Changed the "dataReference.txt" file again

This commit is contained in:
JellieJayde
2024-04-23 12:12:41 -04:00
parent e878c3ae73
commit 072a435416
3 changed files with 23 additions and 8 deletions

View File

@@ -51,6 +51,15 @@ with open(execDir + "\\dataReference.txt", "r") as f:
break
with open(execDir + "\\dataEncoded19.ENC", "r") as f:
dataEncodedChar = f.read()
while True:
dataEncodedChar = f.read(1).strip()
if dataEncodedChar.isalpha():
if dataEncodedChar.lower() not in dataEncoded:
dataEncoded.append(dataEncodedChar.lower())
if dataEncodedChar == "~":
print (dataEncoded)
break
parse(dataLanguageChar, dataEncodedChar)

View File

@@ -55,4 +55,4 @@ RWHBBAIFCWIBQIRWIFIZPXNQIWOBWKNWYIPJZBYIMFJXGBAWANFIINB
WAYFYBCPYIRAIPCWOBABHBMWNKPXYQAPJRFGRNLBYMFZRBQXMWYFXCBYPXGRJPM
WYLTRBMBJMPCPYBIPJFHBACWNNYXZNBWMTBWKPYAQBKBYQFYGPYIRBAOFNN
PJIRBVPCVCWOBMAFYIBNNFGBYZBWYWNLAIAAWLFMWYZPXNQVBWYLTRBMB
JMPCIRMBBIPYFYBLBWMAWTWLJMPCRWHFYGIRBWVFNFILIPVXFNQWYWIPCVPCV
JMPCIRMBBIPYFYBLBWMAWTWLJMPCRWHFYGIRBWVFNFILIPVXFNQWYWIPCVPCV~

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@@ -1,11 +1,17 @@
People seem to really dislike long posts. If you have a post that's more than a few paragraphs long, mark my words, Redditors are going to flood in to complain about the length.
Canada Post is refusing to collect firearms that were banned by the federal government in 2020, complicating Ottawa's plans for a buyback program to remove 144,000 firearms from private hands, federal sources say.
Though it's true that some writers would purposefully elongate what could be said with a few sentences to a full-blown article just for the sake of 'creating content', sometimes writers just have to write long in order to go in depth about the points they're trying to make.
The Crown corporation informed the government of its position in a recent letter. It said its decision was based on concerns about its employees' security, according to federal sources who were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.
If the excuse for hating long articles is that we don't have enough time, I must point out I doubt we're that short on time. I bet most of us read many more short posts once we're done with one. If we have enough time to read many short articles, how come we can't use that time to read just one long article?
One key source of concern being cited by Canada Post is the possibility of staff conflicts with gun owners who have been asked to give up their so-called "assault" or "military-style" weapons, which can no longer be used or sold in Canada.
I also think the shortage of time is really just an excuse. The real reason is our lack of making an effort. Pro tip: never forget you need to work hard to be rewarded.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's Liberals promised a buyback program in both the 2019 and 2021 elections. The government officially announced the process in 2020 and is now hoping to finalize it before the next general election, set for the fall of 2025.
If you ask me, I think this is the dangerous trend-posts getting shorter and shorter and us getting lazier and lazier. No matter how skilled we are with keeping things short, there's only so much we can say with a few sentences. If everybody insists on posts being short, we could only communicate less and less.
Federal officials told Radio-Canada they still believe using the postal service would be the "most efficient" and "least costly" way to recover banned weapons such as the AR-15, which cannot be used or sold in Canada since a federal ban was imposed four years ago.
I hope this post doesn't fall in the tl;dr category. That would be a real shame.~
Ottawa's plan is to have owners of banned guns place the unloaded and secured weapons in government-issued boxes and then send them back to the government to be destroyed. The owners would then be financially compensated.
Government sources say they're puzzled by Canada Post's refusal to receive the weapons, since the corporation already delivers guns that are sold online.
The sources insist that "discussions" with Canada Post are ongoing. One possible compromise would see Canada Post transport the weapons without taking charge of receiving them.
"It's a challenge, but we do not think this jeopardizes our timetable or the government's desire to move forward," said one of the federal sources. "We want the discussions to continue."