doit
schedule
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doit | schedule | |
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20 | 13 | |
1,781 | 11,488 | |
1.5% | - | |
0.0 | 4.8 | |
6 months ago | 1 day ago | |
Python | 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.
doit
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How do you deal with CI, project config, etc. falling out of sync across repos?
I like mage for Go and doit for Python.
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What’s with DevOps engineers using `make` of all things?
Some competitors - Rake (ruby) - Bake - Earthly - SCons - doit
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Show HN: Jeeves – A Pythonic Alternative to GNU Make
An alternative to Scons could be Doit (<https://pydoit.org/>), which if I remember correctly was built as a faster alternative to Scons. See also reasons of some users to prefer the later to other mentioned here: <https://pydoit.org/stories.html>.
- A Python powered task management and automation tool
- Makefile Tricks for Python Projects
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Write Posix Shell
If you code in Python, your probably should use the language as much as possible and avoid calling shell commands.
E.G:
- manipulate the file system with pathlib
- do hashes with hashlib
- zip with zipfile
- set error code with sys.exit
- use os.environ for env vars
- print to stderr with print(..., file=...)
- sometimes you'll need to install lib. Like, if you want to manipulate a git repo, instead of calling the git command, use gitpython (https://gitpython.readthedocs.io/en/stable/)
But if you don't feel like installing a too many libs, or just really want to call commands because you know them well, then the "sh" lib is going to make things smoother:
https://pypi.org/project/sh/
Also, enjoy the fact Python comes with argparse to parse script arguments (or if you feel like installing stuff, use typer). It sucks to do it in bash .
If what you need is more build oriented, like something to replace "make", then I would instead recommend "doit":
https://pydoit.org/
It's the only task runner that I haven't run away from yet.
Remember to always to everything in a venv. But you can have a giant venv for all the scripts, and just she-bang the venv python executable so that it's transparent. Things don't have to be difficult.
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Alternatives to Makefile for Python
I've been using Doit for a project which involves gathering together documents made up of multiple Markdown files and converting to multiple formats. It's really cool but has some irritations. It didn't end up being much simpler than Make for me. I'm interested in trying some of the alternatives people have posted.
- Just: A Command Runner
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I used Python to control a custom stop-motion animation drawing machine
The code for all of this is available here, and described in detail in my article. I'm particularly fan of doit for this type of project, and highly encourage everyone to check it out!
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Monorepo Build Tools
Instead, I use pydoit (which is basically a Python version of make). It's simple, flexible, and quite extensible. So, here's what I do with it:
schedule
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The GIL can now be disabled in Python's main branch
Thank you for your insight!
I asked about it to the dev if you're interested, by the way. No replies yet though, since the lib isn't very active to begin with.
https://github.com/dbader/schedule/issues/614
- A great project for schedule tasks
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simple CPP schedule library
similar to this this library in python3
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7 Useful Python Libraries You Should Use in Your Next Project
schedule
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how do I make a piece of code in python that will automatically send a message every certain amount of hours
https://github.com/dbader/schedule should do the trick with running periodically.
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Good resources for creating a bash script to call multiple python evironments?
https://github.com/dbader/schedule might help as well
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ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor in Python
Python provides two different modules, sched and concurrent.futures and it is in the hands of the user to implement the ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor. Though there are packages that provide scheduling in Python, there is no implementation as close to the one provided by Java. So, I’ve implemented the same with the APIs to closely resemble the ones in Java.
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How can I make code run at a certain time without making it wait for that time?
You can use the Schedule package
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Executing a command on a certain time
You could look into using cron (a UNIX utility you can use to run commands on a schedule) or schedule, which I don't have a ton of experience with but which is pretty popular and well supported.
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Issue when running schedule with Flask
I need to run a certain task periodically on my Flask application. I decided to use a simple library - Schedule (https://github.com/dbader/schedule) for doing this. I am running the task scheduler on a separate thread from the main application thread. Here's the relevant code snippet.
What are some alternatives?
Invoke - Pythonic task management & command execution.
APScheduler - Task scheduling library for Python
Prefect - The easiest way to build, run, and monitor data pipelines at scale.
Joblib - Computing with Python functions.
TaskFlow - A library to complete workflows/tasks in HA manner. Mirror of code maintained at opendev.org.
Task - A task runner / simpler Make alternative written in Go
gunnery - Remote task execution tool
Spiff - A powerful workflow engine implemented in pure Python