----- Original Message ----- From: "Gary Walker" <borealis3 at home.com> Newsgroups: comp.lang.python To: <python-list at python.org> Sent: Monday, April 02, 2001 2:40 PM Subject: Newbie has question that's not exactly Python... > But since I'm learning Python, I'd like to post it here, and hope someone > will post some example code in Python... > > Background: I'm excited by the object oriented simplicity Python offers; I'm > a Delphi programmer by day, and it's the similar exception handling, object > creating, etc. that I really dig, not to mention PIL, the Python Imaging > Library. I'm also jazzed by the web, and so Python seemed a natural choice > for a new language to pick up... > > Here's the question: > > When a web app needs to produce an image, it's usually a trivial task: > simply reference the image in the HTML code, and voila. > > How does one go about producing a dynamically generated image? That is to > say, one that didn't exist until the python script ran? I hope I don't have > to save it to some tempfile, and reference *that* in my python code. Why not? > Thinking aloud here: > Ideally, one would reference a SCRIPT instead of an image, and the script > would return the image to the, the... page?? Yes, you can write an http request handler that can return an image as a string (a raw binary string, that is). Actually, it would probably be simpler to just make the handler save the image as a file in a temp directory and return it as a file. > Can anyone provide a really simple example of how I'd go about something > like this?? Not really, you need to learn medusa first. Actually you should learn python first, then medusa. This probably shouldn't be your very first project. :-) > Does this question make sense?? I know what I'm *trying* to say here, but I > might not be succeeding at saying it... :) Makes sense to me. > TIA, > > Gary Walker > > > -- > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list >
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