Book Image

Learning Python Application Development

By : Ninad Sathaye
Book Image

Learning Python Application Development

By: Ninad Sathaye

Overview of this book

Python is one of the most widely used dynamic programming languages, supported by a rich set of libraries and frameworks that enable rapid development. But fast paced development often comes with its own baggage that could bring down the quality, performance, and extensibility of an application. This book will show you ways to handle such problems and write better Python applications. From the basics of simple command-line applications, develop your skills all the way to designing efficient and advanced Python apps. Guided by a light-hearted fantasy learning theme, overcome the real-world problems of complex Python development with practical solutions. Beginning with a focus on robustness, packaging, and releasing application code, you’ll move on to focus on improving application lifetime by making code extensible, reusable, and readable. Get to grips with Python refactoring, design patterns and best practices. Techniques to identify the bottlenecks and improve performance are covered in a series of chapters devoted to performance, before closing with a look at developing Python GUIs.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Learning Python Application Development
Credits
Disclaimers
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Using a private PyPI repository


This section will briefly cover how to setup a private PyPI repository. The discussion will be limited to creating a simple HTTP-based local server. There are several packages that can help you do this. Let's use a popular package called pypiserver (https://pypi.python.org/pypi/pypiserver). Let's open a terminal window and get ready for action.

Step 1 – Installing pypiserver

First, install the required package:

$ pip install pypiserver 

The pypi-server executable sits at the same location that you have the Python executable. For example, if you have /usr/bin/python, pypi-server will be available as /usr/bin/pypi-server.

Step 2 – Building a new source distribution

Go to the directory where you have setup.py and all other files. In the discussion earlier, we named it testgamepkg:

$ cd /path/to/testgamepkg

We have already installed testgamepkg in an earlier section. To simplify things, in setup.py let's change the name field to something else. While you are at it...