Sigh. Asking "what's your question?" and getting the response "my question is, [insert summary of assignment here that doesn't end in a question mark]"
I considered replying "please ask your question in the form of a question", but I don't think it would be productive.
I found similar questions but that only pulls the value of the respective key from second file. I am looking for little more advance.
File_one this is a an output of some classification
Node Node some_value some_value some_value
A B 2 2 24
A C
A D
A E
B ...
> This is going to end badly. Oh look, here's this incomprehensible mess someone posted a question about... I'm going to just run it without even looking at it.
But... You can already do that.
It just requires "copy/paste/open new file", as opposed to "click the button".
Unless running the code straight in the SO window somehow gives it elevated privileges to mess with your account or cookies or whatever. Something something Same Origin Policy something something.
@DSM "I don't have a drinking problem doctor - it's just all these people that keep hitting 10k rep boundaries that I've never met, but hang around with on a programming Q&A website..."
`query = "Select * from data where name like %s limit 1"` `cursor2.execute(query, ('%%%s%%' % string))` is my latest, twisted variant, normal `LIKE '%%s%' ` doesnt seem to work
@Kevin No, if you're three days from retirement you are a grizzled cop who's always played by the rules, but you've just been teamed up with a young maverick who doesn't. That's when you're too old for this.
@rodling use cursor2.execute(query, ['%' + string + '%']) instead of string interpolation... to prevent SQL injection problems and automatically get correct escaping
(and maybe re-think using string as a name as it's a builtin module - so may confuse things... maybe param or text etc...)
@rodling as long as you're using something DB API 2 compliant, the cursor/execute objects will take a query string argument (with placeholders) and another argument that are the values to be substituted... and that substitution will do the escaping necessary to build a correct and sql-injection safe attack full query string
@MartijnPieters Just looking at the contextlib to find the reference for @corvid... one thing you could have mentioned (good old hindsight) is some of the new functions ithere...
@corvid you don't necessarily need a class... you can use a decorated function
@corvid thanks for making me have to look up the docs... there's a few bits in contextlib I could probably use at some point, and didn't realise were introduced to 3.4...
In actual fact it's just about the minimum possible patch, and only really the result of a snarky comment by a core dev about a bikeshedding argument over the name prompting me to put my money where my mouth was, but still ... name in the docs :-D
On an entirely different subject - weirdest quote I've seen in a news article all week: "You can't give a 9-year-old an Uzi and expect her to control it".
this guy posted a question that's a dupe of one he deleted yesterday. I'm tempted to just copy-paste the "you're more likely to get help here if..." comment into the new one.
It's fairly straight-forward to expand the character classes out and do the combinations, but if there's anything else in the regex apart from classes and constants, well... I don't even want to to think about it
is there a python equivalent to os.walk that allows you to traverse up a directory? (For example, os.walk('home', topdown=False) will look at 'home/foo/bar' first and work its way up to 'home', is there anyway to start with home, then go up from there to '..'?)
"My end goal is to run the python script as a task every 10 minuets or so". I have a lot of dancing to do tonight, and I can't be bothered to manually run this script every tenth song!
Incidentally I think the answer to that question is "use sys.argv". Not entirely sure, as I don't speak Visual Basic or SQL.
Today I learned that the parameter list in a function definition can contain a trailing comma. I knew that function calls could have trailing commas, but I didn't know definitions could.
The usual excuse of "it makes it easier to write a call that takes up more than one line" doesn't hold as well here. How often do you write a def on multiple lines?