harlequin
httpx
harlequin | httpx | |
---|---|---|
13 | 53 | |
2,531 | 12,379 | |
- | 2.1% | |
9.3 | 8.9 | |
3 days ago | 4 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
MIT License | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" 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.
harlequin
- DBeaver – open-source Database client
- FLaNK Stack 29 Jan 2024
- FLaNK Weekly 08 Jan 2024
- Harlequin: SQL IDE for Your Terminal
- Harlequin: DuckDB IDE for the terminal
- Harlequin.sh DuckDB IDE for your terminal
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Show HN: Harlequin, the DuckDB IDE for Your Terminal
For the past four months I've been working (part-time, this is OSS after all) on Harlequin, a SQL IDE for DuckDB that runs in your terminal. I built this because I work in Data, and I found myself often reaching for the DuckDB CLI to quickly query CSV or Parquet data, but then hitting a wall when using the DuckDB CLI as my queries got more complex and my result sets got larger.
Harlequin is a drop-in replacement for the DuckDB CLI that runs in any terminal (even over SSH), but adds a browsable data catalog, full-powered text editor (with multiple buffer support), and a scrollable results viewer that can display thousands of records.
Harlequin is written in Python, using the Textual framework. It's licensed under MIT.
Today I released v1.0.0, and I'm excited to share Harlequin with HN for the first time. You can try it out with `pip install harlequin`, or visit https://harlequin.sh for docs and other info.
- FLaNK Stack Weekly for 07August2023
httpx
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A Retrospective on Requests
For reference, it's a butterfly, not a moth.
Source: https://github.com/encode/httpx/issues/834
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Show HN: Twitter API Wrapper for Python – No API Keys Needed
Very cool, first I'm hearing of httpx https://www.python-httpx.org/
I think most people would start with trying out requests or something for this kind of work, I'm guessing that didn't work out? You've got a star from me.
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Harlequin: SQL IDE for Your Terminal
To access 10 different commands at the same time, that is tricky but definitely doable.
First thing that comes to mind, you can use aliases.
To keep it simple, lets use 3 examples instead of 10: harlequin (this project), pgcli (https://www.pgcli.com/) and httpx (https://www.python-httpx.org/)
Setup a main home for all your venvs:
cd ~
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HTTP Rate Limit
There are already some implementations for Python HTTP clients. One of them is aiometer. But it's not suitable for my use case. Since httpx already has the internal pool, it would be better to reuse the design.
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Introducing Flama for Robust Machine Learning APIs
Besides, flama also provides support for SQL databases via SQLAlchemy, an SQL toolkit and Object Relational Mapper that gives application developers the full power and flexibility of SQL. Finally, flama also provides support for HTTP clients to perform requests via httpx, a next generation HTTP client for Python.
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Embracing Modern Python for Web Development
We can use the async HTTP client provided by httpx, a fully featured HTTP client for Python with an API broadly compatible with requests, so it can be used in pretty much the same way in most cases.
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Didn't want to click on refresh to see updates, this is what I did!
httpx in place of requests library
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Python Requests 3
The main value of Requests is that it provided an abstract interface on top of HTTP, which was designed well-enough to become a standard. But today it has fallen way behind in its field, and there are much better alternatives such as HTTPX [0].
[0] https://www.python-httpx.org/
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Unlocking Performance: A Guide to Async Support in Django
HTTPX is a popular Python library that provides an asynchronous HTTP client, and it can be beneficial for enabling async support in Django. While Django itself does not require HTTPX for async support, using HTTPX in combination with Django's async views can bring several advantages:
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Show HN: Python package for interfacing with ChatGPT with minimized complexity
The underlying library for both sync and async is httpx (https://www.python-httpx.org/) which may be limited from the HTTP Client perspective but it may be possible to add rate limiting at a Session level.
What are some alternatives?
hugging-chat-api - HuggingChat Python API🤗
AIOHTTP - Asynchronous HTTP client/server framework for asyncio and Python
opensms - Open-source solution to programmatically send and receive SMS using your own SIM cards
Niquests - Requests but with HTTP/3, HTTP/2, Multiplexed Connections, System CAs, Certificate Revocation, DNS over HTTPS / TLS / QUIC or UDP, Async, DNSSEC, and (much) pain removed!
llama2_aided_tesseract - Enhance Tesseract OCR output for scanned PDFs by applying Large Language Model (LLM) corrections, complete with options for text validation and hallucination filtering.
requests-html - Pythonic HTML Parsing for Humansâ„¢
OpenBuddy - Open Multilingual Chatbot for Everyone
requests - A simple, yet elegant, HTTP library.
examples - Analyze the unstructured data with Towhee, such as reverse image search, reverse video search, audio classification, question and answer systems, molecular search, etc.
Flask - The Python micro framework for building web applications.
textadept - Textadept is a fast, minimalist, and remarkably extensible cross-platform text editor for programmers.
starlette - The little ASGI framework that shines. 🌟