stew
ubelt
stew | ubelt | |
---|---|---|
1 | 7 | |
21 | 711 | |
- | - | |
7.3 | 8.3 | |
3 days ago | 7 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
stew
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Python projects with best practices on Github?
For best practices you can take a look at https://github.com/coveo/stew (disclaimer: I'm the author). It's a tool that works with Poetry and offers some freebies around Continuous Integration. It also comes with a Github Action to make this a free meal.
ubelt
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Python libs that I wish were part of the standard library
I can't give you a stdlib, but I can give you a package with a lot of the basic functionality but still small enough that it installs quickly and has negligable overhead. The ubelt library is a set of 100ish utility functions and classes. It's similar to boltons, but I suppose it reflects a different perspective on what's useful.
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How do you feel about vendored packages?
Number 3 is the one I feel most conflicted about. Specifically, I tout my ubelt library as having 0 required dependencies. However, it vendors two libraries: progiter and orderedset. The first of which I also maintain and the second of which I don't maintain, but have contributed to. It feels odd to have a single dependency for a library that would otherwise have zero. But at the same time it feels odd to maintain that code myself. Also if I didn't vendor it, it would not be included in the documentation, so there is that. I've recently been thinking I should split ubelt up into many smaller packages and then use ubelt as a "hub" to include them all. However, that's a lot more work than just maintaining one (still quite small) package, and I think having everything broken up with incur a lot of overhead at pip install time, so I'm very conflicted on the whole subject.
- Useful helper libraries
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Python projects with best practices on Github?
I'm fairly happy with my ubelt library.
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[D] What is some cool python magic(s) that you've learned over the years?
The ubelt.util_platform module is a good example of including references to similar functionality.
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[P] best-of-ml-python: A ranked list of awesome machine learning Python libraries
I also have a utility library ubelt with 552 stars and 6.9k downloads / month.
What are some alternatives?
CPython - The Python programming language
best-of-web-python - 🏆 A ranked list of awesome python libraries for web development. Updated weekly.
xonsh - :shell: Python-powered, cross-platform, Unix-gazing shell.
best-of-python-dev - 🏆 A ranked list of awesome python developer tools and libraries. Updated weekly.
Flask - The Python micro framework for building web applications.
best-of-jupyter - 🏆 A ranked list of awesome Jupyter Notebook, Hub and Lab projects (extensions, kernels, tools). Updated weekly.
PRAW - PRAW, an acronym for "Python Reddit API Wrapper", is a python package that allows for simple access to Reddit's API.
best-of-python - 🏆 A ranked list of awesome Python open-source libraries and tools. Updated weekly.
dispatch - All of the ad-hoc things you're doing to manage incidents today, done for you, and much more!
fastcore - Python supercharged for the fastai library
best-of-ml-python - 🏆 A ranked list of awesome machine learning Python libraries. Updated weekly.
best-of-generator - 🏆 Generates a ranked list of awesome libraries and tools.