pylyzer
ruff
pylyzer | ruff | |
---|---|---|
13 | 97 | |
2,006 | 27,076 | |
- | 5.3% | |
7.5 | 10.0 | |
11 days ago | about 9 hours ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
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.
pylyzer
- Pylyzer – A fast static code analyzer and language server for Python
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Mypy 1.6 Released
There's pylyzer[0], but it's in the early stages.
[0] https://github.com/mtshiba/pylyzer
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Ruff v0.1.0
I’ve just found out pylyzer https://github.com/mtshiba/pylyzer
Not sure how good it is.
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How do you enable semantic highlighting for Python?
That explains why I didn't see textDocument/semanticTokens/full or anything like it in pyright's code. Do you happen to know of any Python LSP that has semantic tokens? pylsp, pyright, and jedi-language-server all don't have it. The only one I could find that might support it is https://github.com/mtshiba/pylyzer but I haven't tried that LSP yet
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FastAPI 0.100.0:Release Notes
You might want to check Pylyzer then (https://github.com/mtshiba/pylyzer).
I'm not involved at all. It is still very very early in development. But as it is in the same vein, I thought I'd mentioned it here.
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Python development in a restricted environment
I don't need a lot. Something like "go to definition" and "show docstring" would go a long way, "signature help" would be nice... I'd take a nice completion, but that would just be a cherry on top. Any low-effort ways to achieve this? I've found https://github.com/mtshiba/pylyzer which looked really nice (and I could just download the right binary), but it has another programming language as a dependency, which is kind of intimidating...
- [Neovim] Pylyser python lsp
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Astral: Next-gen Python tooling
Perhaps pylyzer can deliver. https://github.com/mtshiba/pylyzer
- Ask HN: Is there a Ruff for Python static type checking?
- Pylyser python lsp
ruff
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Ruff: The Extensible Python Linter
Ruff is an open-source Python linter created by Astral Sh that stands out for its impressive speed, adaptability, and wide-ranging features.
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Introducing Tapyr: Create and Deploy Enterprise-Ready PyShiny Dashboards with Ease
Leverage Python Tools: Tapyr takes advantage of Python’s ecosystem tools, including ruff, pytest, and others.
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Ask HN: High quality Python scripts or small libraries to learn from
I think I mention this all the time when this comes up, but I learned the most 'best practices' through using ruff.
https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/
I just installed and enabled all the rules by setting
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Enhance Your Project Quality with These Top Python Libraries
Ruff is a Python linter that helps to identify and remove code smells. Over 700 built-in rules: Ruff includes native re-implementations of popular Flake8 plugins, like flake8-bugbear. And also built-in caching to avoid re-analyzing unchanged files.
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Ask HN: What interesting project ideas you've got but have no time to work on?
Because the Python's "ast" modules is too slow, and lacks proper "format" feature (it has unparse but it removes comments, and forgets the current style completely). I use "ruff" a lot (https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff) which is in Rust. But I want to be able to implement fast custom linters in Go (linters that ruff / fixit lack, and Python linters lack or are too slow).
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Rye: A Vision Continued
I think it’s interesting that rye uses ruff (https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff) for linting and formatting. That’s the right call, and it’s also correct to bundle that in for an integrated dev experience.
I had to guess, that’s the path that the Astral team would take as well - expand ruff’s capabilities so it can do everything a Python developer needs. So the vision that Armin is describing here might be achieved by ruff eventually. They’d have an advantage that they’re not a single person maintenance team, but the disadvantage of needing to show a return to their investors.
- An fast Python linter and code formatter, written in Rust
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Smooth Packaging: Flowing from Source to PyPi with GitLab Pipelines
Adding more weight to ease of setup and configurability, the choice came down on flake8. It is easy to integrate, since its also available through pip and let’s you configure which standards you want to omit by simply stating them as a list via the --ignore switch. Moving to ruff appears quite smooth, so future updates may do so.
- Show HN: Marimo – an open-source reactive notebook for Python
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AST-grep(sg) is a CLI tool for code structural search, lint, and rewriting
I confess I stole the pip recipe from Charlie :D
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/blob/main/.github/workflow...
What are some alternatives?
python-lsp-ruff - Linter plugin for pylsp based on ruff.
black - The uncompromising Python code formatter
pyright-inlay-hints - Static Type Checker for Python
mypy - Optional static typing for Python
nvim-lspconfig - Quickstart configs for Nvim LSP
pyright - Static Type Checker for Python
fastapi-router-controller - A FastAPI utility to allow Controller Class usage
Pylint - It's not just a linter that annoys you!
Flake8 - flake8 is a python tool that glues together pycodestyle, pyflakes, mccabe, and third-party plugins to check the style and quality of some python code.
msgspec - A fast serialization and validation library, with builtin support for JSON, MessagePack, YAML, and TOML
pre-commit - A framework for managing and maintaining multi-language pre-commit hooks.