#513: Stories from Python History

#513: Stories from Python History

Why do people listen to this podcast? Sure, they're looking for technical explorations of new libraries and ideas. But often it's to hear the story behind them. If that speaks to you, then I have the perfect episode lined up. I have Barry Warsaw, Paul Everitt, Carol Willing, and Brett Cannon all back on the show to share stories from the history of Python. You'll hear about how import this came to be and how the first PyCon had around 30 attendees (two of whom are guests on this episode!). Sit back and enjoy the humorous stories from Python's past.

Avsnitt(517)

#92: Bonus: Python Bytes Crossover: Python 3.6 is going to be awesome, Kite: your friendly co-developing AI

#92: Bonus: Python Bytes Crossover: Python 3.6 is going to be awesome, Kite: your friendly co-developing AI

Here's a bonus as many of you are on winter break or travelling around. I hope you enjoy this episode of Python Bytes. If you love it, be sure to subscribe to the full podcast. Full [show notes here](https://pythonbytes.fm/episodes/show/6/python-3.6-is- going-to-be-awesome-kite-your-friendly-co-developing-ai).

29 Dec 201621min

#91: Top 10 Data Science Stories of 2016

#91: Top 10 Data Science Stories of 2016

It's been an amazing year for Python and Data Science. It's time to look back at the major headlines and take stock in what we've done as a community.

27 Dec 20161h 7min

#90: Data Wrangling with Python

#90: Data Wrangling with Python

Do you have a dirty, messy data problem? Whether you work as a software developer or as a data scientist, you've surely run across data that was malformed, incomplete, or maybe even wrong. Don't let messy data wreck your apps or generate wrong results.

21 Dec 20161h 1min

#89: A conversation with the Chief Data Scientist of the United States

#89: A conversation with the Chief Data Scientist of the United States

This special episode is hosted by Jonathon Morgan.

15 Dec 201652min

#88: Lightweight Django

#88: Lightweight Django

Django is a very popular Python web framework. One reason is you have many building blocks to drop in for large sections of your application. Need a full-on admin table editor backend? That's a few lines of code and boom you have a basic table editor.

6 Dec 201659min

#87: PonyORM: The most Pythonic ORM yet?

#87: PonyORM: The most Pythonic ORM yet?

If you could have any API you want for accessing data from Python, what would it look like? What would make it Pythonic? This week you'll hear about Pony ORM: Pony is a Python ORM with beautiful query syntax that lets you write your database queries using Python generators and lambdas.

29 Nov 201656min

#86: Python at StackOverflow

#86: Python at StackOverflow

If you run into a problem with some API or Python code what do you do to solve it? I personally throw a few keywords into google, sometimes even before checking the full docs.

24 Nov 20161h 10min

#85: Parsing horrible things with Python

#85: Parsing horrible things with Python

Do you have horribly convoluted things that need parsing? Obviously you'll learn a bunch of tips and tricks from this episode. But you'll see that advanced parsing is a gateway to many interesting computer science techniques.

17 Nov 201659min

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