river
fastapi
river | fastapi | |
---|---|---|
17 | 469 | |
4,775 | 71,023 | |
1.3% | - | |
9.1 | 9.8 | |
7 days ago | 8 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" 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.
river
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🔍Underrated Open Source Projects You Should Know About đź§
River is a Python library for online machine learning. Online machine learning can dynamically adapt to new patterns in the data, or when the data itself is generated as a function of time, e.g., stock price prediction, content personalization.
- Ask HN: What Underrated Open Source Project Deserves More Recognition?
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Unexpected Expected Thriller: A Tale of Coding Curiosity
Today, I'm going to take you on a thrilling coding adventure inspired by a LinkedIn code snippet, where I tangled with FastAPI, River, Watchdog, and Tenacity. Ready? Buckle up!
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Elevate Your Python Skills: Machine Learning Packages That Transformed My Journey as ML Engineer
Complimentary: river and skorch
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What are your favorite tools or components in the Kafka ecosystem?
River - https://github.com/online-ml/river (Online machine learning, best used with Bytewax for Kafka integration)
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Show HN: Want something better than k-means? Try BanditPAM
Hey, great work. Do you think this algorithm would be amenable to be done online? I'm the author of River (https://riverml.xyz) where we're looking for good online clustering algorithms.
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Python's “Disappointing” Superpowers
If you don't know Rust, but know Python, you can install Python libraries written in Rust with pip. Like, pip install polars or pip install robyn. In this case you follow the two bottom links. But then you don't write your own libraries and stuff so.. I guess that's not what you want.
But, if you want to learn Rust, you probably wouldn't start out with pyo3. You first install Rust with https://rustup.rs/ and then check out the official book, and the book rust by example, that you can find here https://www.rust-lang.org/learn - and maybe write some code on the Rust playground https://play.rust-lang.org/ - then, you use pyo3 to build Python libraries in Rust, and then use maturin https://www.maturin.rs/ to build and publish them to Pypi.
But if you still prefer to begin with Rust by writing Python libraries (it's a valid strategy if you are very comfortable with working with multiple stacks), the Maturin link has a tutorial that setups a program that is half written in python, half written in Rust, https://www.maturin.rs/tutorial.html (well the pyo3 link I sent also has one too. You should refer to the documentation of both, because you will use the two together)
After learning Rust, the next step is looking for libraries that you could leverage to make Python programs ultra fast. Here https://github.com/rayon-rs/rayon is an obvious choice, see some examples from the Rust cookbook https://rust-lang-nursery.github.io/rust-cookbook/concurrenc... - when you create a parallel iterator, it will distribute the processing to many threads (by default, one per core). The rust cookbook, by the way, is a nice reference to see the most used crates (Rust libraries) in the Rust ecosystem.
Anyway there are some posts about pyo3 on the web, like this blog post https://boring-guy.sh/posts/river-rust/ (note: it uses an outdated version of pyo3, and doesn't seem to use maturin which is a newer tool). This post was written by the developers of https://github.com/online-ml/river - another Python library written in Rust
- [D] Is it possible to update random forest parameters with new data instead of retraining on all data?
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If ChatGPT that could browse to the internet, what would you ask it to do?
Oh they definitely can be incrementally updated, there is just added complexity. Online learning has been used with more classical machine learning methods in real-time analytics for a while now. River is a library that handles that.
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[D] Good online learning-to-rank models
We have both bandits and FTRL implemented in River (https://riverml.xyz) if that helps.
fastapi
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Github Sponsor Sebastián RamĂrez Python programmer
He is probably most well know for creating FastAPI that I taught to some of my clients and Typer that I've never used.
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Python: A SQLAlchemy Wrapper Component That Works With Both Flask and FastAPI Frameworks
It has been an interesting exercise developing this wrapper component. The fact that it seamlessly integrates with the FastAPI framework is just a bonus for me; I didn't plan for it since I hadn't learned FastAPI at the time. I hope you find this post useful. Thank you for reading, and stay safe as always.
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FastAPI Best Practices: A Condensed Guide with Examples
FastAPI is a modern, high-performance web framework for building APIs with Python, based on standard Python type hints.
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Building an Email Assistant Application with Burr
In this tutorial, I will demonstrate how to use Burr, an open source framework (disclosure: I helped create it), using simple OpenAI client calls to GPT4, and FastAPI to create a custom email assistant agent. We’ll describe the challenge one faces and then how you can solve for them. For the application frontend we provide a reference implementation but won’t dive into details for it.
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FastAPI Got Me an OpenAPI Spec Really... Fast
That’s when I found FastAPI.
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How to Deploy a Fast API Application to a Kubernetes Cluster using Podman and Minikube
FastAPI & Uvicorn
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Analysing FastAPI Middleware Performance
Discussion at FastAPI GitHub: https://github.com/tiangolo/fastapi/issues/2696
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LangChain, Python, and Heroku
An API application framework (such as FastAPI)
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Litestar – powerful, flexible, and highly performant Python ASGI framework
It’s been my experience that async Python frameworks tend to turn IO bound problems into CPU bound problems with a high enough request rate, because due to their nature they act as unbounded queues.
This ends up made worse if you’re using sync routes.
If you’re constrained on a resource such as a database connection pool, your framework will continue to pull http requests off the wire that a sane client will cancel and retry due to timeouts because it takes too long to get a connection out of the pool. Since there isn’t a straightforward way to cancel the execution of a route handler in every Python http framework I’ve seen exhibit this problem, the problem quickly snowballs.
This is an issue with fastapi, too- https://github.com/tiangolo/fastapi/issues/5759
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AI-Powered Image Search with CLIP, pgvector, and Fast API
Fast API.
What are some alternatives?
alibi-detect - Algorithms for outlier, adversarial and drift detection
AIOHTTP - Asynchronous HTTP client/server framework for asyncio and Python
python-tidal - Python API for TIDAL music streaming service
HS-Sanic - Async Python 3.6+ web server/framework | Build fast. Run fast. [Moved to: https://github.com/sanic-org/sanic]
wayfire - A modular and extensible wayland compositor
Tornado - Tornado is a Python web framework and asynchronous networking library, originally developed at FriendFeed.
PySyft - Perform data science on data that remains in someone else's server
django-ninja - đź’¨ Fast, Async-ready, Openapi, type hints based framework for building APIs
edl - Inofficial Qualcomm Firehose / Sahara / Streaming / Diag Tools :)
Flask - The Python micro framework for building web applications.
makinage - Stream Processing Made Easy
swagger-ui - Swagger UI is a collection of HTML, JavaScript, and CSS assets that dynamically generate beautiful documentation from a Swagger-compliant API.