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Unavailable#3 Python 3.6 is coming, and it's awesome plus superior text processing with Pynini
Currently unavailable

#3 Python 3.6 is coming, and it's awesome plus superior text processing with Pynini

FromPython Bytes


Currently unavailable

#3 Python 3.6 is coming, and it's awesome plus superior text processing with Pynini

FromPython Bytes

ratings:
Length:
30 minutes
Released:
Nov 23, 2016
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Welcome to Python Bytes. Python headlines delivered directly to your earbuds. In this episode we cover the new features in Python 3.6, text processing with Pynini, Python is 2nd most popular language on GitHub and more.

This episode was brought to you by Rollbar: they help you take the pain out of errors.

News items

How to get superior text processing with Pynini


how to change your thinking from regular expression matching to FSAs (finite-state acceptor), then FSTs.
Example using cheese names (love the Python tradition with that).
library developed at Google called pynini for easily using FSTs


Python 3.6 b4 Is out! (beta!!!)


PEP 498, formatted string literals.
PEP 515, underscores in numeric literals.
PEP 525, asynchronous generators.
PEP 530: asynchronous comprehensions.
The dict type has been reimplemented to use a faster, more compact representation similar to the PyPy dict implementation. This resulted in dictionaries using 20% to 25% less memory when compared to Python 3.5.
The class attribute definition order is now preserved.
Security: The new secrets module has been added to simplify the generation of cryptographically strong pseudo-random numbers suitable for managing secrets such as account authentication, tokens, and similar.
Windows: python.exe and pythonw.exe have been marked as long-path aware, which means that when the 260 character path limit may no longer apply. See removing the MAX_PATH limitation for details.


Create an Excellent Python Dev Env


pyenv, like virtualenv, I think, but independent of Python.
pyenv-virtualenv instead of virtualenvwrapper
pipsi - a tool to let you install python based CLI utilities in their own virtualenv easily.
Tools he installs with pipsi:

tox - testing multiple environments
mkdocs - documentation static site generator
git-review - gerrit integration with git.
flake8 - static analysis

He also mentions a shell called fish, which I hadn’t heard of before.


GitHub language statistics, Python is 2nd most popular language


An active repository should meet this requirements:
created or updated during the evaluated period,

at least one star
at least one fork
a size larger than 10 Kb

JavaScript is likely over counted


Handling Unicode Strings in Python


Text Representation in Python and the differences between 2.7 and 3.4+
Converting between unicode strings and bytes
IO boundary issues with databases, file system, or network services
Logging
JSON encoding
Redis
A pointer to a 2012 article from Ned Batchelder called Pragmatic Unicode.


Python extensions for VS Code for Mac / PC / Linux


Linting (Prospector, Pylint, pycodestyle/Pep8, Flake8, pylama, pydocstyle with config files and plugins)
Intellisense (autocompletion with support for PEP-0484)
Scientific tools (Jupyter/IPython)
Auto indenting
Code formatting (autopep8, yapf, with config files)
Code refactoring (Rename, Extract Variable, Extract Method, Sort Imports)
Viewing references, code navigation, view signature
Excellent debugging support (remote debugging over SSH, mutliple threads, django, flask)
Unit testing, including debugging (unittest, pytest, nosetests, with config files)
Execute file or code in a python terminal
Local help file (offline documentation)
Snippets


Our personal news

Brian


Lot’s of writing. My target is to get the book in print by PyCon US 2017 in May. But that’s an aggressive schedule with the rest of my projects.
Still working on getting #25 out the door. Interview with Dave Hunt from Mozilla about Selenium, Mozilla, pytest, tox, CI, and much more. Should go out within the next couple of days.
Next interview scheduled is with David Hussman from DevJam. This will be a higher level discussion about software development practices. Look for that this month also.


Michael


Shipped: Episode #85: Parsing horrible things with Python
Quick correction: github's awesome-python isn't the newsletter, that's https://python.libhunt.com
Released:
Nov 23, 2016
Format:
Podcast episode