this post was submitted on 08 Jul 2024
73 points (92.9% liked)
Python
6356 readers
7 users here now
Welcome to the Python community on the programming.dev Lemmy instance!
π Events
Past
November 2023
- PyCon Ireland 2023, 11-12th
- PyData Tel Aviv 2023 14th
October 2023
- PyConES Canarias 2023, 6-8th
- DjangoCon US 2023, 16-20th (!django π¬)
July 2023
- PyDelhi Meetup, 2nd
- PyCon Israel, 4-5th
- DFW Pythoneers, 6th
- Django Girls Abraka, 6-7th
- SciPy 2023 10-16th, Austin
- IndyPy, 11th
- Leipzig Python User Group, 11th
- Austin Python, 12th
- EuroPython 2023, 17-23rd
- Austin Python: Evening of Coding, 18th
- PyHEP.dev 2023 - "Python in HEP" Developer's Workshop, 25th
August 2023
- PyLadies Dublin, 15th
- EuroSciPy 2023, 14-18th
September 2023
- PyData Amsterdam, 14-16th
- PyCon UK, 22nd - 25th
π Python project:
- Python
- Documentation
- News & Blog
- Python Planet blog aggregator
π Python Community:
- #python IRC for general questions
- #python-dev IRC for CPython developers
- PySlackers Slack channel
- Python Discord server
- Python Weekly newsletters
- Mailing lists
- Forum
β¨ Python Ecosystem:
π Fediverse
Communities
- #python on Mastodon
- c/django on programming.dev
- c/pythorhead on lemmy.dbzer0.com
Projects
- PythΓΆrhead: a Python library for interacting with Lemmy
- Plemmy: a Python package for accessing the Lemmy API
- pylemmy pylemmy enables simple access to Lemmy's API with Python
- mastodon.py, a Python wrapper for the Mastodon API
Feeds
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Having more than one obvious way is unpythonic
Unfortunately, pip, the obvious way, kind of sucks. So I use poetry, which seems to work nicely.
I'm using Poetry as well. But I really hope Rye works out so we can finally end this madness.
Interesting. I just learned about Rye today. Has anybody tried it? Does it live up to the promise?
Haven't tried Rye but I have used
uv
(which Rye uses to replace pip). Pip install time went down from 58s to 7s. Yes really. Python is fucking slow!I tried it a little - being able to run
rye sync
and not even having to worry about Python versioning is sooooo nice.Check "uv". Builds on top, is coming good.
... except for the part where the dependency definition doesn't follow the latest approved PEP, and the default constraint with ^ add an upper limit that causes problems.
I moved to PDM.
Eh, by the time I get everyone on board and convert all of our repos, poetry will probably have support for the latest PEP.
Given the glacial pace I've been seeing, I would't be so sure... But understandable if you have many repos and need to reach consensus.
You can reduce some impacts adding explicit >= constraints instead of ^.
The thing is, things are working reasonably well right now, so updating to be in sync with the latest PEP isn't super impactful, whereas switching from requirements.txt -> poetry and pyproject.toml was a big change. So we'll probably switch eventually, but since we have over a dozen repos and several teams across timezones, it isn't a priority.
I'll certainly take a look though.
Wait, whatβs wrong with pip?
(Disclaimer: I grade my Python proficiency slightly above beginner. I used it for some research in college and grad school, and Iβve made a few helpful scripts at work, but I am not anything approaching an expert)
It does its job well, but it doesn't do much more than that.
The main workflow w/ Pip is:
pip freeze > requirements.txt
so the next person can justpip install -r requirements.txt
instead of figuring out the requirementsrequirements.txt
manually to do updates, orpip freeze
again laterThere are some issues with this:
It's totally fine for one-off scripts and whatnot, but it gets pretty annoying when working across multiple repositories on a larger project (i.e. what I do at work with microservices).
Poetry improves this in a few ways:
There's a simple command to update all dependencies, and another command to try to add a dependency with minimal impact. It makes doing package updates a lot nicer, and I can easily compare direct dependencies between repositories since there's minimal noise in the pyproject.toml (great when doing bulk updates of some critical dependency).
TL;DR - pip is fine for small projects, alternatives are nice when dealing with large, complex projects because it gives you nicer control over dependencies.
Good to know, thank you for educating me!