deptry
ibis
deptry | ibis | |
---|---|---|
25 | 23 | |
764 | 4,208 | |
- | 5.8% | |
9.3 | 10.0 | |
12 days ago | 6 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
MIT License | 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.
deptry
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This Week In Python
deptry – Find unused, missing and transitive dependencies in a Python project
deptry – A command line utility to check for obsolete, missing and transitive dependencies in a Python project
- Show HN: Deptry 0.14.0 – detect unused Python dependencies up to 10 times faster
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Show HN: Deptry 0.10.0 – detect unused dependencies in your Python project
We are happy to share that deptry 0.10.0 has been released! Deptry is a command line tool to check for issues with dependencies in a Python project, such as obsolete or missing dependencies.
In this latest release, Some major improvements were added to the way deptry reports issues by [Mathieu Kniewallner](https://github.com/mkniewallner). You can find the full release notes [here](https://github.com/fpgmaas/deptry/releases/tag/0.10.0).
If you're interested in learning more about deptry, be sure to check out the [Documentation](https://fpgmaas.github.io/deptry/) and the [GitHub repository](https://github.com/fpgmaas/deptry).
Let us know if you have any questions or feedback!
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deptry 0.10.0 - A tool to detect issues with your project's dependencies and imports.
Since PEP-621 does not specify a recommended way to define development dependencies, everything is expected to be a regular dependency. See here.
- deptry 0.6.1 was just released, adding support for PDM.
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Looking for opinions on a design issue of a CLI I am currently developing
Thanks for your comment :) src was used purely as an example. By default, the tool scans for .py files in all directories recursively. But for example, in this issue someone put their source code in crop directory and thus called the tool with deptry crop/, which is not how the argument is supposed to be used.
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A cool Python tool to download Research papers in bulk from any conference
Your project could use some additional documentation. Now the only way for me to find out how to use it is through the 'open colab' button. You could consider adding an example to the README. I personally always try to add a documentation website, which is really easily done with e.g. mkdocs or Sphinx. For an example, you could check out my most recent project deptry.
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Show HN: Deptry, a tool to check for dependency issues in a Python project
I have recently been working on a project called `deptry`, a command line tool to check for issues in the dependencies of Python projects. It can be used to find obsolete, missing, transitive and misplaced development dependencies. It supports the following types of projects:
- Projects that use Poetry and a corresponding pyproject.toml file
- Projects that use a requirements.txt file according to the pip standards
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* Documentation: https://fpgmaas.github.io/deptry/
* GitHub repository: https://github.com/fpgmaas/deptry
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I am quite happy with the project in its current form, but I also realise there is still a lot of room left for improvement. Therefore, I hope some people are willing to give it a try and provide me with feedback. So; if you have a project with a long list of dependencies and a little bit of spare time on your hands, please give it a try and let me know what you think!
If you encounter any issues, find a bug, or have any other form of feedback, please don't hesitate to raise an issue in the GitHub repository, or leave a comment here.
Kind regards,
Florian
P.S. Many thanks to Hirokazu Takaya (https://github.com/lisphilar) for incorporating it in the CI/CD pipeline of his project covid19-sir (https://github.com/lisphilar/covid19-sir). It provided me with very valuable early feedback.
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Deptry 0.4.4, a tool to check for dependency issues in a Python project
- Projects that use a _requirements.txt_ file according to the [pip](https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/user_guide/) standards
* [*Documentation*](https://fpgmaas.github.io/deptry/)
ibis
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Show HN: Hashquery, a Python library for defining reusable analysis
I really don't understand the appeal of dbt vs a proper programming language. The templating approach leads to massive spaghetti. I look forward to trying out something like Ibis [0]
0: https://ibis-project.org/
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This Week In Python
ibis – portable Python dataframe library
- Ibis: The portable Python dataframe library
- FLaNK Stack 26 February 2024
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Quarto
The main benefit is that you get a Python (or R, Julia or Rust) interpreter. So you can evaluate code. A good example of the value of this is the Ibis docs which use Quarto: https://ibis-project.org/
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Polars – A bird's eye view of Polars
Ive found polars quite intuitive, though for python, I lean more towards [ibis](https://ibis-project.org/). The interface is nearly identical, but ibis has the benefit if building sql queries before pulling any actual data (like dbplyr) — whereas polars requires the data to be in-memory (at least for rdb’s, though correct me if Im wrong)
this to me seems like a good argument for only using ibis, but Im happy to be convinced otherwise
- Ibis – Universal Interface for Data Wrangling
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Vanna.ai: Chat with your SQL database
Please add Ibis Birdbrain https://ibis-project.github.io/ibis-birdbrain/ to the list. Birdbrain is an AI-powered data bot, built on Ibis and Marvin, supporting more than 18 database backends.
See https://github.com/ibis-project/ibis and https://ibis-project.org for more details.
- Ibis
What are some alternatives?
docquery - An easy way to extract information from documents
snowflake-connector-python - Snowflake Connector for Python
django-functest - Helpers for creating high-level functional tests in Django, with a unified API for WebTest and Selenium tests.
PySpark-Boilerplate - A boilerplate for writing PySpark Jobs
resp - Fetch Academic Research Papers from different sources
Apache Impala - Apache Impala
sqlparse - A non-validating SQL parser module for Python
pangres - SQL upsert using pandas DataFrames for PostgreSQL, SQlite and MySQL with extra features
py-shiny - Shiny for Python
sqlite_scanner - DuckDB extension to read and write to SQLite databases
covid19-sir - CovsirPhy: Python library for COVID-19 analysis with phase-dependent SIR-derived ODE models.
katacoda