doorstop
pip-upgrade
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doorstop | pip-upgrade | |
---|---|---|
2 | 4 | |
453 | 33 | |
1.8% | - | |
9.4 | 6.0 | |
4 days ago | 3 months ago | |
Python | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
doorstop
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Ask HN: How do you keep track of software requirements and test them?
Zooming into "requirements management" (and out of "developing test cases") there's a couple of Open Source projects that address specifically this important branch of software development. I like both approaches and I think they might be used in different situations. By the way, the creators of these two projects are having useful conversations on aspects of their solutions so you might want to try both and see what's leading from your point of view.
* https://github.com/doorstop-dev/doorstop
- A requirements management tool alongside source code in version control
pip-upgrade
- My first code PR to an open source project and it was to optimize Pip's new resolver!
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Pip update all with dependency management
Hey guys, I found a neat little project a few months ago and it's been super helpful to me, so I figured that I'd share it here. It's called pip-upgrade-tool and as the title says, it allows for an "upgrade all" mechanic in pip, since it currently doesn't have an official way of doing this. There is the way to upgrade everything by piping pip freeze to grep and cut and xargs, but that doesn't take into account the dependencies that each package has. This project, on the other hand, does take into account dependencies, just like a normal package manager. After installation with pip3 install pip-upgrade-tool, you can just run pip-upgrade in a terminal to upgrade everything. This package can run in and out of virtual environments, and has the ability to exclude packages as well. I actually contributed to it when I first found out about it, and added the ability to use a configuration file for permanent configurations (e.g. permanent excluded packages). Hope you guys find this as useful as I do!
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How often are you supposed to update Python and libraries?
I really like to use the pip-upgrade pip package to upgrade all of my packages, it doesn't break dependencies like normal pip would do with something like pip3 list --outdated --format=freeze | grep -v '^\-e' | cut -d = -f 1 | xargs -n1 pip3 install -U. Here's the link: https://github.com/realiti4/pip-upgrade
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Contributing to FOSS projects
https://github.com/realiti4/pip-upgrade - Updates all packages in pip, and takes into account dependencies, something that pip cannot currently do
What are some alternatives?
strictdoc - Software for technical documentation and requirements management.
rules_python - Bazel Python Rules
nbdime - Tools for diffing and merging of Jupyter notebooks.
FetchCord - FetchCord grabs your OS info and displays it as Discord Rich Presence
jupytext - Jupyter Notebooks as Markdown Documents, Julia, Python or R scripts
legendary - Legendary - A free and open-source replacement for the Epic Games Launcher
rdm - Our regulatory documentation manager. Streamlines 62304, 14971, and 510(k) documentation for software projects.
pip - The Python package installer
kapply - Version control for Kubernetes manifests
ImaginaryInfinity-Calculator
MkDocs - Project documentation with Markdown.
pigar - :coffee: A tool to generate requirements.txt for Python project, and more than that. (IT IS NOT A PACKAGE MANAGEMENT TOOL)