birdseye
taskipy
birdseye | taskipy | |
---|---|---|
3 | 9 | |
1,634 | 420 | |
- | 1.4% | |
2.4 | 6.8 | |
7 months ago | 5 months ago | |
JavaScript | Python | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
birdseye
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Show HN: A 100% free and interactive Python course for coding beginners
> Is there any way for users to construct their own multiple stage tutorials?
I really hope some kind of GUI to do that can exist one day, but it's definitely a complicated feature that I'd need help from contributors to build. Same for graphical output.
> (It looks like we can do single questions)
I think you're talking about the question wizard. That's for helping people to write good quality questions about their own struggles to post on StackOverflow and similar sites. It's not for making 'challenges' for others to solve.
> Incredibly generous of you to make it open source!
Thank you! I'm really trying to improve the state of education and make the world a better place. I hope that in addition to directly helping users, I can inspire other educators, raise the bar, and help them build similar products. To this end, futurecoder is powered by many open source libraries that I've created which are designed to also be useful in their own right:
Debuggers: these are integrated in the site but also usable in any environment:
- https://github.com/alexmojaki/birdseye
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How much time do you spend debugging?
u/Immediate_Macaron496 you should try birdseye - https://github.com/alexmojaki/birdseye
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Useful Python Modules for us
pdbpp: Improved pdb boltons: assorted python addtions twisted: event driven networking framework sorcery: Dark magic in python, things know where+how they are being called, helps reducing boilerplate sh: Better alternative for subprocess module, much more pythonic taskipy: npm run scipt_name like functionality snoop: pdb lite, record+replay function steps birdseye: graphical debugger remote-pdb: easy pdb from inside containers typer: wrapper around click for simpler code for CLIs arrow: Always TZ aware datetimes, plus more features more-itertools: more functions for iterators pydantic: data validation + dataclasses loguru: better logging notifiers: sending notifications from python
taskipy
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Useful Python Modules for us
pdbpp: Improved pdb boltons: assorted python addtions twisted: event driven networking framework sorcery: Dark magic in python, things know where+how they are being called, helps reducing boilerplate sh: Better alternative for subprocess module, much more pythonic taskipy: npm run scipt_name like functionality snoop: pdb lite, record+replay function steps birdseye: graphical debugger remote-pdb: easy pdb from inside containers typer: wrapper around click for simpler code for CLIs arrow: Always TZ aware datetimes, plus more features more-itertools: more functions for iterators pydantic: data validation + dataclasses loguru: better logging notifiers: sending notifications from python
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What is your favorite ,most underrated 3rd party python module that made your programming 10 times more easier and less code ? so we can also try that out :-) .as a beginner , mine is pyinputplus
Taskipy
- GitHub - illBeRoy/taskipy: the complementary task runner for python
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This Week In Python
taskipy – complementary task runner for python
- Taskipy: The Complementary Task Runner for Python
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Which not so well known Python packages do you like to use on a regular basis and why?
I always use Taskipy https://github.com/illBeRoy/taskipy to run tasks in my applications, works really well with Poetry so when I am running my dev Flask/FastAPI server and Celery or running my tests or format my code it's all there.
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No-op statements syntactically valid only since Python X.Y
```
In legacy (don't break anything) mode, there's still no reason to not switch. I export `requirements.txt` with poetry just for pip legacy reasons and it works great. If I just update some scripts, I could avoid it. It's running all the time in CI, it's exercised quite a bit.
What's wrong with just using pip and requirements.txt? There's no dev section. In addition, bumping deps is not the same. I have [a blog post](https://squarism.com/2021/09/10/sciencing-out-updates/) explaining semver updates to a python dev.
_my strong assertion:_ Python and Go missed it from the start. That's why it is so confusing. There's no other choice in Rust but Cargo. Rust devs are never confused on how to add a package, semver it. The answer is always Cargo. It's in the tutorial. It's in the book. It's in the culture.
I think I've heard that pip might support the pyproject spec, poetry already does. If you want scripts like npm, you can have that too with [taskipy](https://github.com/illBeRoy/taskipy). You don't have to.
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Top python libraries/ frameworks that you suggest every one
taskipy
- Writing Makefiles for Python Projects
What are some alternatives?
pyodide-worker-runner
Toolz - A functional standard library for Python.
cheap_repr - Better version of repr/reprlib for short, cheap string representations in Python
wheezy.template - A lightweight template library.
sync-message
yamlpath - YAML/JSON/EYAML/Compatible get/set/merge/validate/scan/convert/diff processors using powerful, intuitive, command-line friendly syntax.
executing - Get information about what a Python frame is currently doing, particularly the AST node being executed
plumbum - Plumbum: Shell Combinators
python_runner - Helper for running python code indirectly
zpy - Zsh helpers for Python venvs, with uv or pip-tools
snoop - A powerful set of Python debugging tools, based on PySnooper
requests-html - Pythonic HTML Parsing for Humans™