What kind of IDE do use in your project?
About me, I especially use VS Code due to its convenience and flexibility.
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What kind of IDE do use in your project?
About me, I especially use VS Code due to its convenience and flexibility.

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Current status of the database code: Bit fucked lol but i stopped working on it so wc
Visual Studio Code got offended because I used PyCharm to code and now refuses to push files to git… 😭
Maybe I’m a bit behind the curve, or maybe because JetBrains have such a big hold on the
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Python keywords are special reserved words that have specific meanings and purposes and ca not be used for anything but those specific purposes. These keywords are always available — you ’ll no way have to import them into your law.

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me: *finishes assembly programming class*
me: *downloads PyCharm immediately*
30 days of Python: 24/30
I think I may have missed a day or two of actual coding activity that I simply didn’t remember to blog about, but I’m erring on the side of caution and calling this only one day’s worth of update.
Just more Udemy course, as usual. (The IDE in the pic is PyCharm.)
We’ve started the unit on working with files (reading from them, writing to them), and I love it! The second or third lesson of the unit was already a challenge: the teacher described a simple app and suggested that we try to make it on our own before he shows us how. Of course I was excited to do that – and I managed to get the whole thing going by myself! It wasn’t exactly the same as his, but it met all the specs.
The one thing that threw me was that I forgot you can’t modify elements in an iterable in-place by reassigning them inside a for loop (or if you can, I haven’t learned how yet – I was trying “for x in y: x = modified_x” and that clearly didn’t work, so I had to make a new list every time and sequentially append modified_x to that list).
But I debugged that okay, and the reading-from/writing-to files stuff went just fine, and I didn’t even get thrown by the newline at the end of each line in a file – I learned how to use the .strip method, which was cool :)
Today, we’re moving on to working with CSV files – can’t wait!
Hey, Jetbrains, don’t forget to add Stories to your IDE
Ko-fi