colorama
typer
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colorama | typer | |
---|---|---|
8 | 87 | |
3,430 | 14,347 | |
- | - | |
3.2 | 8.7 | |
24 days ago | 1 day ago | |
Python | Python | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" 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.
colorama
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[Newbie question] struggling with colour change on user input
Try using https://github.com/tartley/colorama, that should straighten out most low level problems. If you still have issues, you need to adjust your color scheme in pycharm.
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New IP Osint Tool!
Pyshark: https://github.com/KimiNewt/pyshark Requests: https://github.com/psf/requests Colorama:https://github.com/tartley/colorama
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Terminology: a simpler alternative to Colorama
from colorama import Fore, Style # Colorama doesn't support Underlined text because it # is struggling to make it work for windows users # https://github.com/tartley/colorama/issues/38 print(Fore.RED + Style.BRIGHT + 'Danger' + Style.NORMAL)
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Terminology: a much simpler alternative to python's Colorama library
There are obviously a lot of libraries in python that color text, but I never loved their syntaxes, so I ended up creating this one a few years back. For comparison, this is how you print a red, bold, underlined string in **terminology**\: from terminology import in_red print(in_red('Danger').in_bold().underlined()) and this is how you do it with the other alternatives: **colorama** from colorama import Fore, Style # Colorama doesn't support Underlined text because it # is struggling to make it work for windows users # https://github.com/tartley/colorama/issues/38 print(Fore.RED + Style.BRIGHT + 'Danger' + Style.NORMAL)
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Get Colored Console Output In Python Using Colorama
The link to its github repository is this: colorama.
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Rendering color in vscode console output
Escape sequences may vary depending on the terminal you use. You can try some package like Colorama which escapes those sequences and gives you the correct color in Windows. There is also Blessings.
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Build CLI with Hype
As I mentioned earlier, Hype doesn't rely on any third-party library but then there are some plugins that third-party library powered Hype. For example, the color printing that is powered by colorama.
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What are some of your gold standard Python open source repos you discovered here or elsewhere that have very high quality, commented and understandable code that use best practices?
Looks really cool! Way more functionality than I'd ever need. I've been using colorama for color coding info, warning, and error messages in my Python projects. No complaints. From the feature list of rich it sounds like it probably pulls in a lot more dependencies?
typer
- Typer: Python library for building CLI applications
- Copilot for your GitHub stars
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Things I've learned about building CLI tools in Python
I have been using Typer on every one of my CLI projects which uses Click under the hood. The documentation is fantastic, the CLI app it produces looks great and lets you create things quickly. I high recommend it.
https://typer.tiangolo.com/
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Things to do with standalone script
Adding CLI capabilities. My preferred library here is typer.
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Where to start for managing a Python code base for public distribution
I just heard about this but it seems to be pretty much the type of thing you want and want fast.
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Help on Docstrings
Docstrings are for documenting how a function/ class/ method/ module works. Often you don't need to add a docstring to your main function because no one will be importing it to use elsewhere. And if you want it to run as a CLI, then there are better ways to document the available options. For example, typer does most of it for you, or in click you add the help text to the decorator.
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Which best practices do you follow to build robust & extensible ETL jobs?
Most computing tasks in airflow DAGs are KubernetesPodOperator containing a CLI (Python Typer). It allows us to pass arguments easily to run DAG manually if needed (the new UI to pass arguments to DAG in airflow 2.6 is really nice). Arguments allow us to replay DAG easily (change start / end dates for instance).
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Devs on teams that deploy anytime you want, what does your SDLC workflow look like?
So it's basically the main .gitlab-ci.yml file plus a separate Python CI app using Typer for the AWS instrumentation.
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The different uses of Python type hints
Similarly for Typer, which is literally "the FastAPI of CLIs"[1]. Handy to type your `main` parameters and have CLI argument parsing. For more complicated cases, it's a wrapper around Click.
[1] https://typer.tiangolo.com/
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Command line parser library, which one do you like the most, regardless of language?
interesting that you hate python, but love Click. Did you try Typer which uses Click underneath?
What are some alternatives?
rich - Rich is a Python library for rich text and beautiful formatting in the terminal.
click - Python composable command line interface toolkit
asciimatics - A cross platform package to do curses-like operations, plus higher level APIs and widgets to create text UIs and ASCII art animations
Python Fire - Python Fire is a library for automatically generating command line interfaces (CLIs) from absolutely any Python object.
python-prompt-toolkit - Library for building powerful interactive command line applications in Python
Gooey - Turn (almost) any Python command line program into a full GUI application with one line
clint - Python Command-line Application Tools
cement - Application Framework for Python