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[P] I made wut – a CLI that explains your last command using a LLM
/r/MachineLearning
https://redd.it/1hew6wy
/r/MachineLearning
https://redd.it/1hew6wy
best django course request
Hi friends, I'm new to django and i want to boost my learning to finish it faster so would appreciate suggesting django course for me.
thanks i advance.
/r/django
https://redd.it/1hfblp9
Hi friends, I'm new to django and i want to boost my learning to finish it faster so would appreciate suggesting django course for me.
thanks i advance.
/r/django
https://redd.it/1hfblp9
Reddit
From the django community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the django community
Flask with apache2 issues with routing.
I have a flask app running in a docker container open to port 5000 on my server. Apache2 is proxying port 5000 to myserver.com/myapp (not real). I have used url_for in all my templates however all the addresses it generates go to myserver.com/address instead of myserver.com/myapp/address how do I fix this?
/r/flask
https://redd.it/1hf9gze
I have a flask app running in a docker container open to port 5000 on my server. Apache2 is proxying port 5000 to myserver.com/myapp (not real). I have used url_for in all my templates however all the addresses it generates go to myserver.com/address instead of myserver.com/myapp/address how do I fix this?
/r/flask
https://redd.it/1hf9gze
Report of big data. Experience stories
Good day🙋
Is there someone who works on a project where there's big data involved, i mean big database ( we use postgresql) where in one table for example, there is a lot of entries and there is a need of generating a report of them. For us we have celery and redis doing the work. The best part, It is not blocking the application but we are not very satisfied with the generation part. For example in order to generate a report of 10000 identifications, it takes around 20min. I would like to hear other stories and experience of dealing with generation of big report with a lot of data.
/r/django
https://redd.it/1hey4ft
Good day🙋
Is there someone who works on a project where there's big data involved, i mean big database ( we use postgresql) where in one table for example, there is a lot of entries and there is a need of generating a report of them. For us we have celery and redis doing the work. The best part, It is not blocking the application but we are not very satisfied with the generation part. For example in order to generate a report of 10000 identifications, it takes around 20min. I would like to hear other stories and experience of dealing with generation of big report with a lot of data.
/r/django
https://redd.it/1hey4ft
Reddit
From the django community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the django community
Monday Daily Thread: Project ideas!
# Weekly Thread: Project Ideas 💡
Welcome to our weekly Project Ideas thread! Whether you're a newbie looking for a first project or an expert seeking a new challenge, this is the place for you.
## How it Works:
1. **Suggest a Project**: Comment your project idea—be it beginner-friendly or advanced.
2. **Build & Share**: If you complete a project, reply to the original comment, share your experience, and attach your source code.
3. **Explore**: Looking for ideas? Check out Al Sweigart's ["The Big Book of Small Python Projects"](https://www.amazon.com/Big-Book-Small-Python-Programming/dp/1718501242) for inspiration.
## Guidelines:
* Clearly state the difficulty level.
* Provide a brief description and, if possible, outline the tech stack.
* Feel free to link to tutorials or resources that might help.
# Example Submissions:
## Project Idea: Chatbot
**Difficulty**: Intermediate
**Tech Stack**: Python, NLP, Flask/FastAPI/Litestar
**Description**: Create a chatbot that can answer FAQs for a website.
**Resources**: [Building a Chatbot with Python](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a37BL0stIuM)
# Project Idea: Weather Dashboard
**Difficulty**: Beginner
**Tech Stack**: HTML, CSS, JavaScript, API
**Description**: Build a dashboard that displays real-time weather information using a weather API.
**Resources**: [Weather API Tutorial](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9P5MY_2i7K8)
## Project Idea: File Organizer
**Difficulty**: Beginner
**Tech Stack**: Python, File I/O
**Description**: Create a script that organizes files in a directory into sub-folders based on file type.
**Resources**: [Automate the Boring Stuff: Organizing Files](https://automatetheboringstuff.com/2e/chapter9/)
Let's help each other grow. Happy
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1hf62db
# Weekly Thread: Project Ideas 💡
Welcome to our weekly Project Ideas thread! Whether you're a newbie looking for a first project or an expert seeking a new challenge, this is the place for you.
## How it Works:
1. **Suggest a Project**: Comment your project idea—be it beginner-friendly or advanced.
2. **Build & Share**: If you complete a project, reply to the original comment, share your experience, and attach your source code.
3. **Explore**: Looking for ideas? Check out Al Sweigart's ["The Big Book of Small Python Projects"](https://www.amazon.com/Big-Book-Small-Python-Programming/dp/1718501242) for inspiration.
## Guidelines:
* Clearly state the difficulty level.
* Provide a brief description and, if possible, outline the tech stack.
* Feel free to link to tutorials or resources that might help.
# Example Submissions:
## Project Idea: Chatbot
**Difficulty**: Intermediate
**Tech Stack**: Python, NLP, Flask/FastAPI/Litestar
**Description**: Create a chatbot that can answer FAQs for a website.
**Resources**: [Building a Chatbot with Python](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a37BL0stIuM)
# Project Idea: Weather Dashboard
**Difficulty**: Beginner
**Tech Stack**: HTML, CSS, JavaScript, API
**Description**: Build a dashboard that displays real-time weather information using a weather API.
**Resources**: [Weather API Tutorial](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9P5MY_2i7K8)
## Project Idea: File Organizer
**Difficulty**: Beginner
**Tech Stack**: Python, File I/O
**Description**: Create a script that organizes files in a directory into sub-folders based on file type.
**Resources**: [Automate the Boring Stuff: Organizing Files](https://automatetheboringstuff.com/2e/chapter9/)
Let's help each other grow. Happy
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1hf62db
YouTube
Build & Integrate your own custom chatbot to a website (Python & JavaScript)
In this fun project you learn how to build a custom chatbot in Python and then integrate this to a website using Flask and JavaScript.
Starter Files: https://github.com/patrickloeber/chatbot-deployment
Get my Free NumPy Handbook: https://www.python-engi…
Starter Files: https://github.com/patrickloeber/chatbot-deployment
Get my Free NumPy Handbook: https://www.python-engi…
1-Year Perplexity Pro Promo Code for Only $25 (Save $175!)
Get a 1-Year Perplexity Pro Promo Code for Only $25 (Save $175!)
Enhance your AI experience with top-tier models and tools at a fair price:
Advanced AI Models: Access GPT-4o, o1 & Llama 3.1 also utilize Claude 3.5 Sonnet, Claude 3.5 Haiku, and Grok-2.
Image Generation: Explore Flux.1, DALL-E 3, and Playground v3 Stable Diffusion XL
Available for users without an active Pro subscription, accessible globally.
Easy Purchase Process:
Join Our Community: Discord with 450 members.
Secure Payment: Use PayPal for your safety and buyer protection.
Instant Access: Receive your code via a straightforward promo link.
Why Choose Us?
Our track record speaks for itself.
Check our verified Verified Buyers + VIP Buyers and Customer Feedback 2, Feedback 3, Feedback 4, Feedback 5
I WILL SEND YOU THE PROMO CODE
/r/flask
https://redd.it/1hf9l81
Get a 1-Year Perplexity Pro Promo Code for Only $25 (Save $175!)
Enhance your AI experience with top-tier models and tools at a fair price:
Advanced AI Models: Access GPT-4o, o1 & Llama 3.1 also utilize Claude 3.5 Sonnet, Claude 3.5 Haiku, and Grok-2.
Image Generation: Explore Flux.1, DALL-E 3, and Playground v3 Stable Diffusion XL
Available for users without an active Pro subscription, accessible globally.
Easy Purchase Process:
Join Our Community: Discord with 450 members.
Secure Payment: Use PayPal for your safety and buyer protection.
Instant Access: Receive your code via a straightforward promo link.
Why Choose Us?
Our track record speaks for itself.
Check our verified Verified Buyers + VIP Buyers and Customer Feedback 2, Feedback 3, Feedback 4, Feedback 5
I WILL SEND YOU THE PROMO CODE
/r/flask
https://redd.it/1hf9l81
Discord
Join the GPT Code Shop™ Discord Server!
Welcome to GPT Code Shop! This server is your one-stop shop for Perplexity, LinkedIn & many other premium digital items. | 442 members
How to show a modal in Django + HTMX
https://joshkaramuth.com/blog/django-htmx-modal/
/r/djangolearning
https://redd.it/1hfgty1
https://joshkaramuth.com/blog/django-htmx-modal/
/r/djangolearning
https://redd.it/1hfgty1
Joshkaramuth
How to show a modal in Django + HTMX
Learn how to show a modal with minimal Javascript in Django + HTMX
D What's your favorite paper you've read this year and why?
Haven't made this thread in many years, but holiday travel demands are great and would love to have a repository of papers to read during it.
/r/MachineLearning
https://redd.it/1hfljy3
Haven't made this thread in many years, but holiday travel demands are great and would love to have a repository of papers to read during it.
/r/MachineLearning
https://redd.it/1hfljy3
Reddit
From the MachineLearning community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the MachineLearning community
Summarized how the CIA writes Python
I have been going through Wikileaks and exploring Python usage within the CIA.
They have coding standards and write Python software with end-user guides.
They also have some curious ways of doing things, tests for example.
They also like to work in internet-disconnected environments.
They based their conventions on a modified Google Python Style Guide, with practical advice.
Compiled my findings.
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1hez6qa
I have been going through Wikileaks and exploring Python usage within the CIA.
They have coding standards and write Python software with end-user guides.
They also have some curious ways of doing things, tests for example.
They also like to work in internet-disconnected environments.
They based their conventions on a modified Google Python Style Guide, with practical advice.
Compiled my findings.
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1hez6qa
Substack
How the CIA Writes Python
The CIA uses Python for hacking as well as utility scripts.
Stockstir is a Python library that lets you get stock information from any script at no cost
Hello!
Just wanted to quickly showcase my project, Stockstir, which may be of use to many of you that want to follow stock prices freely in any script.
What My Project Does
Stockstir is an easy way to instantly gather stock data from any of your Python scripts. Not only that, but it includes other features, such as multi data gathering, anti ban, a fail-safe mechanism, random user agents, and much more.
Target Audience
Stockstir is for everyone that needs to gather realtime company stock info from any of their scripts. It mostly differs from any other stock related project in the way that it is simple, and doesn't rely on apis that cost money.
Comparison
Stockstir differs from other methods of gathering stock data in that it is has a very simple concept behind it. It is largely a GET wrapper in the Tools class, but initial API support such as Alpha Vantage, as well as gathering much more data of a Company stock through cnbc's JSON api, under the API class. It is mostly a quick way to gather stock data through simple use.
You can find installation instructions and other information under the project link provided below:
Link: Stockstir Project Link
To see the latest Changelog information,
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1hfmmm5
Hello!
Just wanted to quickly showcase my project, Stockstir, which may be of use to many of you that want to follow stock prices freely in any script.
What My Project Does
Stockstir is an easy way to instantly gather stock data from any of your Python scripts. Not only that, but it includes other features, such as multi data gathering, anti ban, a fail-safe mechanism, random user agents, and much more.
Target Audience
Stockstir is for everyone that needs to gather realtime company stock info from any of their scripts. It mostly differs from any other stock related project in the way that it is simple, and doesn't rely on apis that cost money.
Comparison
Stockstir differs from other methods of gathering stock data in that it is has a very simple concept behind it. It is largely a GET wrapper in the Tools class, but initial API support such as Alpha Vantage, as well as gathering much more data of a Company stock through cnbc's JSON api, under the API class. It is mostly a quick way to gather stock data through simple use.
You can find installation instructions and other information under the project link provided below:
Link: Stockstir Project Link
To see the latest Changelog information,
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1hfmmm5
GitHub
GitHub - PatzEdi/Stockstir: Easily gather stock data of any company in any of your Python projects
Easily gather stock data of any company in any of your Python projects - PatzEdi/Stockstir
P Graph-Based Editor for LLM Workflows
We made an open-source tool that provides a graph-based interface for building, debugging, and evaluating LLM workflows: https://github.com/PySpur-Dev/PySpur
Why we built this:
Before this, we built several LLM-powered applications that collectively served thousands of users. The biggest challenge we faced was ensuring reliability: making sure the workflows were robust enough to handle edge cases and deliver consistent results.
In practice, achieving this reliability meant repeatedly:
1. Breaking down complex goals into simpler steps: Composing prompts, tool calls, parsing steps, and branching logic.
2. Debugging failures: Identifying which part of the workflow broke and why.
3. Measuring performance: Assessing changes against real metrics to confirm actual improvement.
We tried some existing observability tools or agent frameworks and they fell short on at least one of these three dimensions. We wanted something that allowed us to iterate quickly and stay focused on improvement rather than wrestling with multiple disconnected tools or code scripts.
We eventually arrived at three principles upon which we built PySpur :
1. Graph-based interface: We can lay out an LLM workflow as a node graph. A node can be an LLM call, a function call, a parsing step, or any logic component. The visual structure provides an instant overview, making complex workflows more intuitive.
2. Integrated debugging: When
/r/MachineLearning
https://redd.it/1hfr4sg
We made an open-source tool that provides a graph-based interface for building, debugging, and evaluating LLM workflows: https://github.com/PySpur-Dev/PySpur
Why we built this:
Before this, we built several LLM-powered applications that collectively served thousands of users. The biggest challenge we faced was ensuring reliability: making sure the workflows were robust enough to handle edge cases and deliver consistent results.
In practice, achieving this reliability meant repeatedly:
1. Breaking down complex goals into simpler steps: Composing prompts, tool calls, parsing steps, and branching logic.
2. Debugging failures: Identifying which part of the workflow broke and why.
3. Measuring performance: Assessing changes against real metrics to confirm actual improvement.
We tried some existing observability tools or agent frameworks and they fell short on at least one of these three dimensions. We wanted something that allowed us to iterate quickly and stay focused on improvement rather than wrestling with multiple disconnected tools or code scripts.
We eventually arrived at three principles upon which we built PySpur :
1. Graph-based interface: We can lay out an LLM workflow as a node graph. A node can be an LLM call, a function call, a parsing step, or any logic component. The visual structure provides an instant overview, making complex workflows more intuitive.
2. Integrated debugging: When
/r/MachineLearning
https://redd.it/1hfr4sg
GitHub
GitHub - PySpur-Dev/pyspur: A visual playground for agentic workflows: Iterate over your agents 10x faster
A visual playground for agentic workflows: Iterate over your agents 10x faster - PySpur-Dev/pyspur
Tuesday Daily Thread: Advanced questions
# Weekly Wednesday Thread: Advanced Questions 🐍
Dive deep into Python with our Advanced Questions thread! This space is reserved for questions about more advanced Python topics, frameworks, and best practices.
## How it Works:
1. **Ask Away**: Post your advanced Python questions here.
2. **Expert Insights**: Get answers from experienced developers.
3. **Resource Pool**: Share or discover tutorials, articles, and tips.
## Guidelines:
* This thread is for **advanced questions only**. Beginner questions are welcome in our [Daily Beginner Thread](#daily-beginner-thread-link) every Thursday.
* Questions that are not advanced may be removed and redirected to the appropriate thread.
## Recommended Resources:
* If you don't receive a response, consider exploring r/LearnPython or join the [Python Discord Server](https://discord.gg/python) for quicker assistance.
## Example Questions:
1. **How can you implement a custom memory allocator in Python?**
2. **What are the best practices for optimizing Cython code for heavy numerical computations?**
3. **How do you set up a multi-threaded architecture using Python's Global Interpreter Lock (GIL)?**
4. **Can you explain the intricacies of metaclasses and how they influence object-oriented design in Python?**
5. **How would you go about implementing a distributed task queue using Celery and RabbitMQ?**
6. **What are some advanced use-cases for Python's decorators?**
7. **How can you achieve real-time data streaming in Python with WebSockets?**
8. **What are the
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1hfxi6n
# Weekly Wednesday Thread: Advanced Questions 🐍
Dive deep into Python with our Advanced Questions thread! This space is reserved for questions about more advanced Python topics, frameworks, and best practices.
## How it Works:
1. **Ask Away**: Post your advanced Python questions here.
2. **Expert Insights**: Get answers from experienced developers.
3. **Resource Pool**: Share or discover tutorials, articles, and tips.
## Guidelines:
* This thread is for **advanced questions only**. Beginner questions are welcome in our [Daily Beginner Thread](#daily-beginner-thread-link) every Thursday.
* Questions that are not advanced may be removed and redirected to the appropriate thread.
## Recommended Resources:
* If you don't receive a response, consider exploring r/LearnPython or join the [Python Discord Server](https://discord.gg/python) for quicker assistance.
## Example Questions:
1. **How can you implement a custom memory allocator in Python?**
2. **What are the best practices for optimizing Cython code for heavy numerical computations?**
3. **How do you set up a multi-threaded architecture using Python's Global Interpreter Lock (GIL)?**
4. **Can you explain the intricacies of metaclasses and how they influence object-oriented design in Python?**
5. **How would you go about implementing a distributed task queue using Celery and RabbitMQ?**
6. **What are some advanced use-cases for Python's decorators?**
7. **How can you achieve real-time data streaming in Python with WebSockets?**
8. **What are the
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1hfxi6n
Discord
Join the Python Discord Server!
We're a large community focused around the Python programming language. We believe that anyone can learn to code. | 413614 members
Laravel Developer Inheriting a Flask App
Hey all - I've been writing web apps in Laravel pretty much exclusively for the past 10 years. I was hired on by a client who said their previous developer was bailing on them and taking his code with him and I had 3 weeks to recreate his work. I was excited for the challenge. Now they've made nice enough with the previous developer (paying him the $50k of back pay they owed him - red flag!) that he's going to give me the source for the existing app. Turns out it's written in Python/Flask.
They're giving it to me in an AWS AMI that I theoretically just spin up in a new environment and it's good to go - includes all the RabbitMQ stuff, cron jobs, apache setup, etc.
The kicker though is that they want me to sign on to support this thing for a year or more. I was excited about that part too when I thought it was something I was going to write from the ground up and know inside and out. Supporting somebody else's stuff in a stack I don't understand... different enchilada.
Anybody here worked in both Laravel and Flask that might have some insight
/r/flask
https://redd.it/1hg1pbq
Hey all - I've been writing web apps in Laravel pretty much exclusively for the past 10 years. I was hired on by a client who said their previous developer was bailing on them and taking his code with him and I had 3 weeks to recreate his work. I was excited for the challenge. Now they've made nice enough with the previous developer (paying him the $50k of back pay they owed him - red flag!) that he's going to give me the source for the existing app. Turns out it's written in Python/Flask.
They're giving it to me in an AWS AMI that I theoretically just spin up in a new environment and it's good to go - includes all the RabbitMQ stuff, cron jobs, apache setup, etc.
The kicker though is that they want me to sign on to support this thing for a year or more. I was excited about that part too when I thought it was something I was going to write from the ground up and know inside and out. Supporting somebody else's stuff in a stack I don't understand... different enchilada.
Anybody here worked in both Laravel and Flask that might have some insight
/r/flask
https://redd.it/1hg1pbq
Reddit
From the flask community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the flask community
selfie-lib - snapshot testing *and* caching/memoization (useful for testing against genAI)
# What My Project Does
selfie-lib is a snapshot testing library ([docs](https://selfie.dev/py/get-started#quickstart), [source](https://github.com/diffplug/selfie)), with a few novel features. At its most basic, it functions like `print` but it writes into your sourcecode instead of the console. You write a test like this:
expect_selfie(primes_under(15)).to_be_TODO()
When you run the test, selfie automatically rewrites the test code by calling `repl()` on the result of `primes_under(15)`, e.g.
expect_selfie(primes_under(15)).to_be([2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13])
Now that the method call is `to_be` instead of `to_be_TODO`, this will throw an `AssertionError` if the `primes_under(15)` call ever changes its output.
That's standard snapshot testing stuff, the other things it can do are
* save snapshots inline with the source code or on disk
* [https://selfie.dev/py/facets#harmonizing-disk-and-inline-literals](https://selfie.dev/py/facets#harmonizing-disk-and-inline-literals)
* you can use snapshots to cache/memoize the results of slow & non-deterministic APIs (e.g generative AI), and build other test infrastructure on top of that snapshotted data
* [https://selfie.dev/py/cache#example](https://selfie.dev/py/cache#example)
# Target Audience
**People who test their code with** `print`. Just replace `print` with `expect_selfie(...).to_be_TODO()` and you can turn that `print` into a repeatable test.
**People who are building applications with nondeterministic or slow components, such as generative AI.** You don't want to hit the model for every unit test on the
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1hfwri1
# What My Project Does
selfie-lib is a snapshot testing library ([docs](https://selfie.dev/py/get-started#quickstart), [source](https://github.com/diffplug/selfie)), with a few novel features. At its most basic, it functions like `print` but it writes into your sourcecode instead of the console. You write a test like this:
expect_selfie(primes_under(15)).to_be_TODO()
When you run the test, selfie automatically rewrites the test code by calling `repl()` on the result of `primes_under(15)`, e.g.
expect_selfie(primes_under(15)).to_be([2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13])
Now that the method call is `to_be` instead of `to_be_TODO`, this will throw an `AssertionError` if the `primes_under(15)` call ever changes its output.
That's standard snapshot testing stuff, the other things it can do are
* save snapshots inline with the source code or on disk
* [https://selfie.dev/py/facets#harmonizing-disk-and-inline-literals](https://selfie.dev/py/facets#harmonizing-disk-and-inline-literals)
* you can use snapshots to cache/memoize the results of slow & non-deterministic APIs (e.g generative AI), and build other test infrastructure on top of that snapshotted data
* [https://selfie.dev/py/cache#example](https://selfie.dev/py/cache#example)
# Target Audience
**People who test their code with** `print`. Just replace `print` with `expect_selfie(...).to_be_TODO()` and you can turn that `print` into a repeatable test.
**People who are building applications with nondeterministic or slow components, such as generative AI.** You don't want to hit the model for every unit test on the
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1hfwri1
selfie.dev
Selfie Python Snapshot Testing | Get started
Zero-config inline and disk snapshots for Python. Add a single dependency and you're all set.
Advice for Landing an Entry-Level Django Developer Job Without Professional Experience
Hi everyone,
I’ve been learning Django for a while and have built a few personal projects to strengthen my skills. While I feel confident in my abilities, I don’t yet have professional development experience. Because of this, I’ve been struggling to land an entry-level or junior developer role.
I’d love to hear feedback or advice from seasoned developers or anyone currently working in the field. Your feedback and advice are truly priceless to me, and I deeply appreciate any insights you can share.
I’m planning to include my resume and a link to my portfolio in this post for reference. Any tips or suggestions on how I can improve them, or general advice about entering the field, would mean a lot to me.
Thank you so much for your time and help!
Portfolio , Resume
/r/django
https://redd.it/1hg5lc8
Hi everyone,
I’ve been learning Django for a while and have built a few personal projects to strengthen my skills. While I feel confident in my abilities, I don’t yet have professional development experience. Because of this, I’ve been struggling to land an entry-level or junior developer role.
I’d love to hear feedback or advice from seasoned developers or anyone currently working in the field. Your feedback and advice are truly priceless to me, and I deeply appreciate any insights you can share.
I’m planning to include my resume and a link to my portfolio in this post for reference. Any tips or suggestions on how I can improve them, or general advice about entering the field, would mean a lot to me.
Thank you so much for your time and help!
Portfolio , Resume
/r/django
https://redd.it/1hg5lc8
TypeScribe: A Python GUI App for organic Handwritten Text Generation with Machine Learning
Hey folks, just sharing a little side project I have been working on.
I was looking for a handwritten text generator, but since most of them rely on fixed fonts, the consistency becomes an obvious give away. So, I decided to build one on my own.
# TypeScribe v1.0
I'm excited to introduce TypeScribe, a program that converts text into organic handwritten text using a Recurrent Neural Network (RNN) trained on real handwriting samples. In documents generated with TypeScribe, every stroke, curve, and loop is unique.
What My Project Does
With TypeScribe, you can customize every aspect of the your handwritten documents including:
12 unique handwriting styles to choose from
Page, Line and Margin color customization
Page Dimensions
Ink Color, Pen Thickness Customization
Handwriting Consistency (Neatness)
and many more!
Target Audience
With TypeScribe, you can:
1. Create organic handwritten letters (in cursive!).
2. Fill in your notebooks!
3. Send out handwritten Christmas cards, just in time!
4. Add a personal touch to absolutely anything.
TypeScribe can automatically split large texts into multiple pages, and YOU get to specify how many lines to write per page!
When you create a document with TypeScribe, it generates an SVG file that can be scaled with zero loss in quality. All you have to do is paste
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1hg682r
Hey folks, just sharing a little side project I have been working on.
I was looking for a handwritten text generator, but since most of them rely on fixed fonts, the consistency becomes an obvious give away. So, I decided to build one on my own.
# TypeScribe v1.0
I'm excited to introduce TypeScribe, a program that converts text into organic handwritten text using a Recurrent Neural Network (RNN) trained on real handwriting samples. In documents generated with TypeScribe, every stroke, curve, and loop is unique.
What My Project Does
With TypeScribe, you can customize every aspect of the your handwritten documents including:
12 unique handwriting styles to choose from
Page, Line and Margin color customization
Page Dimensions
Ink Color, Pen Thickness Customization
Handwriting Consistency (Neatness)
and many more!
Target Audience
With TypeScribe, you can:
1. Create organic handwritten letters (in cursive!).
2. Fill in your notebooks!
3. Send out handwritten Christmas cards, just in time!
4. Add a personal touch to absolutely anything.
TypeScribe can automatically split large texts into multiple pages, and YOU get to specify how many lines to write per page!
When you create a document with TypeScribe, it generates an SVG file that can be scaled with zero loss in quality. All you have to do is paste
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1hg682r
GitHub
GitHub - rudyoactiv/typescribe-handwriting: ⚡ Create handwritten documents from text with a Neural Network!
⚡ Create handwritten documents from text with a Neural Network! - rudyoactiv/typescribe-handwriting
AF
My flask code display 'Method Not Found' ,although the "GET" request is working properly . Can any one help me ,please
https://preview.redd.it/fmkkpnbwx87e1.png?width=921&format=png&auto=webp&s=2df436fb1e713a05fb33fc31f4ef8c00f5432bd8
/r/flask
https://redd.it/1hfoj57
My flask code display 'Method Not Found' ,although the "GET" request is working properly . Can any one help me ,please
https://preview.redd.it/fmkkpnbwx87e1.png?width=921&format=png&auto=webp&s=2df436fb1e713a05fb33fc31f4ef8c00f5432bd8
/r/flask
https://redd.it/1hfoj57
Py-Cachify 2.0 - Distributed Locks and Handy Caching Decorators
What My Project Does
Py-Cachify is a robust caching and locking library for Python applications. I recently published a significant 2.0 update introducing several improvements, including enhanced locking versatility, revamped documentation, automatically attachable helper methods, and more. This library simplifies the implementation of caching and locking, offering decorators to easily integrate these features into your code.
Target Audience
This library is ideal for developers looking to optimize their Python applications, whether for production use or personal projects. Its features cater to both novice and experienced Python developers.
Comparison
Py-Cachify focuses on the simplicity of cache and lock implementations, prioritizing ease and flexibility of use in any app over complex caching/locking strategies. One of its standout features is dynamic key generation based on function signatures without any external dependency, allowing you to cache function results with context-aware keys.
Additionally, it works in both synchronous and asynchronous environments and is fully type-annotated for enhanced IDE support.
The source code is on GitHub.
The new documentation is here.
Feedback and feature requests are appreciated!
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1hftk6a
What My Project Does
Py-Cachify is a robust caching and locking library for Python applications. I recently published a significant 2.0 update introducing several improvements, including enhanced locking versatility, revamped documentation, automatically attachable helper methods, and more. This library simplifies the implementation of caching and locking, offering decorators to easily integrate these features into your code.
Target Audience
This library is ideal for developers looking to optimize their Python applications, whether for production use or personal projects. Its features cater to both novice and experienced Python developers.
Comparison
Py-Cachify focuses on the simplicity of cache and lock implementations, prioritizing ease and flexibility of use in any app over complex caching/locking strategies. One of its standout features is dynamic key generation based on function signatures without any external dependency, allowing you to cache function results with context-aware keys.
Additionally, it works in both synchronous and asynchronous environments and is fully type-annotated for enhanced IDE support.
The source code is on GitHub.
The new documentation is here.
Feedback and feature requests are appreciated!
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1hftk6a
GitHub
GitHub - EzyGang/py-cachify: Caching and distributed locks in your applications with just one or two lines. Easy to learn. Fast…
Caching and distributed locks in your applications with just one or two lines. Easy to learn. Fast to code. - EzyGang/py-cachify
WOWY - A Full-Featured E-commerce Platform with Stripe Integration
Hi everyone! I wanted to share my Django e-commerce project that I've been working on. It's a comprehensive solution with a modern UI and robust admin features.
# Key Features
**Product Management**
* Multi-image product support with primary/gallery images
* Category management
* Stock tracking
* Price and discount management
* Advanced search/filtering
**Orders & Payments**
* Stripe integration
* Cash on delivery option
* PDF invoice generation
* Order status tracking
* Multiple shipping addresses
**User Features**
* Customer accounts/profiles
* Wishlist functionality
* Real-time cart operations
* Order history
* Address management
**Admin Dashboard**
* Sales analytics and reporting
* Customer insights
* Product performance metrics
* Payment method analysis
* Comprehensive order management
**Technical Details**
* Django 4.x
* PostgreSQL/SQLite
* Stripe/djstripe for payments
* Bootstrap for frontend
* jQuery for interactivity
**Code Example**
Here's how the Stripe integration is implemented:
class StripeMixin:
def setup_stripe(self):
"""Configure Stripe with API keys from djstripe"""
try:
# Get Stripe keys from djstripe
publishable_key = APIKey.objects.get(type=APIKeyType.publishable).secret
/r/django
https://redd.it/1hg7d2y
Hi everyone! I wanted to share my Django e-commerce project that I've been working on. It's a comprehensive solution with a modern UI and robust admin features.
# Key Features
**Product Management**
* Multi-image product support with primary/gallery images
* Category management
* Stock tracking
* Price and discount management
* Advanced search/filtering
**Orders & Payments**
* Stripe integration
* Cash on delivery option
* PDF invoice generation
* Order status tracking
* Multiple shipping addresses
**User Features**
* Customer accounts/profiles
* Wishlist functionality
* Real-time cart operations
* Order history
* Address management
**Admin Dashboard**
* Sales analytics and reporting
* Customer insights
* Product performance metrics
* Payment method analysis
* Comprehensive order management
**Technical Details**
* Django 4.x
* PostgreSQL/SQLite
* Stripe/djstripe for payments
* Bootstrap for frontend
* jQuery for interactivity
**Code Example**
Here's how the Stripe integration is implemented:
class StripeMixin:
def setup_stripe(self):
"""Configure Stripe with API keys from djstripe"""
try:
# Get Stripe keys from djstripe
publishable_key = APIKey.objects.get(type=APIKeyType.publishable).secret
/r/django
https://redd.it/1hg7d2y
Reddit
From the django community on Reddit: WOWY - A Full-Featured E-commerce Platform with Stripe Integration
Explore this post and more from the django community
Displaying HTTP response code in Jinja
I want to display the response code sent from my Flask backend (e.g. 400 200 201 etc.) in Jinja - how can I access this?
/r/flask
https://redd.it/1hgg9uf
I want to display the response code sent from my Flask backend (e.g. 400 200 201 etc.) in Jinja - how can I access this?
/r/flask
https://redd.it/1hgg9uf
Reddit
From the flask community on Reddit
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What features should all flask apps have?
I've been programming for about a year and a half now and built a small flask app to manage my music business. Basically a management application with some API integration and sqlalchemy. The app now works fine and is stable, but I'm wondering if there are any features/functions/etc. that all flask apps should have implemented, that don't seem obvious to a beginner like me. Cybersecurity and complex algorhithms still go a bit beyond my understanding, but I wanna make my app as secure, stable and reliable as possible.
/r/flask
https://redd.it/1hgfd8y
I've been programming for about a year and a half now and built a small flask app to manage my music business. Basically a management application with some API integration and sqlalchemy. The app now works fine and is stable, but I'm wondering if there are any features/functions/etc. that all flask apps should have implemented, that don't seem obvious to a beginner like me. Cybersecurity and complex algorhithms still go a bit beyond my understanding, but I wanna make my app as secure, stable and reliable as possible.
/r/flask
https://redd.it/1hgfd8y
Reddit
From the flask community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the flask community