After yesterday, my today’s goal was very simple. I wanted to create a simple working scraper that gets the data from web pages. Today’s target: From Sitemaps, get career and about pages (links) and ...
Today was all about making pragmatic technical decisions and getting my hands dirty with local LLMs. Two major milestones: finalizing my database choice and successfully running a local model for data ...
This is the summarization of my day 5 research. (I gave my rough research to AI for summarization.) Job aggregators like Indeed and LinkedIn actively prohibit ...
No code today, just research. Honestly felt like I did less work than previous days, but research is work. New plan: Custom open-source LLM (haven’t picked model yet) running locally first. Generate a ...
No code written yet—spent the hour planning HuntKit‘s architecture. And honestly? I almost made a huge mistake.
Going to the database repeatedly is slow and operations-heavy. Caching stores recent/frequent data in a faster layer (memory) so we don’t need database operations again and again. It’s most useful for ...
Many times before, I have tried to take up a lot of challenges to build stuff in public and learn in public. I did end up finishing the projects and learning the things I planned to. But I am never ...
This beginner-friendly guide will walk you through Tkinter’s ScrolledText widget — step by step with code, clear explanations, and some fun along the way.
What is a Scrollbar in Tkinter? Scrollbars in Tkinter are those little bars that help you scroll when content overflows. Imagine you have a huge list or a long text area. If it doesn’t fit in the ...
Tomorrow, we’ll build a full Rich Text Editor with bold, italic, font styles, colors, links—you name it. But first, let’s master the basics.
But suddenly, it’s all looking like spaghetti. Let me introduce you to your new best friend: Frame. It helps you keep your layout neat and organized—just like folders on your desktop.
What is grid() in Tkinter? Okay, imagine your app is like a spreadsheet. You’ve got rows and columns. With grid(), you can tell Python: “Hey, I want this button in row 1, column 0.” And boom! It lands ...