fatiando.org
Installing Fatiando — fatiando 0.4 documentation
http://www.fatiando.org/install.html
If you have any trouble installing please submit a bug report on Github. Or write to the mailing list. There are many versions of the Python. Language in use today. The main ones are Python 2.7 and Python 3.x. Most, if not all, of the scientific Python packages that Fatiando relies on support both versions of the language. However, while it is possible (and not that difficult) to support both versions simultaneously. It does take work. And work takes time. Fatiando requires the following packages:. Pip i...
bruceeckel.github.io
Python Conference 2015 In Montreal · Computing Thoughts
http://bruceeckel.github.io/2015/08/02/python-conference-2015-in-montreal
09 Oct 2016 » Notes from The Elm Developer Retreat. 12 Sep 2016 » The Elm Developer Retreat. 20 Jun 2016 » A Model To Fund Open-Source Projects. 15 Jun 2016 » Pycon 2016. 27 Apr 2016 » Java 8 Parallel Operations Are Not As Simple As They Seem. 10 Jan 2016 » Video Of Belarus Conference Opening Keynote. 17 Oct 2015 » Are Java 8 Lambdas Closures? 24 Sep 2015 » Jet Conference Slides. 29 Aug 2015 » What I Do. 06 Aug 2015 » News, Readables, Viewables. 02 Aug 2015 » Python Conference 2015 In Montreal. It’s not ...
podcastinit.com
Episode 16 - Holger Krekel on Pytest| Podcast.__init__
http://podcastinit.com/holger-krekel-pytest.html
A podcast about Python and the people who make it great. Episode 16 - Holger Krekel on Pytest. In this episode we talked to Holger Krekel about the py.test library. We discussed the various styles of testing that it supports, the plugin system and how it compares to the unittest library. We also reviewed some of the challenges around packaging and releasing Python software and our thoughts on some ways that they can be improved. Date of recording - July 8th, 2015. Hosts Tobias Macey and Chris Patti.
ostricher.com
Itamar Ostricher | The Ostrich
http://www.ostricher.com/author/itamar
Recent Posts by Itamar Ostricher. Go Plain Ubiquitous Plaintext Capture, Part 1: nvALT. Saturday, April 9, 2016. In my Go Plain manifesto. I said that the first thing I plan to deal with is. Ubiquitous plaintext capture solution. So here I am, trying to deal with it, having some success on the Mac, mostly failing on mobile…. Of several posts on the subject of. I am dividing it to parts because it is still work-in-progress, and I wanted to share as I go along. For capturing notes on OS X. Been using i...
ostricher.com
Software Engineering | The Ostrich
http://www.ostricher.com/category/software-eng
Software engineering, development, design, quality, and methodologies. Get Safe Paths From Arbitrary Strings In Python. Wednesday, March 30, 2016. Sometimes, all you want to do with an arbitrary string, is to use it to create a file or a directory. Really, that’s all. Nothing too special about it, right? This is the root of all evil! Arbitrary strings are dangerous, and should be handled with the utmost care, as if they were explosives, or Frank Underwood’s new liver! This is exactly what my. Their ̶...
pythonpodcast.com
Episode 16 – Holger Krekel on Py.Test – Podcast.__init__
https://pythonpodcast.com/holger-krekel-pytest.html
The Podcast About Python and the People Who Make It Great. Episode 16 – Holger Krekel on Py.Test. Episode 16 – Holger Krekel on Py.Test. July 24, 2015. November 1, 2016. MP3 Audio [67 MB]. To listen to past episodes, learn more about the show and sign up for our mailing list. Welcome to Podcast. init the podcast about Python and the people who make it great. Date of recording – July 8th, 2015. Hosts Tobias Macey and Chris Patti. Follow us on iTunes. Give us feedback on iTunes. Interview with Holger Krekel.
radar.oreilly.com
Python 3: threat or menace? - O'Reilly Radar
http://radar.oreilly.com/2014/09/python-3-threat-or-menace.html
Shop Video Training & Books. Shop Video Training & Books. Web Ops and Performance. We're in the process of moving Radar to the new oreilly.com. Check it out. Python 3: threat or menace? Prepare for the future of computing with Python. September 26, 2014. I wish I still had my copy of this: a. Magazine from the ’60s, displaying a picture of a flying saucer and the ominous headline: “Flying Saucers: Threat or Menace? The authors of such articles, and Python developers in general,. If you’re not a new...
groovematic.com
Python: When The Two Become One
http://groovematic.com/2014/08/python-when-the-two-become-one
A moo-saa-fir and his undercover mission. Agustus 09, 2014. Python: When The Two Become One. The Gap Between 2 Python Worlds. From my point of view, I truly agree on how we should moving forward. Despite of Python 2 is still alive and kickin', the current development is heavily-geared toward Python 3, because it's the future! Unfortunately, reality bites for sure. There are many reasons why people still working on Python 2 codebase:. Worrying too much about changes made in Python 3. And so on .
ilovesymposia.com
Experiences porting a medium-sized library from Python 2 to 3 | I Love Symposia!
https://ilovesymposia.com/2015/03/08/experiences-porting-a-medium-sized-library-from-python-2-to-3
Science and Tech for the Small Fry. Experiences porting a medium-sized library from Python 2 to 3. March 8, 2015. Prompted in part by some discussions with Ed Schofield, creator of python-future.org. I’ve been going on a bit of a porting spree to Python 3. I just finished with my gala segmentation library. (Find it on GitHub. Reminder: the order of dictionary items is undefined. This is one of those. Things that I forget over and over and over. In my porting, some tests that depended on a scikit-learn.