A test repo to compare different Python IDEs.
This is just a sample Python project. It's for snippets and experimentation.
You can get a copy of this project by clicking on the ZIP or TAR buttons near the top right of the GitList web page.
You can clone from the origin with:
git clone ssh://USERNAME@dlma.com/~/git/testpython.git
This project has example Visual Studio Code, PyCharm, and Sublime Text 3 projects.
The best IDE of all, for those who live on the CLI. Create two panes in tmux, run vim in one, and run entr in the other with a command like:
git ls-files | entr -c sh -c 'ctags -R *; ./testpython.py'
or
find . -type f -name \*.py | entr -c sh -c 'ctags -R *; ./testpython.py'
or to run in pdb:
git ls-files | entr -c sh -c 'ctags -R *; python3 -m pdb testpython.py'
Tip: In vim you can do a multi-file grep and use the QuickFix window with commands like...
:grep -rI searchterm .
:cw
See this QuickFix tip for sorting results by filename.
Download Microsoft's Visual Studio Code from code.visualstudio.com. Code uses the testpython.code-workspace project file.
PyCharm uses the .idea directory. JetBrains suggests sharing the .idea directory except for workspace.xml and tasks.xml.
Sublime uses the testpython.sublime-project file.
If you want your style similar to PEP-8, you can check the style of your code with ''pycodestyle'':
pycodestyle --first --show-source --ignore=E501,W503 *.py
requirements.txt specifies the requirements for Python modules and apps. Install the requirements with:
python3 -m pip install -r requirements.txt
Ideally, track why modules are required, create requirements.in with only the the top-level requirements, and let pip-compile (from pip-tools) figure out the next-level dependencies.
(venv) $ python3 -m pip install pip-tools
(venv) $ pip-compile requirements.in
Otherwise, you can make requirements.txt directly with pip freeze:
(venv) $ python3 -m pip freeze > requirements.txt
Yes.