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 Brett Cannon and Christian Heimes have introduced PEP 594 which is the first step in trimming outdated and unmaintained older modules from the Standard Library.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

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#505: t-strings in Python (PEP 750)

#505: t-strings in Python (PEP 750)

Python has many string formatting styles which have been added to the language over the years. Early Python used the % operator to injected formatted values into strings. And we have string.format() w...

13 Maj 20251h 11min

#504: Developer Trends in 2025

#504: Developer Trends in 2025

What trends and technologies should you be paying attention to today? Are there hot new database servers you should check out? Or will that just be a flash in the pan? I love these forward looking epi...

5 Maj 20251h 9min

#503: The PyArrow Revolution

#503: The PyArrow Revolution

Pandas is at a the core of virtually all data science done in Python, that is virtually all data science. Since it's beginning, Pandas has been based upon numpy. But changes are afoot to update those ...

28 Apr 20251h 8min

#502: Django Ledger: Accounting with Python

#502: Django Ledger: Accounting with Python

Do you or your company need accounting software? Well, there are plenty of SaaS products out there that you can give your data to. but maybe you also really like Django and would rather have a foundat...

21 Apr 20251h 3min

#501: Marimo - Reactive Notebooks for Python

#501: Marimo - Reactive Notebooks for Python

Have you ever spent an afternoon wrestling with a Jupyter notebook, hoping that you ran the cells in just the right order, only to realize your outputs were completely out of sync? Today's guest has a...

14 Apr 20251h

#500: Django Simple Deploy and other DevOps Things

#500: Django Simple Deploy and other DevOps Things

We're sitting down with Eric Matthes, the educator, author, and developer behind Django Simple Deploy. If you've ever struggled with taking that final step of getting your Django app onto a live serve...

10 Apr 202557min

#499: BeeWare and the State of Python on Mobile

#499: BeeWare and the State of Python on Mobile

This episode is all about Beeware, the project that working towards true native apps built on Python, especially for iOS and Android. Russell's been at this for more than a decade, and the progress is...

31 Mars 20251h 7min

#498: Algorithms for high performance terminal apps

#498: Algorithms for high performance terminal apps

In this episode, we welcome back Will McGugan, the creator of the wildly popular Rich library and founder of Textualize. We'll dive into Will's latest article on "Algorithms for High Performance Termi...

24 Mars 20251h 8min

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