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I'd like to get the group's opinion on a few things...I sometimes wonder where my 'brython' time is best used. There are many fronts:* implement python 3 syntax, so that brython is python 3 compliant.
* try to port python 3 standard libraries to brython (this requires importing the module, and trying to track down errors/bugs).
* get python 3 unit tests to work with brython. (many tests pass, but many tests fail). Many of the ones that fail are edge cases that do not usually occur in most applications, or tests fail because those modules/functions/feature has not been ported yet.
* speed.brython.info: I believe as time goes on this will be very useful to convince people that brython does perform well compared to its peers (Cpython, jython, pypy, etc).
* implement some type of interface that allows brython to be used in the classroom. Integrate with google drive (or some other storage mechanism) so that python scripts can be saved/loaded (or imported) by brython to a students personal drive in the cloud. If the prep time/cost is low for instruction of python (via brython), I could see more classrooms using brython. If brython is one of the first languages students learn, they could use it for decades. Wouldn't it be cool to learn brython for an intro to programming class, and then later use brython to develop websites? Need a tool to do data analysis, you can use brython/python, need to tool for x, (you get the picture!) :)
Lately, I've used most of my time fixing bugs, speeding up javascript code, getting some unit tests to work, and code coverage.
I believe all these fronts are important. I've been leaning toward doing tasks that make brython, python 3 compliant (or doing things that support python 3 compliant work).What do others think? I want my time to be used to the maximum effect for this project. I believe in brython, and I want to see it succeed.
I also wonder if we should create a brython foundation who's mission is to promote brython. I believe Pierre is taking on the cost of the brython.info website. Should we help with that burden?
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I'd like to get the group's opinion on a few things...I sometimes wonder where my 'brython' time is best used. There are many fronts:* implement python 3 syntax, so that brython is python 3 compliant.* try to port python 3 standard libraries to brython (this requires importing the module, and trying to track down errors/bugs).* get python 3 unit tests to work with brython. (many tests pass, but many tests fail). Many of the ones that fail are edge cases that do not usually occur in most applications, or tests fail because those modules/functions/feature has not been ported yet.* speed.brython.info: I believe as time goes on this will be very useful to convince people that brython does perform well compared to its peers (Cpython, jython, pypy, etc).* implement some type of interface that allows brython to be used in the classroom. Integrate with google drive (or some other storage mechanism) so that python scripts can be saved/loaded (or imported) by brython to a students personal drive in the cloud. If the prep time/cost is low for instruction of python (via brython), I could see more classrooms using brython. If brython is one of the first languages students learn, they could use it for decades. Wouldn't it be cool to learn brython for an intro to programming class, and then later use brython to develop websites? Need a tool to do data analysis, you can use brython/python, need to tool for x, (you get the picture!) :)Lately, I've used most of my time fixing bugs, speeding up javascript code, getting some unit tests to work, and code coverage.I believe all these fronts are important. I've been leaning toward doing tasks that make brython, python 3 compliant (or doing things that support python 3 compliant work).What do others think? I want my time to be used to the maximum effect for this project. I believe in brython, and I want to see it succeed.I also wonder if we should create a brython foundation who's mission is to promote brython. I believe Pierre is taking on the cost of the brython.info website. Should we help with that burden?Thanks!Billy
Thanks.. all comments are greatly appreciated. I think we need to have these conversations.
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I fully agree on most points and also think that this discussion has to happen.Let me chime in by adding/emphasizing a few points.- +1 for github. They clearly won. Projects that are not on github are either old, irrelevant or both. I don't know how much work migrating is, though.- ergo also +1 on Billy's 'small issues tag' comment- +1 on Kiko's comment about marketing. I hate to say this, but there must be some more effort on this (I say that because I am guily in that respect, too, for most of my projects).- I would love to see a page (or a playground) that shows the JS that is created from Brython. It's not mandatory, but I think there will be people who want to see the efficency of the transpiling step.
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I agree with just about everything commented on. This verifies many of the thoughts l have had.
Do others have suggestions or comments?
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I agree with just about everything commented on. This verifies many of the thoughts l have had.Do others have suggestions or comments?
Also, although I am not contributing code to the project, I fully support the move to Github. The Github community seems larger and they seem to provide better tools than bitbucket. The traction is better on that side of the world..
Git is a pain to use, but, in my opinion, not moving to GitHub is shooting oneself in the foot. That's where the vast majority of the most common open source projects are. The only fact of moving to GitHub is likely to bring you many more users...Also, although I am not contributing code to the project, I fully support the move to Github. The Github community seems larger and they seem to provide better tools than bitbucket. The traction is better on that side of the world..
Git is a pain to use, but, in my opinion, not moving to GitHub is shooting oneself in the foot. That's where the vast majority of the most common open source projects are. The only fact of moving to GitHub is likely to bring you many more users...Also, although I am not contributing code to the project, I fully support the move to Github. The Github community seems larger and they seem to provide better tools than bitbucket. The traction is better on that side of the world..
Le vendredi 12 septembre 2014 10:45:22 UTC+2, Cyrille Rossant a écrit :Git is a pain to use, but, in my opinion, not moving to GitHub is shooting oneself in the foot. That's where the vast majority of the most common open source projects are. The only fact of moving to GitHub is likely to bring you many more users...Also, although I am not contributing code to the project, I fully support the move to Github. The Github community seems larger and they seem to provide better tools than bitbucket. The traction is better on that side of the world..
I must say I am not enthousiastic about moving to Github : I prefer the Bitbucket look and feel, I have to learn a new version control tool, the existing content on BB (issues, wiki pages, downloads...) will be lost or I'll have to copy/paste, etc.
But most of you (sorry Olemis) think that Brython will be more attractive to Open Source developers and users. This is only a marketing reason, and marketing is evil, but I am going to make a concession...
- Pierre
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On 9/4/14, Kiko <kikoco...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 2014-09-04 16:15 GMT+02:00 Billy Earney <billy....@gmail.com>:
>
[...]
>>
>> I also wonder if we should create a brython foundation who's mission is
>> to
>> promote brython. I believe Pierre is taking on the cost of the
>> brython.info website. Should we help with that burden?
>>
>
> I could create a mirror of Brython.info, I could host
> speed.brython.info,...
> IF I can help in this sense just let me know.
>
The bureaucratic burden of running one such "Brython foundation" is
high . Another alternative decision would be to insert Brython in the
context of an existing foundation ... and if you ask me preferably one
such open-source foundation outside the US ( French ? European ? ) .
Why ? Because the OFAC [2]_ laws and regulations impose restrictions
over some people to participate in those US-based "open" foundations
[1]_ [3]_ due to reasons beyond the spirit of free & open source
collaboration . Therefore by doing so this action would lead to
actually banning such persons to interact with the project .
I've never heard of such trouble for institutions based on European
countries . CMIIW
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I must say I am not enthousiastic about moving to Github : I prefer the Bitbucket look and feel, I have to learn a new version control tool, the existing content on BB (issues, wiki pages, downloads...) will be lost or I'll have to copy/paste, etc.
I must say I am not enthousiastic about moving to Github : I prefer the Bitbucket look and feel, I have to learn a new version control tool, the existing content on BB (issues, wiki pages, downloads...) will be lost or I'll have to copy/paste, etc.
The search for "migrate bitbucket to github" on google gives a few results that might be of interest. I know that some projects successfully migrated and were able to keep the full history (including issues, wiki, etc.).
A lot of people have github accounts already. When I saw this was on bitbucket, I was at first concerned that it was no longer maintained just because I hadn't encountered a recent open source project that wasn't on github. BitBucket lets you submit issues anon but you can't comment anon. I'm presuming I can fork a git repo from bitbucket but I haven't tried yet. I'd vote for moving to github, because also from a professional standpoint, people who contribute can easily show off to others their contributions, which can help them land a job. Thus there is more incentive to contribute.Piloting Brython on a project here's my thoughts:1. The name needs to change. Might sound silly, but when I see Brython I read that as "Bryan's version of Python". Or rather, it's what some guy name Bryan would name his own version of Python. It put me off from originally looking into this. I think the name needs to entail Py in it somewhere.
2. Brython needs to support all major browsers. Clearly IE has been ignored
because brython.info (also, .info should probably become .org or something more legit looking)
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I'll complement Pierre's response with my own opinions .
On 9/15/14, Pierre Quentel <pierre....@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Le samedi 13 septembre 2014 04:44:38 UTC+2, James Hutchison a écrit :
>>
>> A lot of people have github accounts already. When I saw this was on
>> bitbucket, I was at first concerned that it was no longer maintained just
>>
>> because I hadn't encountered a recent open source project that wasn't on
>> github. BitBucket lets you submit issues anon but you can't comment anon.
>>
<rant> With all respect , this is a peculiar way of thinking ; it's
like saying New York is the city , everything else is just country
side . I don't buy your arguments . </rant>
... but it's useless to start that flamewar , the migration's already happened .
>> I'm presuming I can fork a git repo from bitbucket
I honestly do not know what would be the point of the company for
running bitbucket otherwise . Creating a new fork (among other
features) is an obvious option ...
>> but I haven't tried
>> yet.
jftr
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>>> BitBucket is just some second-rate crap that massive corporation...Not so simple. I use BitBucket for in progress stuffs that I do not want yet to be visible by others. For example, I'm writing a book about SageMathCloud. This book will be free but for the moment I do not want anyone to access to it.I also use BitBucket for my teaching work so as to store infos about my lessons like date of tests, work done with my students... All of this accessible by anyone wouldn't makes sense.For other projects, I use github so as to be visible and also because I find git very easy to use.
github is becoming a dangerous monoculture. There need to be other options.
The opensource community usually shuns single-sourced necessities.
Why is github any different?
Hello,I would like to share my thoughts on what should happen to help Python thrive in the browser world. I see three basic requirements:
- Actively maintain a production-ready Python implementation for the browsers:
- Create and actively maintain a full-featured, all-batteries-included web frontend application framework in Python:
- A pythonic Angular (could be a port: Angular.py) or a "django for the frontend" project
- Bring big players and browser vendors into the game:
- Google, Mozilla
- Native implementations of python in the browser