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PieFed, a FOSS Feed Aggregator alternative to Lemmy, but faster
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Welcome to the Python community on the programming.dev Lemmy instance!
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π understandable. Are you open to one or more of the things I mentioned being added? Strict type checking, tests, formatter, linting?
Anti Commercial-AI license
BTW I recently added the database structure for post licenses and have PeerTube video licence information being saved into the DB when they federate to us. However there is no UI that will let people specify a license for their PieFed posts or comments. The UI needs to present a list of licenses to choose from and reading about all the different ones made my eyes glaze over.
You might like to start there as it seems to be an interest of yours!
I feel like I'm getting nerd-sniped π Believe it or not, writing tests, adding type hints, adding a formatter and linting, are actually more interesting to me than UI-work π
I'll see if I can make some time this week, but no guarantees!
Anti Commercial-AI license
Yes we could really do with all of those. Patches welcome. Other than a preference for PEP 8 I don't have strong opinions about particular linters or formatters.
I see the benefits of types but am not puritanical about it. I'm ok with the way we're using types at the moment. Most utility functions have types specified, especially those that return database objects so the type information flows up to the routes pretty well. I mostly see it as a way to help my IDE autocomplete work better than as a holy grail. I'm sure there are places where more types could be added but making it a policy that every function must have a type signature seems OTT.
To keep it simple
testing and static type checking -- catches all the bugs
linting and formatters -- so
git diff
isn't pure noise showing trailing and unnecessary whitespace and collaborators won't have to go back to correct things that coulda been automagically fixed.in code documentation -- Can be extracted by Sphinx as part of the documentation process. Hint: interrogate is your friend.
gh workflows -- to have the test suite run against various py versions, os, and maybe architectures. Without which not even confident it runs well on your own machine let alone anywhere else.
requirements.txt -- is an output file. Where is requirements.in ??
xz hacker sends his love
Makefile -- for people who like a ton of shell scripts in their Python packages. Up until realize that ya know which Python interpreter is being run, but can't have any level of confidence about the shell interpreter. Cuz it's a big unknown and unknowable. Gotta just take it on faith.