I'm stuck in Python!

castironpi at gmail.com castironpi at gmail.com
Tue May 13 09:02:13 EDT 2008


Hi all.

I am trying to write to the Python newsgroup.  I doubt (aha, but
doubt) that I have come to the right place.  (Incoming "this"!)  Is
this the Python newsgroup?  I heard it was called comp.lang.python.
Now to repeat the subject line.  I'm stuck in Python.

Now that was fun.  I will also try to enumerate simple screen savers
(graphicals, graphiclizers).  It may be profitable on some non-bank-
breaking scale to compile the results.  Shall I proceed?  The risk is
"overunity", such that one person can't be at liberty to live, which
in some technical political arenas would be an "anarchy", but there
are sufficiently many of those that I will too.

Does anyone want such a list, or if not, is it at least fun and
recreational to make it?  The dollar would come along the lines of
PowerPoint (name (tm)), so it may be free to do it, very entertaining,
and peaceable.  (As the above would show, you would be free to
approach me to -buy-; I won't oversell.)  I like programming.  (And is
Guido getting his fair share?  I am prepared to share with him.)
Check in his name.

I want to try to ally with other programmers and make cool games, like
Tron, that one party can make games for on a console, such as live
obstacles, incl. tear-down, and certain people have to play from time
to time.  But you can't charge to do it, so it's a guaranteed game.
(That in virtue of that I'm typing.)  Advantages include microspacing
of time.  Very summer.

Resemblances would include Dungeons & Dragons with multi-host, or
multi-ref small-shooter sport-likers.  The real-time is definitely
attractive (duh).  As for voice, it's not clear it's the most
entertaining, but I just don't have a mic.

However, forseeing, I return with sailing, but that's in 3-space and
not even in code, as though we'd construct the Royal Navy and battle.
But I think we can keep it well.

Thing is, someone has to play it to keep a synch (keep from falling),
and tap-outs would have to live.

Side note: In political theory, this is known as the problem of
nominating a successor.  Would it stay afloat, even for long enough to
make it worth the negatives, yes which do include tear-down and fall,
invasion of privacy, and rights infrigement?

I code in Python (get the callbacks), but configurable servers could
spread the work out, using relays to put each person on each's own
turf to be a ref.  If you feed the roles, it could get really fun, and
c-l-py is the appropriate place to start such a thing, both and ask if
it's been done before.



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