voila
PyOxidizer
voila | PyOxidizer | |
---|---|---|
23 | 28 | |
5,214 | 5,206 | |
1.0% | - | |
7.9 | 0.0 | |
18 days ago | about 2 months ago | |
Python | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Mozilla Public License 2.0 |
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.
voila
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voila VS solara - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 13 Oct 2023
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Show HN: Mercury – convert Jupyter Notebooks to Web Apps without code rewriting
Quick link: https://github.com/voila-dashboards/voila
Humbly recommend when you share a product, you include a link to it ;)
https://voila.readthedocs.io/en/stable/
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Evidence – Business Intelligence as Code
> Works with CI/CD out of the box. Deploy to vercel, netlify, your own infra.
Jupyter is suited for whatever you want to do with it. Voila exists to enable the use case of re-generating notebooks on a CI/CD system: https://github.com/voila-dashboards/voila
Anyways, seems like the templating is more powerful than the one being offered by Jupyter Notebooks.
Good luck and much success with it :)
- Ask HN: Fastest way to turn a Jupyter notebook into a website these days?
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Warning, Streamlit collects a lot of data!
i don't understand why everyone isn't just using voila. it's so much better than streamlit or gradio. but that's just my opinion i guess.
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Mercury – Turn Python Notebooks to Web Apps
Ill have to check it out and see how it compares to voilà and holoviz panel. What I like about Holoviz panel is you can create a data web app from code that resides in a notebook or create a completely standalone app from just plain py scripts, and it supports many different visualization backends. I have found it to be the more flexible and generalizable data web app framework among the others I have come across (like Voilà, Dash, Plotly, and Streamlit).
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Turn Jupyter Notebook to Web App with open-source Mercury framework and Python only
Any insights what the differences between this and Voila are? https://github.com/voila-dashboards/voila
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New library to develop streamlit apps in jupyter
A nifty little alternative to voila, one might say.
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How do you guys share R/Python based analyses to business stakeholders?
Markdown and/or Voilà https://github.com/voila-dashboards/voila
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Looking for web app generator from JSON data
If you are comfortable working in a Jupyter Notebook you can combine ipywidgets & Voila.
PyOxidizer
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Show HN: Pywebview 5
Bundling Python isn't too bad if you find the right tools for it.
I really like https://github.com/indygreg/python-build-standalone and https://github.com/indygreg/PyOxidizer
A bundled, built standalone Python can be 16 to 32MB (including the full standard library, which you can strip down to just the bits you use to save size). Not tiny, but probably not worth switching programming languages over.
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Why do you enjoy systems programming languages?
But really, I would suggest thinking about what you want to build before "how" or "with which tool" - one of the signs of a person becoming a good engineer is having an array of tools at their disposal and being able to choose a correct tool for the correct task. Rust also excels in integrating with other languages - with JS via WebAssembly (a bit of self-promotion, for example), with Elixir via Rustler, with Python via PyO3 and PyOxidizer, etc. So you absolutely can start writing a frontend app with JS, or a distributed system with Elixir, or a data processing/ML app with Python and use Rust to speed up critical parts of those. Or, in reverse, you can start with Rust & add new capabilities to whatever you're building, that being a frontend, a resilient chat interface, or an ML model.
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List of Python compilers
Thank you, although this is not exactly on topic. I'd not heard of PyOxidizer, but it appears to have the same goal as PyInstaller, py2exe, and cx_Freeze -- as the PyOxidizer readme says, it produces
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Buck2, a large scale build tool written in Rust by Meta, is now available
Here is some example Github Action from PyOxidizer as a Kickstarter: https://github.com/indygreg/PyOxidizer/blob/main/.github/workflows/build-exe.yml
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Mitogen speedup (the actual value)
A starting point to try out binary modules by the way would be https://github.com/indygreg/PyOxidizer - could already have benefits by rolling in all dependencies of modules (so no more pip/apt/dnf/... installs on target hosts). Setting this up should be relatively straightforward and could probably be automated enough to even manage to build binary modules for all modules in the community ansible distribution eventually.
- Python Magic Methods You Haven’t Heard About
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What are different ways to make a Python exe besides py-to-exe?
PyOxidizer might be another option.
- Used "Py To EXE" and It Showed KeyLogger as One of Viruses
- indygreg / PyOxidizer :
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A Completely Open-Source Implementation of Apple Code Signing and Notarization
XAR signing is effectively just an RFC 5652 CMS signature plus some minimal data structure manipulation. Code at https://github.com/indygreg/PyOxidizer/blob/faa7dfcea5d66bf5....
Mach-O and bundles, by contrast, require a myriad of additional data structures requiring thousands of lines of code to support. To my knowledge, nobody else has implemented signing of these far-more-complicated primitives. (Existing Mach-O signing solutions just do ad-hoc signing and/or don't handle Mach-O in the context of a bundle.)
What are some alternatives?
mercury - Convert Jupyter Notebooks to Web Apps
PyInstaller - Freeze (package) Python programs into stand-alone executables
streamlit - Streamlit — A faster way to build and share data apps.
Nuitka - Nuitka is a Python compiler written in Python. It's fully compatible with Python 2.6, 2.7, 3.4, 3.5, 3.6, 3.7, 3.8, 3.9, 3.10, and 3.11. You feed it your Python app, it does a lot of clever things, and spits out an executable or extension module.
papermill - 📚 Parameterize, execute, and analyze notebooks
pyarmor - A tool used to obfuscate python scripts, bind obfuscated scripts to fixed machine or expire obfuscated scripts.
PyMe - PyMe is a tool software to develop the Python User Interface for Python programmer.
pynsist - Build Windows installers for Python applications
ipyflex - A WYSIWYG layout editor for Jupyter widgets
py2exe - modified py2exe to support unicode paths
Solara - A Pure Python, React-style Framework for Scaling Your Jupyter and Web Apps
dh-virtualenv - Python virtualenvs in Debian packages