TYR a écrit : > Has anyone else experienced a weird SQLite3 problem? > > Going by the documentation at docs.python.org, the syntax is as > follows: > foo = sqlite3.connect(dbname) creates a connection object representing > the state of dbname and assigns it to variable foo. If dbname doesn't > exist, a file of that name is created. > > To do anything with it, you then need to create a cursor object by > calling foo's method cursor (bar = foo.cursor).
You actually want : bar = foo.cursor() In Python, the parens are not optional when it comes to calling functions - in fact, parens *are* the call operator. Without them, you don't call the function (or method), but retrieve a reference to it. > > You can now pass an SQL query or command to the DB by calling the > cursor object's method execute() with the SQL query as a quoted > statement. > > (bar.execute("SELECT FROM squid WHERE squamous=True") > > And then do other stuff. > > Fine. When I call the cursor object, though, I get an AttributeError; > ('builtinfunction_or_method object has no attribute 'execute') Indeed. cf above. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list