On 6/23/10 6:45 AM, Victor Subervi wrote: > Hi; > I have this line: > > cursor.execute('select clientEmail from clients where client=%s', > (string.replace(client, '_', ' '))) > clientEmail = cursor.fetchone()[0] > cursor.execute('select * from %s' % (client)) > > client = "Lincoln_Properties" > With the replacement, the interpreter complains that mydatabase.Lincoln > doesn't exist. Therefore, the first line of code isn't putting the %s > replacement in quotes, as I was told by you all it would. So I add > quotes to it and the interpreter complains on the second line of code > that it's unsubscriptable (because it's None). What gives?
Its very early, so excuse me if I fall asleep in the middle of the response. First: Don't do 'string.replace(your_string, x, y)' -- that's back in the very, very old days before strings themselves had all the nice methods. Do, 'client.replace("_", " ")' instead. Second, you're forgetting a cardinal rule. Always, always, always, include the actual tracebacks when reporting errors. Don't summarize them. Third, I *think* the problem is-- though I may be wrong here, because again, just woke up-- that you're not passing the options as a tuple. Consider: ("hello") is not a tuple with one item. This is a slight 'wart' with Python syntax. Parens do not make tuples: *commas* do. Therefore, every tuple *must* have a comma. To make a one-item tuple, you must do ("hello", ) -- Stephen Hansen ... Also: Ixokai ... Mail: me+list/python (AT) ixokai (DOT) io ... Blog: http://meh.ixokai.io/
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