Tobias Herp's bag of Python stuff
Project description
README.TXT
~~~~~~~~~~
THeBoPS - Tobias Herp's Bag of Python Stuff
~~~~~~~---~------~~-----~---~--~------~----
This is a collection of Python modules I created over the years and improved
every now and then, while programming for fun at home. Since I consider them
useful and like them a lot, I wanted to have them at work, too, and thus
created this package.
Contained modules are:
thebops.anyos
Tries to help when developing portable programs; includes a find_progs
function which helps e.g. a suitable *X "find" executable on Windows(tm)
systems (if there is one installed); see thebops.likeix below.
thebops.colours
Collects information about HTML, CSS, SVG colours
thebops.counters
A module to help count whatever you want, including different types of
errors, warnings etc.
thebops.enhopa
The "enhanced option parser".
The optparse/optik module is quite cool. Some consider it outdated because
of the newer argparse module; but argparse can't do everything optparse can
(and vice versa), and thus both have their uses.
The enhopa module does some minor tweaks to optparse; since optparse is
"deprecated" now and won't be maintained beyond version 1.5.3 (to my
knowledge, at least), I'll replace it by thebops.optparse, to which
the improvements can be applied much more easily.
See thebops.opo as well, which (of course) doesn't care whether optparse or
thebops.enhopa (or thebops.optparse; see below) is used.
thebops.errors
An error handling module for console programs. To count the errors as well,
use the thebops.counters module.
thebops.iscales
Collects information about image scales and their names;
see iscales_demo.
thebops.likeix
Collects knowledge how to find certain *X conforming tools on Windows systems
(but of course on *X as well, where they should be present in the PATH),
using the find_progs function from thebops.anyos.
Perhaps the best way to use this is the ToolsHub class;
see likeix_demo.
thebops.modinfo
A module which allows Python modules to tell about themselves.
Can be used as a commandline tool (and is installed as such), or can be
imported by a (thus self-documenting) module. Can execute doctests, of
course.
thebops.opo
optparse options: A collection of often used optparse option definitions,
including some which use callback functions.
Interesting for development: add_trace_option/DEBUG;
see opo_demo.
thebops.optparse
This module, of course, owes almost everything to the optparse/optik module
by Greg Ward. Some (for now) minor enhancements are applied; this copy is
intended to obsolete the enhopa module (above) entirely.
thebops.rexxbi
"REXX builtins"; some functions which are built-in to the scripting language
REXX by Mike Cowlishaw, re-implemented in Python, e.g. "overlay" and the
swiss army knife of string manipulation (when avoiding regular expressions),
"translate". The functions are documented by doctests.
See rexxbi_demo.
thebops.shtools
Some utiltities for console programs, e.g. an "ask" function which
understands choices specifications like "yes,sure:1;no,nope:0;always;never"
which can be internationalized easily;
see shtools_demo.
thebops.termwot
This is "Tobias Herp's Terminal Waste of Time".
Not very useful, but helps to make console programs a little bit more fun.
See termwot_demo.
Final remark:
~~~~~~~~~~~~
This package is not fully internationalized yet, but no effort is spared, and
I'm quite eager to get this done. Strings are marked for translation, babel
finds them, and the first Gettext catalogue (hey, this is Europe!) is
created. Any help to make my distribution package use it is appreciated ...
Meanwhile it helps to understand some German.
BTW, there is nothing wrong with that:
It's better (by far!) to document your code well in your own language than to
write nonsense in a foreign one (and trust me, I know what I'm talking about.
Some past and present colleagues of mine prove this every single day.)
The only point in which I strictly disagree with PEP 8.
Oh, and - since several people have downloaded my package by now:
Of course I'm interested to know which parts are most interesting to you,
which you actually use in your private or published projects,
and what you think about them!
Tobias Herp
~~~~~~~~~~
THeBoPS - Tobias Herp's Bag of Python Stuff
~~~~~~~---~------~~-----~---~--~------~----
This is a collection of Python modules I created over the years and improved
every now and then, while programming for fun at home. Since I consider them
useful and like them a lot, I wanted to have them at work, too, and thus
created this package.
Contained modules are:
thebops.anyos
Tries to help when developing portable programs; includes a find_progs
function which helps e.g. a suitable *X "find" executable on Windows(tm)
systems (if there is one installed); see thebops.likeix below.
thebops.colours
Collects information about HTML, CSS, SVG colours
thebops.counters
A module to help count whatever you want, including different types of
errors, warnings etc.
thebops.enhopa
The "enhanced option parser".
The optparse/optik module is quite cool. Some consider it outdated because
of the newer argparse module; but argparse can't do everything optparse can
(and vice versa), and thus both have their uses.
The enhopa module does some minor tweaks to optparse; since optparse is
"deprecated" now and won't be maintained beyond version 1.5.3 (to my
knowledge, at least), I'll replace it by thebops.optparse, to which
the improvements can be applied much more easily.
See thebops.opo as well, which (of course) doesn't care whether optparse or
thebops.enhopa (or thebops.optparse; see below) is used.
thebops.errors
An error handling module for console programs. To count the errors as well,
use the thebops.counters module.
thebops.iscales
Collects information about image scales and their names;
see iscales_demo.
thebops.likeix
Collects knowledge how to find certain *X conforming tools on Windows systems
(but of course on *X as well, where they should be present in the PATH),
using the find_progs function from thebops.anyos.
Perhaps the best way to use this is the ToolsHub class;
see likeix_demo.
thebops.modinfo
A module which allows Python modules to tell about themselves.
Can be used as a commandline tool (and is installed as such), or can be
imported by a (thus self-documenting) module. Can execute doctests, of
course.
thebops.opo
optparse options: A collection of often used optparse option definitions,
including some which use callback functions.
Interesting for development: add_trace_option/DEBUG;
see opo_demo.
thebops.optparse
This module, of course, owes almost everything to the optparse/optik module
by Greg Ward. Some (for now) minor enhancements are applied; this copy is
intended to obsolete the enhopa module (above) entirely.
thebops.rexxbi
"REXX builtins"; some functions which are built-in to the scripting language
REXX by Mike Cowlishaw, re-implemented in Python, e.g. "overlay" and the
swiss army knife of string manipulation (when avoiding regular expressions),
"translate". The functions are documented by doctests.
See rexxbi_demo.
thebops.shtools
Some utiltities for console programs, e.g. an "ask" function which
understands choices specifications like "yes,sure:1;no,nope:0;always;never"
which can be internationalized easily;
see shtools_demo.
thebops.termwot
This is "Tobias Herp's Terminal Waste of Time".
Not very useful, but helps to make console programs a little bit more fun.
See termwot_demo.
Final remark:
~~~~~~~~~~~~
This package is not fully internationalized yet, but no effort is spared, and
I'm quite eager to get this done. Strings are marked for translation, babel
finds them, and the first Gettext catalogue (hey, this is Europe!) is
created. Any help to make my distribution package use it is appreciated ...
Meanwhile it helps to understand some German.
BTW, there is nothing wrong with that:
It's better (by far!) to document your code well in your own language than to
write nonsense in a foreign one (and trust me, I know what I'm talking about.
Some past and present colleagues of mine prove this every single day.)
The only point in which I strictly disagree with PEP 8.
Oh, and - since several people have downloaded my package by now:
Of course I'm interested to know which parts are most interesting to you,
which you actually use in your private or published projects,
and what you think about them!
Tobias Herp
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