#360: Removing Python's Dead Batteries (in just 5 years)
Talk Python To Me8 Huhti 2022

#360: Removing Python's Dead Batteries (in just 5 years)

Python has come a long way since it was released in 1991. It originally released when the Standard Library was primary the totality of functionality you could leverage when building your applications. With the addition of pip and the 368,000 packages on PyPI, it's a different world where what we need and expect from the Standard Library. Brett Cannon and Christian Heimes have introduced PEP 594 which is the first step in trimming outdated and unmaintained older modules from the Standard Library. Join us to dive into the history and future of Python's Standard Library.

Jaksot(543)

#448: Full-Time Open Source Devs Panel

#448: Full-Time Open Source Devs Panel

So you've created a Python-based open source project and it's started to take off. You're getting contributors, lots of buzz in the podcast space, and more. But you have that day job working on Java. ...

8 Helmi 202458min

#447: Parallel Python Apps with Sub Interpreters

#447: Parallel Python Apps with Sub Interpreters

It's an exciting time for the capabilities of Python. We have the Faster CPython initiative going strong, the recent async work, the adoption of typing and on this episode we discuss a new isolation a...

3 Helmi 20241h 11min

#446: Python in Excel

#446: Python in Excel

Why is Python so popular? There is plenty of room for debate on this but one solid reason is it's easy to adopt, easy to use, and caters to people who are not quite developers/data scientists but need...

26 Tammi 202448min

#445: Inside Azure Data Centers with Mark Russinovich

#445: Inside Azure Data Centers with Mark Russinovich

When you run your code in the cloud, how much do you know about where it runs? I mean, the hardware it runs on and the data center it runs in? There are just a couple of hyper-scale cloud providers in...

19 Tammi 202442min

#444: The Young Coder's Blueprint to Success

#444: The Young Coder's Blueprint to Success

Are you early in your software dev or data science career? Maybe it hasn't even really started yet and you're still in school. On this episode we have Sydney Runkle who has had a ton of success in the...

2 Tammi 202454min

#443: Python Bytes Crossover 2023

#443: Python Bytes Crossover 2023

Special crossover episode of Python Bytes to wrap up 2023. Topics include: **Michael #1** : [Hatch v1.8](https://hatch.pypa.io/latest/blog/2023/12/11/hatch-v180/) **Brian #2:** [svcs : A Flexible Ser...

29 Joulu 202335min

#442: Ultra High Speed Message Parsing with msgspec

#442: Ultra High Speed Message Parsing with msgspec

If you're a fan of Pydantic or dataclasses, you'll definitely be interested in this episode. We are talking about a super fast data modeling and validation framework called msgspec. Some of the types ...

14 Joulu 20231h

#441: Python = Syntactic Sugar?

#441: Python = Syntactic Sugar?

You've probably heard the term "syntactic sugar", that is, syntax within a programming language that is designed to make things easier to read or to express. It makes the language "sweeter" for human ...

6 Joulu 20231h 7min