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

#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 Brett Cannon and Christian Heimes have introduced PEP 594 which is the first step in trimming outdated and unmaintained older modules from the Standard Library.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.

Episoder(544)

#425: Memray: The endgame Python memory profiler

#425: Memray: The endgame Python memory profiler

Understanding how your Python application is using memory can be tough. First, Python has it's own layer of reused memory (arenas, pools, and blocks) to help it be more efficient. And many important P...

4 Aug 20231h 10min

#424: Shiny for Python

#424: Shiny for Python

If you want to share your data science results as interactive web apps, you could learn Flask or Django and a bunch of other web technologies. Or, you could pick up one of the powerful frameworks for ...

27 Jul 20231h 4min

#423: Solving 10 different simulation problems with Python

#423: Solving 10 different simulation problems with Python

Python is used for a wide variety of software projects. One area it's really gained a huge amount of momentum is in the computational space (including data science). On this episode we welcome back Al...

24 Jul 20231h 6min

#422: How data scientists use Python

#422: How data scientists use Python

Regardless of which side of Python, software developer or data scientist, you sit on, you surely know that data scientists and software devs seem to have different styles and priorities. But why? And ...

7 Jul 20231h 2min

#421: Python at Netflix

#421: Python at Netflix

When you think of Netflix (as a technology company), you probably imagine them as cloud innovators. They were one of the first companies to go all-in on a massive scale for cloud computing as well as ...

2 Jul 20231h 4min

#420: Database Consistency & Isolation for Python Devs

#420: Database Consistency & Isolation for Python Devs

When you use a SQL database like Postgres, you have to understand the subtleties of isolation levels from "read committed" to "serializable." And distributed databases like MongoDB offer a range of co...

26 Jun 202356min

#419: Debugging Python in Production with PyStack

#419: Debugging Python in Production with PyStack

Here's the situation. You have a Python app that is locked or even has completely crashed and all you're left with is a core dump on the server. Now what? It's time for PyStack! You can capture a view...

14 Jun 20231h 12min

#418: How To Keep A Secret in Python Apps

#418: How To Keep A Secret in Python Apps

Think about the different APIs and databases your application works with. Every one of them requires either an API key or a database connection string that itself contains a password. How do you let y...

2 Jun 20231h 7min

Populært innen Teknologi

lydartikler-fra-aftenposten
romkapsel
teknisk-sett
energi-og-klima
tomprat-med-gunnar-tjomlid
elektropodden
fornybaren
rss-impressions-2
shifter
nasjonal-sikkerhetsmyndighet-nsm
teknologi-og-mennesker
pedagogisk-intelligens
rss-polypod
rss-ki-praten
rss-ai-forklart
rss-for-alarmen-gar
rss-digitaliseringspadden
rss-fjorsilkebris-podcast
rss-visjonarene
rss-alt-som-gar-pa-strom