Tsukasa-credit-card-gag-scam

A script I made to resemble a joke video I saw on reddit ( https://www.reddit.com/r/luckystar/comments/m8p9ul/tsukasa_wants_your_credit_card_info/ ) (by Diapolo10)

Tsukasa-credit-card-gag-scam Alternatives

Similar projects and alternatives to Tsukasa-credit-card-gag-scam

NOTE: The number of mentions on this list indicates mentions on common posts plus user suggested alternatives. Hence, a higher number means a better Tsukasa-credit-card-gag-scam alternative or higher similarity.

Tsukasa-credit-card-gag-scam reviews and mentions

Posts with mentions or reviews of Tsukasa-credit-card-gag-scam. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-07-03.
  • How can I export my project with pythonautogui?
    5 projects | /r/learnpython | 3 Jul 2023
    One workaround that I can think of would be to build everything using GitHub Actions, as then your own system would not matter at all. I have a great example project for that, all you really need to do is create a YAML file in a directory called .github/WORKFLOWS (the filename itself doesn't really matter), you can use this as a base. Just gotta swap out Nuitka for PyInstaller (if you want to), and change how the dependencies are installed. This makes it so that whenever you push a Git tag with a version number (say, v1.0.0), GitHub will then run this script, build executables (on any operating systems you want, no less), then create a release with them available for download. Mine also adds a changelog, but you can just remove that part.
  • Created an app at work, how to distribute?
    1 project | /r/learnpython | 14 Jun 2023
    If your company uses GitHub or GitLab, be it internal or the online version, you could create a release on the project page with your built binaries attached for download. One of my projects should work fine as an example. The releases page is linked on the sidebar. The neat thing with this is that you can automate the whole build and release process; I get a new release whenever I push a Git tag with a version number.
  • Module not found Error in Python.
    3 projects | /r/learnpython | 14 Jun 2023
    Ideally you'd make your project "installable", and use absolute imports for everything. This way, when your project is installed as a package, assuming there are no circular dependencies any part of it can import from any other part. Mainly this makes the job of your unit tests a lot easier. Either of these two examples will probably showcase that just fine.
  • Python imports on Linux $PATH
    2 projects | /r/learnpython | 9 Jun 2023
    However, if that's not the case for your project, such as if you have an extra src directory separating the repository root and the package(s), you'll need to be explicit. In another project I did exactly that:
  • What libraries should I learn?
    2 projects | /r/learnpython | 21 May 2023
    I used it in this project as a test, before I made the decision to transition all my projects from Pylint and Flake8 to Ruff: https://github.com/Diapolo10/Tsukasa-credit-card-gag-scam
  • How to get directories to properly work in Python?
    1 project | /r/learnpython | 19 May 2023
    One of my own projects handles this with a function, which then gets used thorough the program:
  • Blackjack project review
    2 projects | /r/learnpython | 18 May 2023
    Instead of keeping all the code at the repository root, maybe consider a more traditional project structure. As far as examples go, I've got this for an executable, and I think this works for a more complex project.
  • How do I distribute a Python package with a C++ extension module.
    1 project | /r/learnpython | 12 May 2023
    None of my current projects build platform-dependent releases, but I think this example is close enough. It would just take some tweaking.
  • Tips for sharing personal projects.
    3 projects | /r/learnpython | 7 May 2023
    I did something like that myself. I found Bleeplo's video about an attempt at recreating a certain meme image as a real tkinter program, and I enjoyed the idea so much I ended up making a fork of the project, improved upon the original, and even made a pull request to the original project with some of my cleanup. Forked projects always link back to the original, and all forks are visible from the original's settings.
  • having trouble with publishing a package
    1 project | /r/learnpython | 2 May 2023
    pyproject.toml already lists the dependencies, requirements.txt is not needed nor used in the newer standard. In fact, it can list your development dependencies as well, like here for example.
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