cocalc-docker
pylance-release
cocalc-docker | pylance-release | |
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7 | 50 | |
392 | 1,653 | |
- | 0.2% | |
7.7 | 9.0 | |
2 months ago | 5 days ago | |
Dockerfile | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 |
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.
cocalc-docker
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Looking for a multi-user Self-Hosted Jupyter Alternative to Kaggle/Google Colab
I recently discovered Sagemath CoCalc.
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Collaborative platform-R
You can download and use cocalc for free via a docker image: https://github.com/sagemathinc/cocalc-docker
- SelfHosted Calculator (Math, Physics)
- Looking for simple LaTeX editor
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Because of EU rules it is no longer possible for my university to use Overleaf. Does anybody have any other recommendations (preferably free but everything will do) that can handle the sheer amount of equations that go into a physics rapport. Thanks!
I am the CEO of CoCalc, which is an alternatives to Overleaf that they don't own. I don't know whether or not our rules about personal data collection are compatible with your university requirements. Our default rules are at https://cocalc.com/policies, but we have been able to make modifications to them for particular customers. We also have a small easy to install on premises version here https://github.com/sagemathinc/cocalc-docker, and sell a more complicated Kubernetes-based on prem version of our software, so you control all data. Please feel free to email [[email protected]](mailto:[email protected]) with more detailed questions. In particular, it could be that we've already worked with your university to use CoCalc for collaborative Jupyter notebooks for teaching (that's the main thing CoCalc is used for, not latex), and that's something we can discuss in our support channels.
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What you gonna add to your selfhost stack this year?
Mail - probably with mailu; and a multimedia server, but I haven't decided yet which one zenphoto? piwigo? lychee? or others?). Maybe seafile, although I probably don't need it given my use now of Syncthing and a backup strategy. And maybe... CoCalc (https://github.com/sagemathinc/cocalc-docker) as it'd be great to be able to run this from any machine, rather than having to manage software for different platforms.
- Visual Studio Code now available as Web based editor for GitHub repos
pylance-release
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Open source versus Microsoft: The new rebellion begins
One of the things that comes to mind here is the fact that the default Python extension for VS Code is, perhaps surprisingly to many, not open source. https://github.com/microsoft/pylance-release
While it's possible to fork VS Code, it is not possible to fork VS Code and provide a seamless onramp towards a Python editing experience that is fully open source, because users are used to the nuances of the closed-source Pylance experience in VS Code proper. You could use the minified/compiled Pylance plugin in your fork, but you'd have no way to expand its capabilities to new hooks your fork provides. Microsoft's development process would always be able to move faster than a fork, because it could coordinate VS Code internal API development with its internal Pylance team, and could become incompatible with forks at any time.
It's worth re-reading the quote from J Allard in https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embrace,_extend,_and_extinguis... with this modern example in mind.
(Also worth mentioning https://github.com/detachhead/basedpyright?tab=readme-ov-fil... which is a heroic effort to derisk this, but it's an uphill battle for sure!)
- Help! Connection to server got closed error
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Pylance is not working on my vscode
Anyone know how can we fix this issue if we build the vscode locally
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VSCode adding exactly one space to all my new lines??
Do any of these issue tickets explain the behaviour you're seeing? https://github.com/microsoft/pylance-release/issues/4341, https://github.com/microsoft/pylance-release/issues/4071
- Pylance: String literal is unterminated
- What do you expect when renaming an import?
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Writing Python like it's Rust
Maybe they "are the same thing" in terms of behavior (I don't know), but "A uses B" doesn't mean that "A is B".
One important difference in this case is that while "Pylance leverages Microsoft's open-source static type checking tool, Pyright" [1], Pylance itself is not open source. In fact, the license [2] restricts you to "use [...] the software only with [...] Microsoft products and services", which means that you are not allowed to use it with a non-Microsoft open source fork of VS Code, for example.
The license terms also say that by accepting the license, you agree that "The software may collect information about you and your use of the software, and send that to Microsoft" and that "You may opt-out of many of these scenarios, but not all".
[1] https://github.com/microsoft/pylance-release
[2] https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items/ms-python.vscode-...
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Any must-have extensions for working with Python in VSCode/VSCodium?
There's this one: https://github.com/microsoft/pylance-release/issues/4174 (rules don't apply properly, and ovverrides don't work even after being set, this is especially for the more generic ones like )
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MSFT is forcing Outlook and Teams to open links in Edge and IT admins are angry
The example is not .NET in general, but that specific event when Microsoft reneged on open development tooling[1]. For some people, that was the moment they stopped trusting "new Microsoft" to keep their word (though for me, it was when the Python language server was replaced with a DRM-locked, LSP-noncompliant one[2] a bit before that; unlike .NET hot reload, they didn't backtrack there). I can think the company makes great open .NET tools and at the same time not trust them to close it down on a whim.
Does anyone know where the open xlang reimplementation of MIDL went[3], by the way? (Unlike 1990s MIDL, you can't reimplement this one from the language grammar in the docs, because there is no language grammar in the docs.)
[1] https://dusted.codes/can-we-trust-microsoft-with-open-source and links there
[2] https://github.com/microsoft/pylance-release/issues
[3] https://github.com/microsoft/xlang/pull/529
- Import ... could not be resolved
What are some alternatives?
ML-Workspace - 🛠All-in-one web-based IDE specialized for machine learning and data science.
pyright - Static Type Checker for Python
Code-Server - VS Code in the browser
jedi-language-server - A Python language server exclusively for Jedi. If Jedi supports it well, this language server should too.
vscodium - binary releases of VS Code without MS branding/telemetry/licensing
github1s - One second to read GitHub code with VS Code.
emacs-jedi - Python auto-completion for Emacs
brackets - An open source code editor for the web, written in JavaScript, HTML and CSS.
neovim - Vim-fork focused on extensibility and usability
nvim-lspconfig - Quickstart configs for Nvim LSP