Candy Williams
Candy Williams was an Aboriginal country and western singer and actor. He appeared on a number of teen TV shows in the 1960s and recorded several albums.[1]
Select TV Credits
- Burst of Summer (1961)
- Sergeant from Burralee (1961)
- Wandjina! (1966)[2]
- Top Mates (1979)
- A Country Practice
gollark: and then do magic and it's all fine
gollark: That doesn't actually help with *arranging them onscreen*.
gollark: No.
gollark: Also, Python libraries generally seem to be imperative stuff with a thin OOP veneer which makes it slightly more irritating to use.
gollark: ```Internet Protocols and Support webbrowser — Convenient Web-browser controller cgi — Common Gateway Interface support cgitb — Traceback manager for CGI scripts wsgiref — WSGI Utilities and Reference Implementation urllib — URL handling modules urllib.request — Extensible library for opening URLs urllib.response — Response classes used by urllib urllib.parse — Parse URLs into components urllib.error — Exception classes raised by urllib.request urllib.robotparser — Parser for robots.txt http — HTTP modules http.client — HTTP protocol client ftplib — FTP protocol client poplib — POP3 protocol client imaplib — IMAP4 protocol client nntplib — NNTP protocol client smtplib — SMTP protocol client smtpd — SMTP Server telnetlib — Telnet client uuid — UUID objects according to RFC 4122 socketserver — A framework for network servers http.server — HTTP servers http.cookies — HTTP state management http.cookiejar — Cookie handling for HTTP clients xmlrpc — XMLRPC server and client modules xmlrpc.client — XML-RPC client access xmlrpc.server — Basic XML-RPC servers ipaddress — IPv4/IPv6 manipulation library```Why is there, *specifically*, **in the standard library**, a traceback manager for CGI scripts?
References
- "REVUE IS TRULY AIL-AUSTRAIIAN". The Australian Women's Weekly. 31, (7). Australia, Australia. 17 July 1963. p. 12. Retrieved 17 July 2020 – via National Library of Australia.CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
- ""WAND JINA"". The Australian Women's Weekly. 33, (48). Australia, Australia. 27 April 1966. p. 21. Retrieved 17 July 2020 – via National Library of Australia.CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
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