A caesar cipher Tkinter Python program. Can encrypt or decrypt caesar cipher with any shift key (1-26), you can also use the Brute Force button and it will take an encrypted key, and test all 26 shift keys and you can search through them to see which one seems right.
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `jrk_downrecords` [ RunTime:0.001398s ]
SELECT `a`.`aid`,`a`.`title`,`a`.`create_time`,`m`.`username` FROM `jrk_downrecords` `a` INNER JOIN `jrk_member` `m` ON `a`.`uid`=`m`.`id` WHERE `a`.`status` = 1 GROUP BY `a`.`aid` ORDER BY `a`.`create_time` DESC LIMIT 10 [ RunTime:0.073659s ]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `jrk_tagrecords` [ RunTime:0.000953s ]
SELECT * FROM `jrk_tagrecords` WHERE `status` = 1 ORDER BY `num` DESC LIMIT 20 [ RunTime:0.001089s ]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `jrk_member` [ RunTime:0.000942s ]
SELECT `id`,`username`,`userhead`,`usertime` FROM `jrk_member` WHERE `status` = 1 ORDER BY `usertime` DESC LIMIT 10 [ RunTime:0.003140s ]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `jrk_searchrecords` [ RunTime:0.000766s ]
SELECT * FROM `jrk_searchrecords` WHERE `status` = 1 ORDER BY `num` DESC LIMIT 5 [ RunTime:0.003929s ]
SELECT aid,title,count(aid) as c FROM `jrk_downrecords` GROUP BY `aid` ORDER BY `c` DESC LIMIT 10 [ RunTime:0.014305s ]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `jrk_articles` [ RunTime:0.001273s ]
UPDATE `jrk_articles` SET `hits` = 2 WHERE `id` = 86601 [ RunTime:0.017047s ]