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Length:
16 minutes
Released:
Mar 23, 2018
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Sponsored by DigitalOcean: do.co/python
Brian #1: Online CookieCutter Generator
“Get a ZIP-archive with project by filling out the form.”
By @kpavlovsky_pro Konstantin Pavlovsky
Michael #2: cutelog – GUI for Python's logging module
This is a graphical log viewer for Python's standard logging module.
Features
Allows any number of simultaneous connections
Fully customizable look of log levels and columns
Filtering based on level and name of the logger, as well as filtering by searching
Search through all records or only through filtered ones
View exception tracebacks or messages in a separate window
Dark theme (with its own set of colors for levels)
Pop tabs out of the window, merge records of multiple tabs into one
Based on PyQt5 speaking of GUIs
Brian #3: wagtail 2.0
“Wagtail is a content management system built on Django. It’s focused on user experience, and offers precise control for designers and developers.”
The Zen of Wagtail - nice philosophy of the project page to let you know if this kind of thing is right for you and your project.
In 2.0
a new text editor
Django 2 support
better scheduled publishing
…
wagtail docs
gallery of sites made with wagtail
Michael #4: peewee 3.0 is out
Peewee is a simple and small ORM. It has few (but expressive) concepts, making it easy to learn and intuitive to use.
A small, expressive ORM
Written in python with support for versions 2.7+ and 3.4+ (developed with 3.6)
Built-in support for SQLite, MySQL and Postgresql.
Numerous extensions available (postgres hstore/json/arrays, sqlite full-text-search, schema migrations, and much more).
Although this was pretty much a complete rewrite of the 2.x codebase, I have tried to maintain backwards-compatibility for the public APIs.
Exciting because of its async support via peewee-async
peewee-async is a library providing asynchronous interface powered by asyncio for peewee ORM.
database.set_allow_sync(False)
async def handler():
await objects.create(TestModel, text="Not bad. Watch this, I'm async!")
all_objects = await objects.execute(TestModel.select())
for obj in all_objects:
print(obj.text)
Brian #5: Machine Learning Basics
“Plain python implementations of basic machine learning algorithms”
From the repo:
A repository of implementations of basic machine learning algorithms in plain Python (Python Version 3.6+). All algorithms are implemented from scratch without using additional machine learning libraries. The intention of these notebooks is to provide a basic understanding of the algorithms and their underlying structure, not to provide the most efficient implementations.
Linear Regression
Logistic Regression
Perceptron
k-nearest-neighbor
k-Means clustering
Simple neural network with one hidden layer
Multinomial Logistic Regression
Michael #6: Cerberus
Cerberus provides powerful yet simple and lightweight data validation functionality out of the box
designed to be easily extensible, allowing for custom validation
Origin of the name: CERBERUS, n. The watch-dog of Hades, whose duty it was to guard the entrance;
schema = {'name': {'type': 'string'}, 'age': {'type': 'integer', 'min': 10}}
v = Validator(schema)
document = {'name': 'Little Joe', 'age': 5}
v.validate(document) # False
v.errors # {'age': ['min value is 10']}
Follow up and other news
Michael:
#100DaysOfCode in Python course: talkpython.fm/100days
Brian #1: Online CookieCutter Generator
“Get a ZIP-archive with project by filling out the form.”
By @kpavlovsky_pro Konstantin Pavlovsky
Michael #2: cutelog – GUI for Python's logging module
This is a graphical log viewer for Python's standard logging module.
Features
Allows any number of simultaneous connections
Fully customizable look of log levels and columns
Filtering based on level and name of the logger, as well as filtering by searching
Search through all records or only through filtered ones
View exception tracebacks or messages in a separate window
Dark theme (with its own set of colors for levels)
Pop tabs out of the window, merge records of multiple tabs into one
Based on PyQt5 speaking of GUIs
Brian #3: wagtail 2.0
“Wagtail is a content management system built on Django. It’s focused on user experience, and offers precise control for designers and developers.”
The Zen of Wagtail - nice philosophy of the project page to let you know if this kind of thing is right for you and your project.
In 2.0
a new text editor
Django 2 support
better scheduled publishing
…
wagtail docs
gallery of sites made with wagtail
Michael #4: peewee 3.0 is out
Peewee is a simple and small ORM. It has few (but expressive) concepts, making it easy to learn and intuitive to use.
A small, expressive ORM
Written in python with support for versions 2.7+ and 3.4+ (developed with 3.6)
Built-in support for SQLite, MySQL and Postgresql.
Numerous extensions available (postgres hstore/json/arrays, sqlite full-text-search, schema migrations, and much more).
Although this was pretty much a complete rewrite of the 2.x codebase, I have tried to maintain backwards-compatibility for the public APIs.
Exciting because of its async support via peewee-async
peewee-async is a library providing asynchronous interface powered by asyncio for peewee ORM.
database.set_allow_sync(False)
async def handler():
await objects.create(TestModel, text="Not bad. Watch this, I'm async!")
all_objects = await objects.execute(TestModel.select())
for obj in all_objects:
print(obj.text)
Brian #5: Machine Learning Basics
“Plain python implementations of basic machine learning algorithms”
From the repo:
A repository of implementations of basic machine learning algorithms in plain Python (Python Version 3.6+). All algorithms are implemented from scratch without using additional machine learning libraries. The intention of these notebooks is to provide a basic understanding of the algorithms and their underlying structure, not to provide the most efficient implementations.
Linear Regression
Logistic Regression
Perceptron
k-nearest-neighbor
k-Means clustering
Simple neural network with one hidden layer
Multinomial Logistic Regression
Michael #6: Cerberus
Cerberus provides powerful yet simple and lightweight data validation functionality out of the box
designed to be easily extensible, allowing for custom validation
Origin of the name: CERBERUS, n. The watch-dog of Hades, whose duty it was to guard the entrance;
schema = {'name': {'type': 'string'}, 'age': {'type': 'integer', 'min': 10}}
v = Validator(schema)
document = {'name': 'Little Joe', 'age': 5}
v.validate(document) # False
v.errors # {'age': ['min value is 10']}
Follow up and other news
Michael:
#100DaysOfCode in Python course: talkpython.fm/100days
Released:
Mar 23, 2018
Format:
Podcast episode