#445 Auto-activate Python virtual environments for any project Podcast Por  capa

#445 Auto-activate Python virtual environments for any project

#445 Auto-activate Python virtual environments for any project

Ouça grátis

Ver detalhes do programa

Sobre este áudio

Topics covered in this episode: pyx - optimized backend for uv* Litestar is worth a look** Django remake migrations** django-chronos*ExtrasJokeWatch on YouTube About the show Python Bytes 445 Sponsored by Sentry: pythonbytes.fm/sentry - Python Error and Performance Monitoring Connect with the hosts Michael: @mkennedy@fosstodon.org / @mkennedy.codes (bsky)Brian: @brianokken@fosstodon.org / @brianokken.bsky.socialShow: @pythonbytes@fosstodon.org / @pythonbytes.fm (bsky) Join us on YouTube at pythonbytes.fm/live to be part of the audience. Usually Monday at 10am PT. Older video versions available there too. Finally, if you want an artisanal, hand-crafted digest of every week of the show notes in email form? Add your name and email to our friends of the show list, we'll never share it. Michael #1: pyx - optimized backend for uv via John Hagen (thanks again)I’ll be interviewing Charlie in 9 days on Talk Python → Sign up (get notified) of the livestream here.Not a PyPI replacement, more of a middleware layer to make it better, faster, stronger.pyx is a paid service, with maybe a free option eventually. Brian #2: Litestar is worth a look James BennettMichael brought up Litestar in episode 444 when talking about rewriting TalkPython in QuartJames brings up scaling - Litestar is easy to split an app into multiple filesNot using pydantic - You can use pydantic with Litestar, but you don’t have to. Maybe attrs is right for you instead.Michael brought up Litestar seems like a “more batteries included” option.Somewhere between FastAPI and Django. Brian #3: Django remake migrations Suggested by Bruno Alla on BlueSkyIn response to a migrations topic last weekdjango-remake-migrations is a tool to help you with migrations and the docs do a great job of describing the problem way better than I did last week“The built-in squashmigrations command is great, but it only work on a single app at a time, which means that you need to run it for each app in your project. On a project with enough cross-apps dependencies, it can be tricky to run.”“This command aims at solving this problem, by recreating all the migration files in the whole project, from scratch, and mark them as applied by using the replaces attribute.”Also of note The package was created with CopierMichael brought up Copier in 2021 in episode 219It has a nice comparison table with CookieCutter and YoemanOne difference from CookieCutter is yml vs json.I’m actually not a huge fan of handwriting either. But I guess I’d rather hand write yml.So I’m thinking of trying Copier with my future project template needs. Michael #4: django-chronos Django middleware that shows you how fast your pages load, right in your browser.Displays request timing and query counts for your views and middleware.Times middleware, view, and total per request (CPU and DB). Extras Brian: Test & Code 238: So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish after 10 years, this is the goodbye episode Michael: Auto-activate Python virtual environment for any project with a venv directory in your shell (macOS/Linux): See gist.Python 3.13.6 is out.Open weight OpenAI modelsJust Enough Python for Data Scientists CourseThe State of Python 2025 article by Michael Joke: python is better than java
Ainda não há avaliações