#523: Pyrefly: Fast, IDE-friendly typing for Python

#523: Pyrefly: Fast, IDE-friendly typing for Python

Python typing got fast enough to feel invisible. Pyrefly is a new, open source type checker and IDE language server from Meta, written in Rust, with a focus on instant feedback and real-world DX. Today, we will dig into what it is, why it exists, and how it plays with the rest of the typing ecosystem. We have Abby Mitchell, Danny Yang, and Kyle Into from Pyrefly here to dive into the project.

Episoder(523)

#412: PEP 711 - Distributing Python Binaries

#412: PEP 711 - Distributing Python Binaries

What if we distributed CPython, the runtime, in the same way we distributed Python packages - as prebuilt binary wheels that only need to be downloaded and unzipped to run? For starters, that would mean we could ship and deploy Python apps without worrying whether Python itself is available or up-to-date on the platform. Nathaniel Smith has just proposed a PEP to do just that, PEP 711. And we'll dive into that with him next.

19 Apr 20231h 18min

#411: Things I Wish Someone Had Explained To Me Sooner About Python

#411: Things I Wish Someone Had Explained To Me Sooner About Python

What advice would you give someone just getting into Python? What did you learn over time through hard work and a few tears that would have really helped you? It's a fun game to play and we have Jason McDonald on the podcast to give us his take. Enjoy!

14 Apr 20231h 3min

#410: The Intersection of Tabular Data and Generative AI

#410: The Intersection of Tabular Data and Generative AI

AI has taken the world by storm. It's gone from near zero to amazing in just a few years. We have ChatGPT, we have Stable Diffusion. But what about Jupyter Notebooks and pandas? In this episode, we meet Justin Waugh, the creator of Sketch. Sketch adds the ability to have conversational AI interactions about your pandas data frames (code and data). It's pretty powerful and I know you'll enjoy the conversation.

6 Apr 20231h 5min

#409: Privacy as Code with Fides

#409: Privacy as Code with Fides

We all know that privacy regulations are getting more strict. And that many of our users no longer believe that "privacy is dead". But for even medium-sized organizations, actually tracking how we are using personal info in our myriad of applications and services is very tricky and error prone. On this episode, we have Thomas La Piana from the Fides project to discuss privacy in our applications and how Fides can enforce and track privacy requirements in your Python apps.

1 Apr 20231h 8min

#408: Hatch: A Modern Python Workflow

#408: Hatch: A Modern Python Workflow

In recent years, there has been a lot of experimenting how we work with dependencies and external libraries for our Python code. There is pip, pip- tools, Poetry, pdm, pyenv, pipenv, Hatch and others workflows. We dove into this deeply back on episode 406: Reimagining Python's Packaging Workflows. We're back with Ofek Lev to take a deeper look at Hatch.

24 Mar 20231h 2min

#407: pytest tips and tricks for better testing

#407: pytest tips and tricks for better testing

If you're like most people, the simplicity and easy of getting started is a big part of pytest's appeal. But beneath that simplicity, there is a lot of power and depth. We have Brian Okken on this episode to dive into his latest pytest tips and tricks for beginners and power users.

18 Mar 202356min

#406: Reimagining Python's Packaging Workflows

#406: Reimagining Python's Packaging Workflows

The great power of Python is its over 400,000 packages on PyPI to serve as building blocks for your app. How do you get those needed packages on to your dev machine and managed within your project? What about production and QA servers? I don't even know where to start if you're shipping built software to non-dev end users. There are many variations on how this works today. And where we should go from here has become a hot topic of discussion. So today, that's the topic for Talk Python. I have a great panel of guests: Steve Dower, Pradyun Gedam, Ofek Lev, and Paul Moore.

12 Mar 20231h 6min

#405: Testing in Radio Astronomy with Python and pytest

#405: Testing in Radio Astronomy with Python and pytest

So you know about dependencies and testing, right? If you're talking to a DB in your app, you have to decide how to approach that with your tests. There are lots of solid options you might pick and they vary by goals. Do you mock out the DB layer for isolation or do you use a test DB to make it as real as possible? Do you just punt and use the real DB for expediency? What if your dependency was a huge array of radio telescopes and a rack of hundreds of bespoke servers? That's the challenge on deck today were we discuss testing radio astronomy with pytest with our guest James Smith. He's a Digital Signal Processing engineer at the South African Radio Astronomy Observatory and has some great stories and tips to share.

3 Mar 202359min

Populært innen Teknologi

romkapsel
rss-avskiltet
teknisk-sett
tomprat-med-gunnar-tjomlid
energi-og-klima
rss-impressions-2
shifter
nasjonal-sikkerhetsmyndighet-nsm
elektropodden
fornybaren
rss-alt-vi-kan
rss-alt-som-gar-pa-strom
smart-forklart
rss-snakk-om-sikkerhet
teknologi-og-mennesker
kunstig-intelligens-med-morten-goodwin
rss-bouvet-bobler
i-loopen
pedagogisk-intelligens
rss-digitaliseringspadden