#101: Adding a full featured Python environment to  Visual Studio Code

#101: Adding a full featured Python environment to Visual Studio Code

You know the two questions I asked at the end of each episode? What's your favorite editor for writing Python code and what less-well-known PyPI package do you recommend? Well this time, we are making a whole episode out of "What's your favorite editor". You'll meet Don Jayamanne who created the wildly popular and open source Python add-in for Visual Studio Code. That's not the Windows-only Visual Studio, but Microsoft's free cross-platform editor.

Episoder(526)

#117: Functional Python with Coconut

#117: Functional Python with Coconut

One of the nice things about the Python language is it's at least 3 programming paradigms in one: There's the procedural style, object-oriented style, and functional style. This week you'll meet Evan Hubinger who is taking Python's functional programming style and turning it to 11. We're talking about Coconut. A full functional programming language that is a proper superset of Python itself.

21 Jun 20171h 3min

#116: 10 top talks of PyCon 2017 reviewed

#116: 10 top talks of PyCon 2017 reviewed

Whether you got to attend PyCon, there were just too many good talks to attend them all. Luckily our friends at the PSF were on top of publishing the videos online for the whole world to watch for free. On this episode, we'll meet up with Brett Slatkin and replay his path through PyCon. We touch on his top 10 sessions from PyCon 2017.

12 Jun 20171h

#115: Python for Humans projects

#115: Python for Humans projects

When you think of popular Python packages, what comes to mind? There's a good chance that this week's guest, Kenneth Reitz, wrote that package you just thought of. He's the author of so of Python's most popular libraries, including Requests, Records, Maya, and pipenv just to name a few.

8 Jun 201753min

#114: Empowering developers at the Hidden Genius project

#114: Empowering developers at the Hidden Genius project

As most of you know, learning to program opens doors. It takes every day people and turns them into creators. Once you know programming, and Python, you've passed through a door to a place with much more opportunity.

30 Mai 201738min

#113: Dedicated AI chips and running old Python faster at Intel

#113: Dedicated AI chips and running old Python faster at Intel

Where do you run your Python code? No, not Python 3, Python 2, PyPy or the other implementations. I'm thinking waaaaay lower than that. This week we are talking about the actual chips that execute our code.

27 Mai 201753min

#112: Geeking out in the golden years

#112: Geeking out in the golden years

I've always thought that if I retired, I'd more or less do what I had been doing as my job - except without the meetings and reports. That is, write interesting and fulfilling software.

18 Mai 20171h 7min

#111: Pythonic Career Advice and More

#111: Pythonic Career Advice and More

Time for some Pythonic job and career advice with Matt Harrison. Listen in as we discuss how most developer jobs never make it to full job listings and how you can get in on them. We also discuss his books and his avalanche research with the Pandas library.

13 Mai 201757min

#110: Data Democratization with Redash

#110: Data Democratization with Redash

Are you asked to generate reports from your company's data? Has someone suggested that you buy / deploy massive BI software that expensive, closed source, and generally underwhelming?

2 Mai 201756min

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