Please suggest interesting features for this "generic" movie lookup MVP
#
Hello all,
I just finished building a small hobby project called LetsDiscussMoviez — a minimal web app where you can look up movies and view basic ratings/data (IMDb, Rotten Tomatoes, etc.). It’s currently very generic in functionality — you can browse and view movies, but that’s about it.
Now I need your help:
Instead of turning it into “just another IMDb clone”, I want to add one or two unique, fun or useful features that make it worth visiting regularly.
So — what would you love to see in a movie lookup site?
Some half-baked ideas I’m considering:
“Recommend me a movie like ___ but ___” (mashup-style filters)
Discussion threads under each movie like threads
"People who loved this also hated that” — reverse recommendations maybe?
AI-generated summaries / trivia / character breakdowns
Polls like “Better ending: Fight Club vs Se7en?”
Question for you:
What feature would make you bookmark this site or come back often?
Could be fun, social, niche, or even chaotic — I’m open to weird ideas.
Appreciate any feedback!
/r/django
https://redd.it/1o78vso
#
Hello all,
I just finished building a small hobby project called LetsDiscussMoviez — a minimal web app where you can look up movies and view basic ratings/data (IMDb, Rotten Tomatoes, etc.). It’s currently very generic in functionality — you can browse and view movies, but that’s about it.
Now I need your help:
Instead of turning it into “just another IMDb clone”, I want to add one or two unique, fun or useful features that make it worth visiting regularly.
So — what would you love to see in a movie lookup site?
Some half-baked ideas I’m considering:
“Recommend me a movie like ___ but ___” (mashup-style filters)
Discussion threads under each movie like threads
"People who loved this also hated that” — reverse recommendations maybe?
AI-generated summaries / trivia / character breakdowns
Polls like “Better ending: Fight Club vs Se7en?”
Question for you:
What feature would make you bookmark this site or come back often?
Could be fun, social, niche, or even chaotic — I’m open to weird ideas.
Appreciate any feedback!
/r/django
https://redd.it/1o78vso
Reddit
From the django community on Reddit
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Is there an out-of-box django-allauth with beautiful frontend?
I’ve been working on a project with django-allauth for several weeks. It provides me an easy way to integrate with 3rd party OAuth 2. I’ve finished beautifying some of them like login, signup but it seems like there are still a few of them I should work on even I won’t use any of them.
Is there a way to block some of its urls like inactive users?
Or is there a battery included pack which has sleek style for all templates?
/r/django
https://redd.it/1o6xh5p
I’ve been working on a project with django-allauth for several weeks. It provides me an easy way to integrate with 3rd party OAuth 2. I’ve finished beautifying some of them like login, signup but it seems like there are still a few of them I should work on even I won’t use any of them.
Is there a way to block some of its urls like inactive users?
Or is there a battery included pack which has sleek style for all templates?
/r/django
https://redd.it/1o6xh5p
Reddit
From the django community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the django community
Help with structuring the model design
I am building a chat app, and this is currently the state of my models:
from social.models import Profile
class Chat(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=100, blank=True, null=True)
class ChatParticipant(models.Model):
chat = models.ForeignKey(
Chat, related_name="participants", on_delete=models.CASCADE
)
# Profile model is further linked to User
profile = models.ForeignKey(Profile, related_name="chats", on_delete=models.CASCADE)
def __str__(self):
return f"{self.profile.user.username} in {self.chat}"
class Meta:
unique_together = ["chat", "profile"]
class ChatMessage(models.Model):
content = models.TextField()
chat = models.ForeignKey(Chat, on_delete=models.CASCADE)
sender = models.ForeignKey(
/r/django
https://redd.it/1o73hw7
I am building a chat app, and this is currently the state of my models:
from social.models import Profile
class Chat(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=100, blank=True, null=True)
class ChatParticipant(models.Model):
chat = models.ForeignKey(
Chat, related_name="participants", on_delete=models.CASCADE
)
# Profile model is further linked to User
profile = models.ForeignKey(Profile, related_name="chats", on_delete=models.CASCADE)
def __str__(self):
return f"{self.profile.user.username} in {self.chat}"
class Meta:
unique_together = ["chat", "profile"]
class ChatMessage(models.Model):
content = models.TextField()
chat = models.ForeignKey(Chat, on_delete=models.CASCADE)
sender = models.ForeignKey(
/r/django
https://redd.it/1o73hw7
Reddit
From the django community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the django community
Building a Foundation: Migrating pyOpenSci to Django
https://labs.quansight.org/blog/migrating-pyopensci-to-django
/r/django
https://redd.it/1o71a6k
https://labs.quansight.org/blog/migrating-pyopensci-to-django
/r/django
https://redd.it/1o71a6k
labs.quansight.org
Building a Foundation: Migrating pyOpenSci to Django
How we built a modern, Python-native foundation for pyOpenSci website using Django, Wagtail, and Tailwind CSS—from project setup to production-ready features.
Zuban - A Python Language Server / Typechecker - Beta Release
I have just created a Beta Release for Zuban.
Zuban now supports all key features of a Python Language Server — including completions, rename, and type checking — with auto-imports coming soon.
Zuban is a high-performance Python Language Server and type checker implemented in Rust, by the author of Jedi. Zuban is 20–200× faster than Mypy, while using roughly half the memory and CPU compared to Ty and Pyrefly. It offers both a PyRight-like mode and a Mypy-compatible mode, which behaves just like Mypy;
supporting the same config files, command-line flags, and error messages.
You can find the source code here.
Different Python type checkers are compared here.
The Zuban type checker is now in a very stable state, with many issues resolved and only a few remaining. The next planned features include dedicated support for Django and Pytest.
### Support
If you have a large Mypy codebase that needs significant bug fixing, I’d be happy to help.
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1o7bat4
I have just created a Beta Release for Zuban.
Zuban now supports all key features of a Python Language Server — including completions, rename, and type checking — with auto-imports coming soon.
Zuban is a high-performance Python Language Server and type checker implemented in Rust, by the author of Jedi. Zuban is 20–200× faster than Mypy, while using roughly half the memory and CPU compared to Ty and Pyrefly. It offers both a PyRight-like mode and a Mypy-compatible mode, which behaves just like Mypy;
supporting the same config files, command-line flags, and error messages.
You can find the source code here.
Different Python type checkers are compared here.
The Zuban type checker is now in a very stable state, with many issues resolved and only a few remaining. The next planned features include dedicated support for Django and Pytest.
### Support
If you have a large Mypy codebase that needs significant bug fixing, I’d be happy to help.
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1o7bat4
GitHub
GitHub - zubanls/zuban: Python Type Checker / Language Server
Python Type Checker / Language Server. Contribute to zubanls/zuban development by creating an account on GitHub.
Completely rewrote Buridan UI
Hey everyone, so today I decided to rewrite my ui lib from scratch and implemented a new site architecture. It's not perfect nor is it the last iteration, but I really liked the results and so I deccided to share it here!
**What My Project Does**
Buridan UI is a component library for Reflex that you copy and paste directly into your project instead of installing as a package. It provides:
* Wrapped React components (CountUp, Icons, Spinner, Typed effects, etc.)
* Pre-built UI patterns and layouts
* Chart components and data visualizations
* JavaScript integrations ready to use
* Multiple theming options (Hematite, Feyrouz, Yaqout, Zumurrud, Kahraman, Amethyst)
New features in this rewrite:
* **Markdown files static serve** \- you can view the content as markdown
* **AI assistant integration** \- Click to open ChatGPT or Claude with pre-filled prompts about the component or page that can be easily scrapped in markdown
* **SPA architecture** \- Completely rebuilt for smoother navigation and better performance
* **Cleaner codebase** \- Rewrote everything from scratch with lessons learned from v1
**Target Audience**
This is built for any Reflex developer, the copy-paste approach means you can use it in serious projects without worrying about the library being abandoned or breaking changes in updates.
**Comparison**
It's heavily inspired theme from
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1o7k3y6
Hey everyone, so today I decided to rewrite my ui lib from scratch and implemented a new site architecture. It's not perfect nor is it the last iteration, but I really liked the results and so I deccided to share it here!
**What My Project Does**
Buridan UI is a component library for Reflex that you copy and paste directly into your project instead of installing as a package. It provides:
* Wrapped React components (CountUp, Icons, Spinner, Typed effects, etc.)
* Pre-built UI patterns and layouts
* Chart components and data visualizations
* JavaScript integrations ready to use
* Multiple theming options (Hematite, Feyrouz, Yaqout, Zumurrud, Kahraman, Amethyst)
New features in this rewrite:
* **Markdown files static serve** \- you can view the content as markdown
* **AI assistant integration** \- Click to open ChatGPT or Claude with pre-filled prompts about the component or page that can be easily scrapped in markdown
* **SPA architecture** \- Completely rebuilt for smoother navigation and better performance
* **Cleaner codebase** \- Rewrote everything from scratch with lessons learned from v1
**Target Audience**
This is built for any Reflex developer, the copy-paste approach means you can use it in serious projects without worrying about the library being abandoned or breaking changes in updates.
**Comparison**
It's heavily inspired theme from
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1o7k3y6
Reddit
From the Python community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the Python community
Thursday Daily Thread: Python Careers, Courses, and Furthering Education!
# Weekly Thread: Professional Use, Jobs, and Education 🏢
Welcome to this week's discussion on Python in the professional world! This is your spot to talk about job hunting, career growth, and educational resources in Python. Please note, this thread is not for recruitment.
---
## How it Works:
1. Career Talk: Discuss using Python in your job, or the job market for Python roles.
2. Education Q&A: Ask or answer questions about Python courses, certifications, and educational resources.
3. Workplace Chat: Share your experiences, challenges, or success stories about using Python professionally.
---
## Guidelines:
- This thread is not for recruitment. For job postings, please see r/PythonJobs or the recruitment thread in the sidebar.
- Keep discussions relevant to Python in the professional and educational context.
---
## Example Topics:
1. Career Paths: What kinds of roles are out there for Python developers?
2. Certifications: Are Python certifications worth it?
3. Course Recommendations: Any good advanced Python courses to recommend?
4. Workplace Tools: What Python libraries are indispensable in your professional work?
5. Interview Tips: What types of Python questions are commonly asked in interviews?
---
Let's help each other grow in our careers and education. Happy discussing! 🌟
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1o7rffb
# Weekly Thread: Professional Use, Jobs, and Education 🏢
Welcome to this week's discussion on Python in the professional world! This is your spot to talk about job hunting, career growth, and educational resources in Python. Please note, this thread is not for recruitment.
---
## How it Works:
1. Career Talk: Discuss using Python in your job, or the job market for Python roles.
2. Education Q&A: Ask or answer questions about Python courses, certifications, and educational resources.
3. Workplace Chat: Share your experiences, challenges, or success stories about using Python professionally.
---
## Guidelines:
- This thread is not for recruitment. For job postings, please see r/PythonJobs or the recruitment thread in the sidebar.
- Keep discussions relevant to Python in the professional and educational context.
---
## Example Topics:
1. Career Paths: What kinds of roles are out there for Python developers?
2. Certifications: Are Python certifications worth it?
3. Course Recommendations: Any good advanced Python courses to recommend?
4. Workplace Tools: What Python libraries are indispensable in your professional work?
5. Interview Tips: What types of Python questions are commonly asked in interviews?
---
Let's help each other grow in our careers and education. Happy discussing! 🌟
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1o7rffb
Reddit
From the Python community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the Python community
Jinja language server vscode extension
Found it today: https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=noamzaks.jinja-ls
Also found for neovim, but I am not sure if this is jinja or minijinja LSP: https://github.com/uros-5/jinja-lsp
Try them out post here if they work good.
/r/flask
https://redd.it/1o7p6oi
Found it today: https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=noamzaks.jinja-ls
Also found for neovim, but I am not sure if this is jinja or minijinja LSP: https://github.com/uros-5/jinja-lsp
Try them out post here if they work good.
/r/flask
https://redd.it/1o7p6oi
Visualstudio
Jinja Language Server - Visual Studio Marketplace
Extension for Visual Studio Code - Feature-rich language server for Jinja.
[Project] doespythonhaveit: a semantic search engine for Python libraries
Hey folks! I've been working on an open-source project called **doespythonhaveit**, a **semantic search engine for Python libraries** powered by `FastAPI` and `sentence-transformers`.
Basically, you can type something like:
>"machine learning time series"
and it'll (hopefully) suggest things like scikit-learn or darts.
The goal is to make discovering Python libraries faster, smarter, and a little less about keyword guessing.
It's not live *yet* (hosting the model costs a bit), but you can **try it locally**, setup instructions are in the repos:
* API: [github.com/hasboi/doespythonhaveit-api](https://github.com/hasboi/doespythonhaveit-api)
* Web: [github.com/hasboi/doespythonhaveit-web](https://github.com/hasboi/doespythonhaveit-web)
---
# What My Project Does
**doespythonhaveit** lets you search Python libraries *by meaning*, not by exact keywords. Instead of googling *"python library for handling CSVs elegantly"* and clicking through five Stack Overflow posts, you can just search that sentence directly — and it'll understand what you mean using embeddings.
I am also planning a **terminal version**, so you can type something like:
dphi <query> <flags>
and it will suggest relevant libraries **without leaving your code editor or terminal**, basically a semantic library search right where you write code.
---
# Target Audience
Mainly aimed at:
* **Developers** who are tired of remembering exact library names
* **Beginners** who want to discover tools without knowing where to start
* **Open-source enthusiasts** who love browsing cool Python projects
Right now
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1o80g8o
Hey folks! I've been working on an open-source project called **doespythonhaveit**, a **semantic search engine for Python libraries** powered by `FastAPI` and `sentence-transformers`.
Basically, you can type something like:
>"machine learning time series"
and it'll (hopefully) suggest things like scikit-learn or darts.
The goal is to make discovering Python libraries faster, smarter, and a little less about keyword guessing.
It's not live *yet* (hosting the model costs a bit), but you can **try it locally**, setup instructions are in the repos:
* API: [github.com/hasboi/doespythonhaveit-api](https://github.com/hasboi/doespythonhaveit-api)
* Web: [github.com/hasboi/doespythonhaveit-web](https://github.com/hasboi/doespythonhaveit-web)
---
# What My Project Does
**doespythonhaveit** lets you search Python libraries *by meaning*, not by exact keywords. Instead of googling *"python library for handling CSVs elegantly"* and clicking through five Stack Overflow posts, you can just search that sentence directly — and it'll understand what you mean using embeddings.
I am also planning a **terminal version**, so you can type something like:
dphi <query> <flags>
and it will suggest relevant libraries **without leaving your code editor or terminal**, basically a semantic library search right where you write code.
---
# Target Audience
Mainly aimed at:
* **Developers** who are tired of remembering exact library names
* **Beginners** who want to discover tools without knowing where to start
* **Open-source enthusiasts** who love browsing cool Python projects
Right now
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1o80g8o
GitHub
GitHub - hasboi/doespythonhaveit-api: A place where you can find Python libraries that fit your project.
A place where you can find Python libraries that fit your project. - hasboi/doespythonhaveit-api
InfoLens - A python based GUI dashboard
Hello everyone!
I’ve been working on a Python project called InfoLens, a CustomTkinter\-based GUI dashboard that fetches and displays personalized information across multiple genres — news, finance, and weather — all in one place.
# What My Project Does:
It pulls live data from credible sources like:
🧪ScienceDaily – for science and innovation headlines
💰Economic Times & Yahoo Finance API – for real-time stock data and trends
🌤️**wttr.in** API – for location-based weather updates
# Purpose:
We live in a world where information surrounds us everywhere. In fact, the average person in 2025 processes about 75-80 GB of information per day up from 34 GB in 2008 and 63 GB in 2012. That includes all the ads, unnecessary clutter that one doesn't even need. However, studies have shown color-coded dashboards improved visual search performance and recall, enhancing both comprehension and memory; exactly what InfoLens does!
# 🔧Built with:
Python
CustomTkinter for the GUI
Web scraping (BeautifulSoup, requests)
APIs (yfinance, wttr.in, etc.)
# Target Audience:
Currently this is a side project, but meant for all python enthusiasts who are eager to provide their invaluable experience in this app.
# Comparison:
As a GUI dashboard, InfoLens focuses highly on data readability. While other tools like Perplexity exist, InfoLens is unique in the problem solving sense, using web scraping to
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1o86n2t
Hello everyone!
I’ve been working on a Python project called InfoLens, a CustomTkinter\-based GUI dashboard that fetches and displays personalized information across multiple genres — news, finance, and weather — all in one place.
# What My Project Does:
It pulls live data from credible sources like:
🧪ScienceDaily – for science and innovation headlines
💰Economic Times & Yahoo Finance API – for real-time stock data and trends
🌤️**wttr.in** API – for location-based weather updates
# Purpose:
We live in a world where information surrounds us everywhere. In fact, the average person in 2025 processes about 75-80 GB of information per day up from 34 GB in 2008 and 63 GB in 2012. That includes all the ads, unnecessary clutter that one doesn't even need. However, studies have shown color-coded dashboards improved visual search performance and recall, enhancing both comprehension and memory; exactly what InfoLens does!
# 🔧Built with:
Python
CustomTkinter for the GUI
Web scraping (BeautifulSoup, requests)
APIs (yfinance, wttr.in, etc.)
# Target Audience:
Currently this is a side project, but meant for all python enthusiasts who are eager to provide their invaluable experience in this app.
# Comparison:
As a GUI dashboard, InfoLens focuses highly on data readability. While other tools like Perplexity exist, InfoLens is unique in the problem solving sense, using web scraping to
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1o86n2t
wttr.in
Weather report: not found
Local deployment and AI assistants
I’m looking for the best deployment strategy for local only django web apps.
My strategy is using Waitress (windows server) whitenoise (staticfiles) APScheduler (tasks)
And which AI assistance you well while building complicated django applications.
I was using cursor with sonnet 4 but lately i stop vibe coding and focussed on building the whole app but it takes forever
Thanks in advance
/r/django
https://redd.it/1o83o37
I’m looking for the best deployment strategy for local only django web apps.
My strategy is using Waitress (windows server) whitenoise (staticfiles) APScheduler (tasks)
And which AI assistance you well while building complicated django applications.
I was using cursor with sonnet 4 but lately i stop vibe coding and focussed on building the whole app but it takes forever
Thanks in advance
/r/django
https://redd.it/1o83o37
Reddit
From the django community on Reddit
Explore this post and more from the django community
Anyone care to review my PR?
Just for a fun little experiment, this is a library I wrote a while ago based on Django-ninja and stateless JWT auth.
I just got a bit time to make some improvements, this PR adds the ability to instantiating a User instances statelessly during request handling without querying the database, which is a particularly helpful pattern for micro services where the auth service (and database) is isolated.
Let me know what your thoughts are: https://github.com/oscarychen/django-ninja-simple-jwt/pull/25
/r/django
https://redd.it/1o7nmpo
Just for a fun little experiment, this is a library I wrote a while ago based on Django-ninja and stateless JWT auth.
I just got a bit time to make some improvements, this PR adds the ability to instantiating a User instances statelessly during request handling without querying the database, which is a particularly helpful pattern for micro services where the auth service (and database) is isolated.
Let me know what your thoughts are: https://github.com/oscarychen/django-ninja-simple-jwt/pull/25
/r/django
https://redd.it/1o7nmpo
GitHub
Allows stateless authentication and instantiation of Django User model (instead of AnonymousUser) by oscarychen · Pull Request…
Follow up to conversation on previous PR:
Currently, django-ninja-simple-jwt authenticates statelessly using JWT token, the authenticated request in Django will have an AnonymousUser instance but w...
Currently, django-ninja-simple-jwt authenticates statelessly using JWT token, the authenticated request in Django will have an AnonymousUser instance but w...
Kickstarting Infrastructure for Django Applications with Terraform
https://hodovi.cc/blog/bootstrapping-infrastructure-for-django-applications-with-terraform/
/r/django
https://redd.it/1o6nh9n
https://hodovi.cc/blog/bootstrapping-infrastructure-for-django-applications-with-terraform/
/r/django
https://redd.it/1o6nh9n
hodovi.cc
Kickstarting Infrastructure for Django Applications with Terraform
When creating Django applications or using cookiecutters as Django Cookiecutter
you will have by default a number of dependencies that will be needed to be created
as a S3 bucket, a Postgres Database and a Mailgun domain.
you will have by default a number of dependencies that will be needed to be created
as a S3 bucket, a Postgres Database and a Mailgun domain.
I built a VS Code extension for uv integration and PEP 723 scripts
Hey folks! I've been working on a VS Code extension that brings uv integration and PEP 723 support directly into your editor — making Python script development way more powerful.
The extension lets you manage packages, run scripts, and handle dependencies without ever leaving VS Code or switching to the terminal. Plus, with PEP 723 support, your scripts become truly portable and shareable.
Here's what a PEP 723 script looks like:
You can copy this script anywhere, share it with anyone, and it'll just work — no setup instructions needed.
## What My Project Does
My extension provides:
`uv` integration built directly into VS Code
Add, remove, and update packages without touching the terminal
Automatic PEP 723 script metadata detection and management
Complete LSP support (autocomplete, type checking, go-to-definition) for scripts
One-click run and debug for scripts
Smart virtual environment handling behind the scenes
Basically, you get the speed and power of
## Target Audience
This is mainly aimed at:
Python developers who want faster package management in their workflow
People
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1o8fz6j
Hey folks! I've been working on a VS Code extension that brings uv integration and PEP 723 support directly into your editor — making Python script development way more powerful.
The extension lets you manage packages, run scripts, and handle dependencies without ever leaving VS Code or switching to the terminal. Plus, with PEP 723 support, your scripts become truly portable and shareable.
Here's what a PEP 723 script looks like:
# /// script
# requires-python = ">=3.9"
# dependencies = [
# "cowsay"
# ]
# ///
import cowsay
cowsay.cow("Hello World!")
You can copy this script anywhere, share it with anyone, and it'll just work — no setup instructions needed.
## What My Project Does
My extension provides:
`uv` integration built directly into VS Code
Add, remove, and update packages without touching the terminal
Automatic PEP 723 script metadata detection and management
Complete LSP support (autocomplete, type checking, go-to-definition) for scripts
One-click run and debug for scripts
Smart virtual environment handling behind the scenes
Basically, you get the speed and power of
uv with the convenience of never leaving your editor, plus a better way to write and share self-contained Python scripts.## Target Audience
This is mainly aimed at:
Python developers who want faster package management in their workflow
People
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1o8fz6j
docs.astral.sh
uv
uv is an extremely fast Python package and project manager, written in Rust.
Python as a Configuration Language Using Starlark
I wrote an article about how Pythonic syntax (using Starlark) helps avoids many of the configuration related challenges seen with YAML and other such languages. Let me know any feedback.
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1o8gd22
I wrote an article about how Pythonic syntax (using Starlark) helps avoids many of the configuration related challenges seen with YAML and other such languages. Let me know any feedback.
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1o8gd22
OpenRun - App Deployment Simplified
Python as a Configuration Language Using Starlark
Experience with using Starlark (which has a Pythonic syntax) for most configuration needs in OpenRun.
Automating your heating with Octopus Energy AGILE tariff
Hi all, I've just made a Python tutorial for how you can automate your electric heaters during the Agile Energy Plunge Pricing, in the UK.
Effectively, we're automatically switching on our smart plugs (electric radiators), when the price of electricity is negative. This results in consistent credit back every time there's an Octopus Energy Plunge Pricing, plus a nice warm home.
You just need Tapo smart plugs and a Raspberry pi.
https://youtu.be/ch-9DpZL6Vg
code:
https://github.com/yojoebosolo/AutoHeating/
Hope it's helpful to some of you.
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1o86j5t
Hi all, I've just made a Python tutorial for how you can automate your electric heaters during the Agile Energy Plunge Pricing, in the UK.
Effectively, we're automatically switching on our smart plugs (electric radiators), when the price of electricity is negative. This results in consistent credit back every time there's an Octopus Energy Plunge Pricing, plus a nice warm home.
You just need Tapo smart plugs and a Raspberry pi.
https://youtu.be/ch-9DpZL6Vg
code:
https://github.com/yojoebosolo/AutoHeating/
Hope it's helpful to some of you.
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1o86j5t
YouTube
Get paid to heat your home - Python Tutorial
This is the full breakdown and Python tutorial for how to get paid to heat your home using Octopus Energy AGILE tariff, Tapo smart plugs and a Raspberry pi.
Effectively, we're automatically switching on our smart plugs (electric radiators), when the price…
Effectively, we're automatically switching on our smart plugs (electric radiators), when the price…
D For people who work (as PhD students) in Mila, Quebec, what your experience have been like?
You may know that Mila in Quebec is opening applications for PhD students recently, and I am considering for applying. I have searched relevent key words here, but it seems that there are not so many recent posts on studying and working experience at Mila, so I was wondering how do you like your experience here and/or in Montreal in general? For instance, how do you like your work-life balance, Montreal's winter/weather aspects, supervisors? To be more specific, I am interested in DL/LLM theory, AI / foundational models for (formal) math (e.g., Goedel-Prover-V2), and/or post-training.
Thank you!
/r/MachineLearning
https://redd.it/1o81qlw
You may know that Mila in Quebec is opening applications for PhD students recently, and I am considering for applying. I have searched relevent key words here, but it seems that there are not so many recent posts on studying and working experience at Mila, so I was wondering how do you like your experience here and/or in Montreal in general? For instance, how do you like your work-life balance, Montreal's winter/weather aspects, supervisors? To be more specific, I am interested in DL/LLM theory, AI / foundational models for (formal) math (e.g., Goedel-Prover-V2), and/or post-training.
Thank you!
/r/MachineLearning
https://redd.it/1o81qlw
X (formerly Twitter)
Mila - Institut québécois d'IA (@Mila_Quebec) on X
Mila's annual supervision request process is now open to receive MSc and PhD applications for Fall 2026 admission! For more information, visit https://t.co/r01eLcY1P4
Friday Daily Thread: r/Python Meta and Free-Talk Fridays
# Weekly Thread: Meta Discussions and Free Talk Friday 🎙️
Welcome to Free Talk Friday on /r/Python! This is the place to discuss the r/Python community (meta discussions), Python news, projects, or anything else Python-related!
## How it Works:
1. Open Mic: Share your thoughts, questions, or anything you'd like related to Python or the community.
2. Community Pulse: Discuss what you feel is working well or what could be improved in the /r/python community.
3. News & Updates: Keep up-to-date with the latest in Python and share any news you find interesting.
## Guidelines:
All topics should be related to Python or the /r/python community.
Be respectful and follow Reddit's Code of Conduct.
## Example Topics:
1. New Python Release: What do you think about the new features in Python 3.11?
2. Community Events: Any Python meetups or webinars coming up?
3. Learning Resources: Found a great Python tutorial? Share it here!
4. Job Market: How has Python impacted your career?
5. Hot Takes: Got a controversial Python opinion? Let's hear it!
6. Community Ideas: Something you'd like to see us do? tell us.
Let's keep the conversation going. Happy discussing! 🌟
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1o8meso
# Weekly Thread: Meta Discussions and Free Talk Friday 🎙️
Welcome to Free Talk Friday on /r/Python! This is the place to discuss the r/Python community (meta discussions), Python news, projects, or anything else Python-related!
## How it Works:
1. Open Mic: Share your thoughts, questions, or anything you'd like related to Python or the community.
2. Community Pulse: Discuss what you feel is working well or what could be improved in the /r/python community.
3. News & Updates: Keep up-to-date with the latest in Python and share any news you find interesting.
## Guidelines:
All topics should be related to Python or the /r/python community.
Be respectful and follow Reddit's Code of Conduct.
## Example Topics:
1. New Python Release: What do you think about the new features in Python 3.11?
2. Community Events: Any Python meetups or webinars coming up?
3. Learning Resources: Found a great Python tutorial? Share it here!
4. Job Market: How has Python impacted your career?
5. Hot Takes: Got a controversial Python opinion? Let's hear it!
6. Community Ideas: Something you'd like to see us do? tell us.
Let's keep the conversation going. Happy discussing! 🌟
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1o8meso
Redditinc
Reddit Rules
Reddit Rules - Reddit
TOML is great, and after diving deep into designing a config format, here's why I think that's true
Developers have strong opinions about configuration formats. YAML advocates appreciate the clean look and minimal syntax. JSON supporters like the explicit structure and universal tooling. INI users value simplicity. Each choice involves tradeoffs, and those tradeoffs matter when you're configuring something that needs to be both human-readable and machine-reliable. This is why I settled on TOML.
https://agent-ci.com/blog/2025/10/15/object-oriented-configuration-why-toml-is-the-only-choice
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1o8ors4
Developers have strong opinions about configuration formats. YAML advocates appreciate the clean look and minimal syntax. JSON supporters like the explicit structure and universal tooling. INI users value simplicity. Each choice involves tradeoffs, and those tradeoffs matter when you're configuring something that needs to be both human-readable and machine-reliable. This is why I settled on TOML.
https://agent-ci.com/blog/2025/10/15/object-oriented-configuration-why-toml-is-the-only-choice
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1o8ors4
Agent CI
Agent CI - Continuous Integration for AI Agents
Git-native evaluation for modern agent development teams. See performance impact before you merge. Track regressions to specific commits.