Backend (and sometimes frontend) software engineer working on sports data at Elias Sports Bureau.
Experience with: Python, Django, Typescript/JS, infrastructure, databases
Find me:
I haven’t had a chance to look yet, but I’m using a pretty similar stack at, although with React instead of Nuxt/Vue. I definitely love using Docker, at least as a dev platform, because of the way it evens the field across OS’s and makes it easy to onboard new contributors. Will definitely take a closer look when I get more time.
Buuut … I do mod the !django@programming.dev community, which you might be interested in checking out. There’s also the !docker@programming.dev, which is also worth checking out.
I don’t have much to say besides, good job. We all believe in you.
Anecdata here in the US, but my local mom and pop pharmacy (which I love) currently would lose $200/mo on my vyvanse because of my insurance and the whole generic vyvanse nonsense. This system sucks.
For the time being, I fill my vyvanse at Walgreens and hope they’re losing $200/mo on it. I fill everything else at the mom and pop, until they let me know the situation is better.
Aaaaaand I’m cleaning the garage this week …
Thanks for sharing this here! Far from an expert, but will happily take a look.
Includes pytest integration: https://github.com/adamchainz/time-machine#pytest-plugin
The installed packages themselves won’t be faster, but they will install faster, sometimes much faster.
Yes, I believe wheels will generally be preferred by pip
.
My latest is Fresh Off The Boat
@allinalllearners@lemmy.world you seem to have linked to just an image.
Care to update this post?
The other thing to remember is that post IDs are relative to the Lemmy server you’re working with. So post/12345
is almost surely not post/12345
on another server.
I mod a couple of communities on another server and this caught me off guard when trying to share what I thought were good URLs.
OP, you could even use a local file/sqlite database in the repo and just update and commit it when the script runs.
Simon Willison has a cool approach for this that runs in GitHub Actions and keeps the versioned state in git itself: https://simonwillison.net/2020/Oct/9/git-scraping/
Will definitely be playing with this next week.
Also, for anyone interested, the source is linked at the bottom of the page: https://gitlab.com/mbryant/functiontrace
Ooh, thanks for mentioning asdf
! I’ve heard of it, but didn’t realize it could that
I’ve only used pyenv
on Ubuntu machines, but I expect it would work just as well in Debian-based systems.
pyenv
is really useful if you need multiple versions installed simultaneously and it handles installation for you.
My post’s link is to the original blog URL that you point to, I just mentioned the author’s Mastodon post where I ran first saw a reference to the blog post.
Crap, now I need to know about competitive Jenga …