I feel like I've been stuck in a rut lately. Never felt anything like "writer's block" while programming, but creatively I'm just sapped. Hate this feeling =/
Normally I go learn something new to bump myself out of it, but nothing's really standing out to me right now.
What is this weird picture that keeps getting flagged as inappropriate? Like a kind of funhouse picture of a man's face. Is this some kind of veiled goetse and I'm too dim (or lucky) to figure it out?
I see what you're saying; but is there official docs on this behavior? I've always wonders why I see (x,); and this seems to definitely have something to do with it. — josten13 mins ago
this question stackoverflow.com/questions/29585910/… was actually more interesting than it looked - the exception in this particular case is really unhelpful and I do not understand why does it happen
In [23]: from collections import Counter
In [24]: some_string = "abccdef"
In [25]: c = Counter(some_string)
In [26]: c
Out[26]: Counter({'c': 2, 'a': 1, 'e': 1, 'd': 1, 'f': 1, 'b': 1})
works on any iterable
you get a dict that looks like {el: iterable.count(el) for el in iterable}
what I'm trying to do is store the letters as keys and the frequencies as values in dictionaries, and for when the keys are the same a +=1 and if the frequencies of the keys are not the same a = a + 1 + abs(value of frequency1 - value of frequency2) but I can't seem to construct that
he made a function to store dictionaries and used it on both a and b, rather then storing them separately. And then went on to calculate the differences between the words
I am trying to search for a username in a table and subsequently find that users password and check it against input so far I have...
def check():
username = logEntry.get()
password = passEntry.get()
curs.execute("SELECT * FROM logins WHERE username = VALU...
@PM2Ring Usually when you see those kinds of constructs (not a Python string format but something done by the module somehow) it's safe from SQL injection
@BhargavRao I think it's ok. It's fairly comprehensive, and it shows non-regex ways to do it as well as the regex solution. And I guess use of a regex is justified here since standard str methods don't let you search for the index of something that doesn't match a pattern.