplanet.com/advanced/python/index.html * Appears to provide match and replace options. * Has a cookbook of hundreds of examples, but you have to sign in first to see them. * https://regexr.com/ * Has options for Javascript and PCRE only - no Python. * Has both match and replace options. * Provides an explanation for each element of the regex syntax when you hover over the element. * Has option to explain all elements of the regex pattern. * https://rubular.com/ This is ruby oriented and is not Python-specific. This site inspired several of the sites above. #### IDE Based Regular Expression Testers * PyCharm * Has a plugin available called Regex Tester. Unfortunately it is Java oriented. * PyScripter * Has Python oriented regex feature. However, this IDE can only be installed on Windows. * Other IDE?s may have support for testing regexes, but I do not have any experience with them. #### Standalone Regular Expression Testers * Expresso (http://www.ultrapico.com/Expresso.htm) * I showed a link to this downloadable program for testing regular expressions. However, it will it only install and run on Windows, and it only uses the .net regular expression engine. * Regex Buddy (https://www.regexbuddy.com/index.html) * This is another program that can test regular expressions without needing the internet. Although it can convert Regexes from one flavor to another (e.g. Javascript to Python), it only runs on Windows ? and costs $40 to boot. #### Cheat Sheets * https://www.dataquest.io/blog/regex-cheatsheet/ * Has downloadable PDF cheat sheet as well as regex hints lower down on the page. * https://github.com/tartley/python-regex-cheatsheet/ * This is a GitHub repository that will build a PDF cheat sheet. * https://www.tutorialspoint.com/python/python_reg_expressions.htm * More of a list of all regex elements and a description of what each does. #### Formal Python re library documentation: https://docs.python.org/3/library/re.html Notes: * Al Sweigart?s book _Automate the Boring Stuff_, chapter 7, is an excellent tutorial on much of the regex syntax. * The book _The Python 3 Standard Library by Example_ by Doug Hellmann has examples of each regex element and how it can be used. Perhaps you can find it in the library as it is rather expensive. HTH, Travis -- Travis Risner -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: