Python Packages Project Generator
cookiecutter-pypackage
Python Packages Project Generator | cookiecutter-pypackage | |
---|---|---|
5 | 6 | |
1,064 | 4,123 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 7.7 | |
8 months ago | 5 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.
Python Packages Project Generator
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Which scaffolding package should I use?
- python-package-template
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Show HN: Go-template – A Cookiecutter template for Go
Hey HN, this would be more of an early release (still planning on some tweaks before a release) -- would love to hear your thoughts on this!
For some back-story, this is more of a side-side-project (made this while working on another side-project).
When I switched to using Go for my projects (from Python), the lack of a template generator similar to python-package-template[1] was very annoying. I would copy the basic files (Makefile, Github actions, PR templates, etc) from the previous project only to realize I forgot to change some stuff, and now would need to rewrite git history.
By the third project, I decided to create a template generator for Go! I've tried to keep the generated project as flexible as possible - you can decide to skip the of it and go for a simple project, or take the bloat (pre-commit would need Python for one).
While making go-template, one of my side goals has been to keep the project beginner-friendly. I remember stumbling upon python-package-template[1] as a novice, and learning more than I had in a semester - Makefiles, linters, code-formatters, semantic versioning, pipelines, and so much more! With go-template, I hope to give that same experience to some other newbie who might stumble upon my repo (or a project generated using go-template).
As a fun fact, go-template has an option to remove Github-specific-features (pull request templates, workflows, etc). This was inspired by a comment on HN[2] pointing out that many open-source projects were on Github simply because of FOMO, which in-turn promoted Github's dominance!
[1]: https://github.com/TezRomacH/python-package-template
- Python Best Practices for a New Project in 2021
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My humble try to make a language-independent tool for boilerplate generation
Oh, and if I am not mistaken, you have also used the python-package-template itself to generate goli structure 🔥
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[D] What’s the simplest, most lightweight but complete and 100% open source MLOps toolkit?
CookieCutter or Kedro are the winners. I still think we will stick to Kedro template, because it offers extra functionality, and I like to think of each project as a set of pipelines to be run. Anyway, some cookiecutter templates are very good, like this one. In case we use both Kedro and ClearML, we'll have to figure out how to integrate its pipelines with ClearML tasks. But in the slack channel of ClearML there are other teams doing the same, so at least it's possible.
cookiecutter-pypackage
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Which scaffolding package should I use?
- cookiecutter-pypackage
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Would this project be okay to show employers
Just a quick note - your link leads to the cookiecutter tool repo whereas OP needs a python templates like: https://github.com/audreyfeldroy/cookiecutter-pypackage
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I learned about how to take extra time and effort to write pep8 quality code, and it reflects well on my open source projects.
The base template is here: https://github.com/audreyfeldroy/cookiecutter-pypackage
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Having to set the working directory for pytest
I'm experiencing some trouble with running pytest and tox. With this project I mainly wanted to learn how to setup a good repository style and learn to publish my package. I used Cookiecutter PyPackage as template.
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An easy way to deal with __pycache__ bytecode within specific projects.
Take a look at the makefile in this python package cookie cutter template: https://github.com/audreyfeldroy/cookiecutter-pypackage. I’ve started using this for pretty much all my python projects because I like being able to run ‘make clean’ to clean up any pyc files or build artifacts that I don’t want to accidentally commit to version control.
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Best practices for structuring a project
For additional exploration... check out cookiecutter and cookiecutter-pypackage. Not so much a guide as much as a tool, but in short, cookiecutter lets you jumpstart new projects and populate directory structure with one command. Cookiecutter-pypackage is a template that does a pretty good job of following best practices. Though, it does a lot, so, prepare to be a little overwhelmed wondering why it includes so many files. But it may give you an idea of some things you may want to do when creating your own projects.
What are some alternatives?
Poe the Poet - A task runner that works well with poetry.
BookContentToYoutubeVideos - scrape the table of content from a book and search using youtube using the chapter titles
warehouse - The Python Package Index
cookiecutter - A cross-platform command-line utility that creates projects from cookiecutters (project templates), e.g. Python package projects, C projects.
bandersnatch
not-again-ai - A Python package designed to once and for all collect all the little things that come up over and over again in AI projects.
devpi
python-blueprint - 🐍 Example Python project using best practices 🥇
localshop - local pypi server (custom packages and auto-mirroring of pypi)
pyscaffold - 🛠 Python project template generator with batteries included
python-decouple - Strict separation of config from code.
Poetry - Python packaging and dependency management made easy