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- Understanding . get() method in Python - Stack Overflow
The sample code in your question is clearly trying to count the number of occurrences of each character: if it already has a count for a given character, get returns it (so it's just incremented by one), else get returns 0 (so the incrementing correctly gives 1 at a character's first occurrence in the string)
- Understanding __get__ and __set__ and Python descriptors
Non-data descriptors, instance and class methods, get their implicit first arguments (usually named self and cls, respectively) from their non-data descriptor method, __get__ - and this is how static methods know not to have an implicit first argument
- When do you use POST and when do you use GET? - Stack Overflow
From what I can gather, there are three categories: Never use GET and use POST Never use POST and use GET It doesn't matter which one you use Am I correct in assuming those three cases? If so, wha
- What is the difference between POST and GET? [duplicate]
Finally, an important consideration when using GET for AJAX requests is that some browsers - IE in particular - will cache the results of a GET request So if you, for example, poll using the same GET request you will always get back the same results, even if the data you are querying is being updated server-side
- Passing array in GET for a REST call - Stack Overflow
Learn how to pass arrays in GET requests for REST calls on Stack Overflow
- Command to list all files in a folder as well as sub-folders in windows
I tried searching for a command that could list all the file in a directory as well as subfolders using a command prompt command I have read the help for "dir" command but coudn't find what I was
- How to get all groups that a user is a member of? - Stack Overflow
PowerShell's Get-ADGroupMember cmdlet returns members of a specific group Is there a cmdlet or property to get all the groups that a particular user is a member of?
- http method - curl -GET and -X GET - Stack Overflow
Curl offers a series of different http method calls that are prefixed with a X, but also offers the same methods without I've tried both and I can't seem to figure out the difference Can someone
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