spammy | Python spamming tool , including SMS bomb | SMS library
kandi X-RAY | spammy Summary
kandi X-RAY | spammy Summary
SPAMMY: A Python spamming tool, including SMS bomb, Instagram spammer, and more! - I'm not responsible for any damage caused by this!.
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Top functions reviewed by kandi - BETA
- Prompts smsbomb
- Configure a timeline album .
- Upload a video .
- Sets up the mailbomb .
- Sets up a webhook .
- Main function .
- Clear Instagram API .
- Clear system .
spammy Key Features
spammy Examples and Code Snippets
Community Discussions
Trending Discussions on spammy
QUESTION
I am trying to send a message containing a link through a Discord bot (something like: for more information click on the following link).
The problem is that everytime that I send it, Discord generetes an Embed for that message, which in a normal case would be nice, except i don't want it, as it looks very spammy.
I have tried stopping the embed with that embed=None
, but it doesn't do it's job.
ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jan-10 at 18:50Simply put the link between <>
QUESTION
note: this question was briefly marked as a duplicate of this, but it is not an exact duplicate since I am asking about std::optionals specifically. Still a good question to read if you care about general case.
Assume I have nested optionals, something like this(dumb toy example):
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Apr-02 at 17:31Let's look at what the optimal form of a flatten function would look like. By "optimal" in this case, I mean the smallest presentation.
Even in the optimal case, at the point of performing the flatten operation, you would need to provide:
- The
optional
object to flatten. - The flatten operation function name.
- A list of names, in order, to be indirected from at each flattening step.
Your code is very close to optimal. The only issue is that each name in the "list of names" must contain the typename of the member you're accessing at that level, which is something that hypothetically could be computed using knowledge of T
.
C++ has no mechanism to do any better than this. If you want to access a member of an object, you must provide the type of that object. If you want to indirectly do this, C++ allows member pointers, but getting such a pointer requires knowing the type of the object at the point when the member is extracted. Even offsetof
gymnastics would require using the type name when you're getting the offset.
Reflection would allow for something better, as you could pass compile-time strings that static reflection could use to fetch member pointers from the type currently in use. But C++20 has no such feature.
QUESTION
This is Drupal 9 specific PHP issue: so bear with me.
I have several fields in Drupal field which are stored as RAW HTML, in Drupal terms which are called - Fields
and the Values are stored - in field definition formatted
html.
Problem : During re-edit, editor/edit screen pulls stripped html. HTML imported are strpped off HTML tags and HTML classes. And when re-edited post is saved the stripped html is getting stored(Overwritten)
This is causing serious issues for my site, cause this is a required feature. And some of my website-structue is depends upon the RAW HTML.
This could be PHP specific issue. If someone has experience regarding this, and how to get away with this - would be a help.
I need to get away with this, this is causing serious troubles with my Website Structure.
Description : Original HTML
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Mar-04 at 10:46Choose Text format
as Full HTML
, your HTML will not be stripped anymore.
It seems that your use of module Gutenberg did not display the Text format
options. So, install the module Allowed Formats then enable the format Full HTML
for your field.
QUESTION
This question is a follow-up to Why doesn't returning a std::unique_ptr violate unique_ptr's deleted copy constructor? (which is answered here: Returning unique_ptr from functions )
This leads me back to the original problem I'd faced.
I have to work with a function (outside my control) that returns a std::unique_ptr
. I would like instances of a class to have a reference to the object the unique_ptr
encapsulates, but I'm unclear and fumbling with the syntax of what's needed to pull this off.
I hope this sample code makes my intent clear, given that I can't find the right model/syntax to make this compile: I'd like instances of class PtrOwner
to be able to "own" some form of reference to the underlying object encapsulated by the unique_ptr
that is returned by function getUniquePtr()
:
ANSWER
Answered 2020-Dec-02 at 20:46The constructor in your top example tries to copy the unique_ptr
but a unique_ptr
isn't copyable.
You need to move it instead:
QUESTION
In Python, I want to optionally log from a module - but have this logging off by default, enabled with a function call. (The output from this file will be very spammy - so best off by default)
I want my code to look something like this.
...ANSWER
Answered 2020-Nov-04 at 17:59There are two pieces at play here. Python has logging.Logger
objects and logging.Handler
objects that work together to serve you logging information. Loggers handle the logic of collecting logging information, and deciding whether logs should be emitted to associated handlers. If the logging level of your log record is less severe than the level specified in the logger, it will not pass info to associated handlers.
Handlers have the same feature, and since handlers are the last line between log records and defined output, you would likely want to disable the interaction there. To accomplish this, and avoid having logs inadvertently logged elsewhere, you can add a new logging level to your application:
logging.addLevelName(logging.CRITICAL + 1, "DISABLELOGGING")
Note: This only maps the name to value for purposes of formatting, so you will need to add a member to the logging module as well:
logging.DISABLELOGGING = logging.CRITICAL + 1
Setting it to a value higher than CRITICAL
ensures that no normal log event will pass and be emitted.
Then you just need to set your handler to the level you defined:
handler.setLevel(logging.DISABLELOGGING)
and now there should be no logs that pass the handler, and therefore no output shown.
QUESTION
I'm new to python and decided to try doing bots in discord. I've been creating a bot that could log deleted messages in a specific channel but sometimes when a bot deletes a message, it gets spammy. I'd want to know if there's a way I could ignore a specific role. I've been trying stuff myself and I had no luck. I'd really appreciate suggestions as my brain can't think of any way how to.
Here's my code:
...ANSWER
Answered 2020-May-08 at 18:22You can check for the ID of the person who deleted the roles.
QUESTION
I was stuck on my code due to the reason that it's not responding because i want a bot that /price command has a cooldown and in the next time someone use /price command it will wont respond for 30 mins or prompt people to wait until the cooldown is done so that it will be less spammy on telegram groups when many people doing /price in a same time
...ANSWER
Answered 2020-May-05 at 12:53What about something django-rest style, like a decorator?
QUESTION
So our system is sending us email notifications regarding specific incidents. The problem is, things get really spammy and disorganized, and we really want to have our email client (Gmail) thread notifications regarding the same incident.
So for instance:
Email 1 is sent about incident 1. Email 2 is sent about incident 1.
Gmail displays them in their own threads while we want them to appear as "replies" in the same thread.
I thought all I needed was to append "Re: Subject Line" but that doesn't work. Then I read about the References
and In-Reply-To
headers, but these require storing message IDs and we'd want to avoid the overhead if we can.
Is there any workaround to have clients thread emails received about the same topic without having to store message IDs and add them to In-Reply-To headers?
Thank you so much!
Note: Using PHPMailer
...ANSWER
Answered 2020-Apr-06 at 11:37You really can't get around this. You must have something that uniquely identifies a message, and as far as email messages go, that something is the message ID, and that's also exactly the thing referenced by References
and In-Reply-To
headers, so you really can't get away from that. It has to be implemented using message headers because that's universally supported by all email clients.
The definitive threading algorithm, is, like email itself, now very old, but you can find it here, and it's still as valid as it ever was. I used that approach to implement the email threading used in the chamsocial.com social network.
Some email clients try to do threading without using message IDs, and it's almost always a failure - I sometimes see Apple Mail doing this when IDs are missing, pulling completely unrelated messages into a thread just because they happen to have the same subject.
If you wanted to do message threading without message IDs, you'd need to think up something that acts in exactly the same way - which is pointless, so you're best off biting the bullet and implementing message ID support properly.
QUESTION
Apologies if this has been asked before, or if there is an existing question regarding this, I'm very new to NodeJS and one of the ways I'm trying to learn is by creating a simple replacement for AlertManager for our site alerting.
The script is very simple, it performs a get to the prometheus api which returns an array of sites that meet the "down" condition. I am iterating through the array and using nodemailer to send an alert for each site that goes down.
I don't think this is very efficient, if there are 3 sites down, 3 emails get sent. It can get quite spammy, I'd like to grab these distinct values and instead of sending an email while I iterate append the value to a variable as a string and then just send that variable as a list.
I can't quite wrap my head around how to do it- this is my current code:
...ANSWER
Answered 2020-Mar-06 at 17:26The most idiomatic way to do this is with a map
or reduce
. No dealing with indices.
QUESTION
Multiple applications are deployed to Mule CloudHub and their logs are being cluttered/spammed with someone attempting to send some sort of request:
...ANSWER
Answered 2020-Feb-05 at 18:40The simplest approach is just switching the log level of the class triggering those logs to a "higher" level. That information should be available in the full log entries but I believe the class is org.mule.module.http.internal.listener.HttpListenerRegistry
and a WARN level should do.
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Vulnerabilities
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Install spammy
You can use spammy like any standard Python library. You will need to make sure that you have a development environment consisting of a Python distribution including header files, a compiler, pip, and git installed. Make sure that your pip, setuptools, and wheel are up to date. When using pip it is generally recommended to install packages in a virtual environment to avoid changes to the system.
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