Book Image

Learn Python Programming, 3rd edition - Third Edition

By : Fabrizio Romano, Heinrich Kruger
5 (1)
Book Image

Learn Python Programming, 3rd edition - Third Edition

5 (1)
By: Fabrizio Romano, Heinrich Kruger

Overview of this book

Learn Python Programming, Third Edition is both a theoretical and practical introduction to Python, an extremely flexible and powerful programming language that can be applied to many disciplines. This book will make learning Python easy and give you a thorough understanding of the language. You'll learn how to write programs, build modern APIs, and work with data by using renowned Python data science libraries. This revised edition covers the latest updates on API management, packaging applications, and testing. There is also broader coverage of context managers and an updated data science chapter. The book empowers you to take ownership of writing your software and become independent in fetching the resources you need. You will have a clear idea of where to go and how to build on what you have learned from the book. Through examples, the book explores a wide range of applications and concludes by building real-world Python projects based on the concepts you have learned.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
16
Other Books You May Enjoy
17
Index

Alternative tools

Before we finish the chapter, let's have a quick look at some alternative options that you have for packaging your projects. Before PEP 517 and PEP 518, it was very difficult to use anything other than setuptools to build packages. There was no way for projects to specify what libraries were required to build them or how they should be built, so pip and other tools just assumed that packages should be built using setuptools.

Thanks to the build-system information in the pyproject.toml file, it is now easy to use any packaging library you want. There aren't that many alternatives yet, but there are a few that are worth mentioning:

  • The Flit project (https://flit.readthedocs.io/en/latest/index.html) was instrumental in inspiring the development of the PEP 517 and PEP 518 standards (the creator of Flit was a co-author of PEP 517). Flit aims to make packaging simple, pure Python projects that don't require complex build steps (like compiling...