icecream
hoogle
icecream | hoogle | |
---|---|---|
41 | 60 | |
8,504 | 721 | |
- | - | |
5.4 | 6.3 | |
about 1 month ago | 3 months ago | |
Python | Haskell | |
MIT License | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License |
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icecream
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Show HN: Dbg.h: C macro for quick and dirty print debugging
Hey, very useful. Thanks! Similar to ic() for python, but with the nice ability to be used inline.
https://github.com/gruns/icecream
- When you are looking at someone else's code base and you want to make a copy of it to put in a million print statements to understand it, what is good practice in terms of version control and naming the copy?
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Pythoneers here, what are some of the best python tricks you guys use when progrmming with python
Icecream is great for this. Just calling ic(foo) gives you the same thing on stderr.
- What's you fav ice cream??
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What Python debugger do you use?
I get around this by using loguru (a wrapper around python's logger), so I get information like the calling function and line number with my debugging statements. I don't use it these days (and actually built something extremely similar around the same time), but icecream is another alternative that facilitates debugging-by-print
- Top 3 hardest things with debugging as a beginner?
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Does anyone use python debugger?
Most of the time I simply use icecream (a much better version of print()), and sometimes, I use pudb (a visual debugger) for tougher/trickier bugs.
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Let's do a war
We also have ice cream
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What is your favorite ,most underrated 3rd party python module that made your programming 10 times more easier and less code ? so we can also try that out :-) .as a beginner , mine is pyinputplus
I found icecream in a post on this subreddit and still use it as an alternative to print for debugging.
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A script for print debugging python code
In the future using something like icecream might be interesting as well.
hoogle
- The Hunt for the Missing Data Type
- SQL Join Flavors
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What Is Dimensional Analysis?
Dimensions behave somewhat like a "type system" for math. These dimensional-analysis tricks act like the trick you see in Haskell sometimes, where you can easily guess an implementation of an expression once you know it's type (or e.g. search by type signature https://hoogle.haskell.org/ )
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Do you miss dot-completion when coding in Haskell?
Haskell Spotlight makes vscode a client for hoogle. It isn't too different than jumping into your browser and type https://hoogle.haskell.org/. The main advantage is that you have everything in one place
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dear ZVON.org owner, please take your haskell references down
https://hackage.haskell.org/package/base and https://hoogle.haskell.org are automatically up to date and better searchable than almost any other reference of any other programming language. maintaining a redundant reference that needs to be kept up to date manually is simply stupid.
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Java 20 Is Out
Ideally like this: https://zio.dev/reference/#concurrency
Or this: https://hoogle.haskell.org/?hoogle=fork
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Noob Question about Symbols after Class propertys.
And yeah I get it, it's hard to Google for punctuation operators in languages because it doesn't give useful search results (but not impossible, for example, Haskell has a search engine for documentation that handles symbols/punctuation).
- uh, got it. thanks Bing
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Haskell IDE setup
{ "customLocalFormatters.formatters": [ { "command": "make format", "languages": ["haskell"] } ], "emeraldwalk.runonsave": { "commands": [ { "match": "*.hs", "isAsync": true, "cmd": "make retag retag_file=${file}" } ] }, "ghcid.command": "make ghcid", "goto-documentation.customDocs": { "hs": "https://hoogle.haskell.org/?hoogle=${query}" } }
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Idris: A Language for Type-Driven Development
You had a look at Hoogle?
https://hoogle.haskell.org/
For some type signatures there is (are) only one (or only a few) meaningful implementation(s).
What are some alternatives?
pdb++
castle - A tool to manage shared cabal-install sandboxes.
Loguru - Python logging made (stupidly) simple
ghci-ng
py-spy - Sampling profiler for Python programs
ihaskell - A Haskell kernel for the Jupyter project.
Laboratory - Achieving confident refactoring through experimentation with Python 2.7 & 3.3+
hakyll - A static website compiler library in Haskell
remote-pdb - Remote vanilla PDB (over TCP sockets).
Exercism - Scala Exercises - Crowd-sourced code mentorship. Practice having thoughtful conversations about code.
PySnooper - Never use print for debugging again
elm-make