As someone’s new comments just brought me back to this post, I’ll point out that these days there’s another good option: uv run.
As someone’s new comments just brought me back to this post, I’ll point out that these days there’s another good option: uv run.
No, I don’t use GHA locally, but the actions are defined to run the same things that I do run locally (e.g. invoke nox
). I try to keep the GHA-exclusive boilerplate to a minimum. Steps can be like:
- name: fetch code
uses: actions/checkout@v4
- uses: actions/setup-python@v5
with:
allow-prereleases: true
python-version: |
3.13
3.12
3.11
3.10
3.9
3.8
3.7
- run: pipx install nox
- name: run ward tests in nox environment
run: nox -s test test_without_toml combine_coverage --force-color
env:
PYTHONIOENCODING: utf-8
- name: upload coverage data
uses: codecov/codecov-action@v4
with:
files: ./coverage.json
token: ${{ secrets.CODECOV_TOKEN }}
Sometimes if I want a higher level interface to tasks that run nox
or other things locally, I use taskipy
to define them in my pyproject.toml
, like:
[tool.taskipy.tasks]
fmt = "nox -s fmt"
lock = "nox -s lock"
test = "nox -s test test_without_toml typecheck -p 3.12"
docs = "nox -s render_readme render_api_docs"
If you choose to give Fedora a try, I recommend Ultramarine, which has more set up from the start, including their “Terrs” repository with more updated packages.
Ah yes you can tell by the post title:
best linux terminal emulator
For me: Wezterm. It does pretty much everything. I don’t think Alacritty/Kitty etc. offer anything over it for my usage, and the developer is a pleasure to engage with.
Second place is Konsole – it does a lot, is easy to configure, and obviously integrates nicely with KDE apps.
Honorable mention is Extraterm, which has been working on cool features for a long time, and is now Qt based.
Just note that the comment was inaccurate, in that their weird encryption is indeed open source at least.
I suggest trying this one for Zsh, over the more common one: https://github.com/zdharma-continuum/fast-syntax-highlighting
As someone else said, setting less’ jump value is helpful.
Another tool I use, mostly for the zshall manpage, is https://github.com/kristopolous/mansnip
Thanks, yes, I use nox and github actions for automated environments and testing in my own projects, and tox instead of nox when it’s someone else’s project. But for ad hoc, local and interactive multiple environments, I don’t.
If it didn’t bring something more to the table, besides speed, no one would care
I’m literally saying its speed in certain operations makes an appreciable difference in my workflows, especially when operating on tens of venvs at a time. I don’t know why you want to fight me on my own experience.
I’m not telling anyone who doesn’t want to use uv to do so. Someone asked about motivation, and I shared mine.
The convention
That’s one convention. I don’t like it, I prefer to keep my venvs elsewhere. One reason is that it makes it simpler to maintain multiple venvs for a single project, using a different Python version for each, if I ever want to. It shouldn’t matter to anyone else, as it’s my environment, not some aspect of the shared repo. If I ever needed it there for some reason, I could always ln -s $VIRTUAL_ENV .venv
.
Learn pyenv
I have used pyenv. It’s fine. These days I use mise instead, which I prefer. But neither of them dictate how I create and store venvs.
Shell scripts within Python packages is depreciated
I don’t understand if what you’re referencing relates to my comment.
I have a pip-tools wrapper thing that now optionally uses uv instead. Aside from doing the pip-tools things faster, the main advantage I’ve found, and what really motivated me to support and recommend uv with it, is that uv creates new venvs MUCH faster than python’s venv module, which is really annoyingly slow for that operation.
I use my own Zsh project (zpy) to manage venvs stored like ~/.local/share/venvs/HASH-OF-PROJECT-PATH/venv
, so use zpy’s vpy
function to launch a script with its associated Python executable ad-hoc, or add a full path shebang to the script with zpy’s vpyshebang
function.
vpy and vpyshebang in the docs
If anyone else is a Zsh fan and has any questions, I’m more than happy to answer or demo.
Glad you have it working. This may also work:
_stfu () {
shift words
(( CURRENT-=1 ))
_normal -P
}
compdef _stfu stfu
It’s more about replacing typed text than using shortcuts, but there’s espanso.
Ok next time I won’t use your computer.
I’ll just second the suggestion that KDE Plasma is worth a try, as it’s very adaptable once you know what you want. You don’t need to install any addons for the functionality you describe, just open the Shortcuts settings, KWin category, and have at it.
Sure, but nox is the closer counterpart for in-venv-task definitions. List “sessions” with
-l
, pick specific sessions to run with-s
.import nox from nox.sessions import Session nox.options.reuse_existing_virtualenvs = True APP_NAME = 'logging_strict' @nox.session(python='3.12') def mypy(session: Session): """Static type checker (in strict mode)""" session.install('-U', 'mypy', '.') session.run('mypy', '-p', APP_NAME, *session.posargs)
Unfortunately it doesn’t currently do any parallel runs, but if anyone wants to track/encourage/contribute in that regard, see nox#544.