funcy
glom
funcy | glom | |
---|---|---|
5 | 2 | |
3,272 | 1,828 | |
- | - | |
6.0 | 7.4 | |
4 days ago | 3 months ago | |
Python | Python | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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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.
funcy
- Funcy: Fancy and practical functional tools [Python]
- Ask HN: How can I get better at writing production-level Python?
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Ban 1+N in Django
On an unrelated note, Python folks should check out OP's library funcy [1]: "A collection of fancy functional tools focused on practicality. Inspired by clojure, underscore and my own abstractions."
Thanks for the library Suor!
[1] https://github.com/Suor/funcy
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What can you do in Haskell that you can't do in Python(for example)?
Functional semantics are available in Python, but IMO not that great. List, dict, and generator comprehensions allow you to perform most operations that you would use in a functional first programming language and there are third party libraries like toolz and funcy that implement some of the more advanced operations. The main issue I've found with using Python as a functional language is it doesn't support fluent syntax. With Scala you can do a relatively complex map/filter/reduce operation with syntactic ease list_of_ints.map(x => x*x).filter(x => x%2 ==0).reduce(x,y => x+y) With Python it's just clunky and less readable b/c of support of list comprehension syntax over fluent syntax. sum([x**2 for x in list_of_ints if x % 2 == 0]) A codebase with 5000 lines of the Scala style code will be much readable and maintainable than with the Python style code.
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Toolz - A functional standard library for Python
Also worse looking at: https://github.com/suor/funcy
glom
- Ask HN: How can I get better at writing production-level Python?
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Is there a quicker way to check if a attribute within an attribute exists?
If your project requires writing this sort of code a lot, there are third-party libraries that can make it a bit easier. One example that comes to mind is glom (take a look at their tutorial).
What are some alternatives?
Toolz - A functional standard library for Python.
python-lenses - A python lens library for manipulating deeply nested immutable structures
fn.py - Functional programming in Python: implementation of missing features to enjoy FP
best-of-python - 🏆 A ranked list of awesome Python open-source libraries and tools. Updated weekly.
CyToolz - Cython implementation of Toolz: High performance functional utilities
dotwiz - A blazing fast dict subclass that supports dot access notation.
Pyrsistent - Persistent/Immutable/Functional data structures for Python
cuphic - Transform or scrape Hiccup with a declarative DSL.
Coconut - Simple, elegant, Pythonic functional programming.
flyte - Scalable and flexible workflow orchestration platform that seamlessly unifies data, ML and analytics stacks.
Deal - 🤝 Design by contract for Python. Write bug-free code. Add a few decorators, get static analysis and tests for free.
tqdm - :zap: A Fast, Extensible Progress Bar for Python and CLI