{"elapsed_ms":"1.7","episodes":[{"category":"episode","description":"","item_id":221,"title":"Pattern matching and accepting change in Python with Brett Cannon","url":"https://pythonbytes.fm/episodes/show/221/pattern-matching-and-accepting-change-in-python-with-brett-cannon"},{"category":"episode","description":"","item_id":159,"title":"Brian's PR is merged, the src will flow","url":"https://pythonbytes.fm/episodes/show/159/brians-pr-is-merged-the-src-will-flow"},{"category":"episode","description":"<p><strong>#1 Brian: <a href=\"https://github.com/google/python-fire\">python-fire</a></strong></p>\n\n<ul>\n<li>Suggested by several listeners</li>\n<li>Under the Google repo set on github but not a Google product.</li>\n<li>\u201cPython Fire is a library for automatically generating command line interfaces (CLIs) from absolutely any Python object.\u201d</li>\n</ul>\n\n<p><em>Some Benefits as listed on the project page</em></p>\n\n<ul>\n<li>a simple way to create a CLI in Python. </li>\n<li>a tool for exploring and debugging Python code. </li>\n<li>exploring existing code by turning other people's code into a CLI.</li>\n<li>makes transitioning between Bash and Python easier. </li>\n</ul>\n\n<p>My take: </p>\n\n<ul>\n<li>Enough documentation right in the github repo for me to try it out. </li>\n<li>Concise but thorough documentation, as well.</li>\n<li>I wouldn\u2019t ship a CLI with this, as it\u2019s too heavy.\n<ul>\n<li>depends on ipython and six</li>\n</ul></li>\n<li>It would be useful to very quickly throw together a CLI to try out some Python code from bash.</li>\n<li>For internal development and debugging tools.</li>\n<li>I think this week I\u2019m going to try to build a few CLI tools for directly sending and receiving commands to some test instruments.</li>\n</ul>\n","item_id":17,"title":"Google's Python is on fire and Simon says you have CPU load Pythonically","url":"https://pythonbytes.fm/episodes/show/17/googles-python-is-on-fire-and-simon-says-you-have-cpu-load-pythonically"},{"category":"episode","description":"<p>This is Python Bytes, Python headlines and news deliver directly to your earbuds: episode 13, recorded on February 13, 2017. In this episode we discuss Python making the move to GitHub and Dropbox stepping back from Pyston.</p>\n","item_id":13,"title":"Python making the move to GitHub and Dropbox is stepping back from Pyston","url":"https://pythonbytes.fm/episodes/show/13/python-making-the-move-to-github-and-dropbox-is-stepping-back-from-pyston"},{"category":"episode","description":"<p>This is Python Bytes, Python headlines and news deliver directly to your earbuds: episode 12, recorded on February 6th, 2017. In this episode we discuss expanding your Python mental model and serving millions of requests per second with Python.</p>\n","item_id":12,"title":"Expanding your Python mental model and serving millions of requests per second with Python","url":"https://pythonbytes.fm/episodes/show/12/expanding-your-python-mental-model-and-serving-millions-of-requests-per-second-with-python"}],"keywords":["japronto","sanic"]}
