Dan Christensen wrote:
> Fernando Perez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> * Added ipython.el to the end-user distribution, for (X)Emacs support, since
>> now the official python-mode.el from
>>
>> http://sourceforge.net/projects/python-mode
>>
>>
Uwe Mayer wrote:
> Hi,
>
> in an application I want to provide direct access to the python interpreter
> of the running program.
> I use rawinput() and exec() to read an input string and a self-made function
> to check wether the inputed block is closed and then execute it.
>
> When running pyth
Scott David Daniels wrote:
> Mathias wrote:
>> Dear NG,
>>
>> can somebody tell me how the work packages are scheduled to the workers?
>> From the code it seems to me like a a static distribution, ie each
>> worker gets the same amount of work, not taking into account if a faster
>> worker alrea
Alex Martelli wrote:
> the coverage of Twisted and adding just a few things (numarray --
> perhaps premature to have it _instead_ of Numeric, though; dateutils,
You might want to keep in touch with the scipy/numarray gang on this particular
topic. An effort is currently under way to make scipy w
Steven Bethard wrote:
> I get the correct output, but if you run this yourself, you'll see that
> the numbers 1 through 10 aren't printed in sync with the writes (i.e.
> every half second); they're all printed at the end. Could someone
> explain to me why this happens, and how (if possible) I can
Steven Bethard wrote:
> Fernando Perez wrote:
>> Steven Bethard wrote:
>>
>>
>>>I get the correct output, but if you run this yourself, you'll see that
>>>the numbers 1 through 10 aren't printed in sync with the writes (i.e.
>>>every ha
syd wrote:
> I don't even know where to begin. This is just bizarre. I just picked
> up the Gnuplot.py module (a light interface to gnuplot commands) and
> was messing around with it today.
>
> I've got a tiny script, but it only works from the command line about
> half the time! In the python
syd wrote:
> Thanks for all the help, guys!
> Fernando, that's a creative solution, I'll try it as well...
> while 1:
> if os.path.isfile(your_plot_filename):
> break
> time.sleep(1)
More like a desperate brute force one, but it gets the job done :) You
ment
Claudio Grondi wrote:
> Considering what I found in the ipython mailing archives
> and the fact, that after the fix with displaying colors on
> bright backgrounds Gary had no time yet to get in touch
> with me about the code I have sent him, I suppose, that
> there will be no new releases addressi
Michele Simionato wrote:
> Me too :-(
> I have already submitted my issues with the Italian keyboard
> on WinXP with no great success. It works on Linux, but this
> is not of a big help since my plan was to use ipython -p pysh on
> Windows as a replacement of the shell :-(
Bummer. I wonder, if t
ng to the Itpl
design, can be thus used (see http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0215.html for
details on Itpl).
* Fixes for (X)Emacs prompt support (hung file queue when executing files from
an emacs buffer).
* Fixes (thanks to John Hunter) for tab-completion in the face of broken
objects on which dir(
Hi,
I made an observer/pubsub pattern implementation in Python based on jQuery.
It's available in https://github.com/fernandojunior/python-pattern-observer.
Take a look! :)
Fernando Felix
https://br.linkedin.com/in/fernandofnjr
--
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> I have seen at several places "x == None" and "x is None" within
> if-statements.
> What is the difference?
> Which term should I prefer and why?
>
>
> --
> Ullrich Horlacher Server und Virtualisierung
> Rechenzentrum IZUS/TIK E-Mail: horlac...@tik.uni-stuttgart.de
> Uni
I am new to Python, with some experience in Java, C++ and R.
Writing in other languages I usually check the type and values of function
arguments. In the Python code examples I have seen this is rarely done.
Questions:
1) Is this because it would be "unpythonic" or just because the examples ar
Thanks for the insightful answers.
PTVS is Python Tools for Visual Studio.
--
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I am new to Python.
I understand that it is "unpythonic" to write getters and setters, and that
property() can be used if necessary.
This deals with the case of attributes, but there are other kinds of
information available within a class.
Suppose my class contains an attribute called "data" t
The debate got more interesting than I expected. Without taking sides, I would
like to add that perhaps my "length" example was misleading: length is easy to
calculate. The information could be hard to extract from the data, either
because complex calculations are involved, or because it is not
ixed on master, but since the final 0.12 files have
been uploaded to github and PyPI, we'll let them be.
As usual, if you find any other problem, please file a ticket --or even
better, a pull request fixing it-- on our github issues site (https://
github.com/ipython/ipython/issues/).
Many
On Mon, 19 Dec 2011 20:00:03 -0800, alex23 wrote:
> You read the installation instructions and did a 'python setup.py
> install' as it states, yes?
>
> Installed that way for Python 2.7.2 under Win64 with no issues
> whatsoever.
Glad to hear that. Obviously since I announced it here I'll try to
On Mon, 19 Dec 2011 19:51:00 -0800, Raymond Hettinger wrote:
> Do you use IDLE when teaching Python? If not, what is the tool of
> choice?
I'm obviously biased (I started IPython years ago), but I've done a lot
of teaching and I still do like the combination of IPython plus an
editor. Sometime
Thomas Heller wrote:
> I'm using the code module to implement an interactive interpreter
> console in a GUI application, the interpreter running in a separate
> thread. To provide clean shutdown of the application, I have to make
> sure that objects used in the interpreter thread are deleted when
J. D. Leach wrote:
> OK, I'm stupid. I have been unable to discern (even Googled) a way to set
> the PYTHONDOCS variable to point to where the HTML files are. What to do? I
> need to know the process and where theses variables are stored.
It's an environment variable. In my case:
PYTHONDOCS=/us
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I hope some of the other problems with it get
> addressed some day:
> - There is no way (I know of) to start a python script
> from the command line with the debugger active;
> I always have to modify the source to insert a
> pdb.set_trace(). I would like somethi
R. Bernstein wrote:
> Fernando Perez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> suggests:
>> You may want to try out ipython (the current release candidate from
>> http://ipython.scipy.org/dist/testing/, which has many improvements on this
>> front). The %pdb magic will trigger automat
s. The changelog has full
details.
Enjoy, and as usual please report any problems on the IPython lists.
Regards,
Fernando.
--
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Tim Chase wrote:
>> http://beta.python.org
>
> In both Mozilla-suite (1.7) and FireFox (1.5), the links on the
> left (the grey-backgrounded all-caps with the ">>" at the right)
> all intrude into the body text. They're all the same length:
Just as an FYI, I see the same problem under Linux, us
R. Bernstein wrote:
> In doing the extension to the python debugger which I have here:
>
http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=61395&package_id=175827
> I came across one little thing that it would be nice to get done better.
>
> I notice on stack traces and tracebacks, an exec
R. Bernstein wrote:
> Fernando Perez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> R. Bernstein wrote:
> ...
>> > However the frame information for exec or execfile looks like this:
>> > File "", line 1, in ?
>>
>> That comes from how the code
bblais wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Let me start by saying that I am coming from a background using Matlab
> (or Octave), and C++. I am going to outline the basic nuts-and-bolts
> of how I work in these languages, and ask for some help to find out how
> the same thing is done in Python. I am not sure wh
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> After using numeric for almost ten years, I decided to attempt to
> switch a large codebase (python and C++) to using numpy. Here's are
> some comments about how that went.
>
> - The code to automatically switch python stuff over just kind of
> works. But it was a 90% s
sturlamolden wrote:
> Following up on my previous post, there is a simple Python MPI wrapper
> that can be used to exploit multiple processors for scientific
> computing. It only works for Numeric, but an adaptaion to NumPy should
> be easy (there is only one small C file in the source):
>
> http
Hi all,
The IPython team is happy to release version 0.7.2, with a lot of new
enhancements, as well as many bug fixes.
We hope you all enjoy it, and please report any problems as usual.
WHAT is IPython?
1. An interactive shell superior to Python's default. IPython has many
fea
Martin Manns wrote:
> Hi,
>
> When I use matplotlib for a scatter plot with both dots and connecting
> lines, the exported eps file is huge, if the distances between many points
> are small. I think of this as a bug, since no preview tiff is included in
> the generated eps and a variety of text p
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I have some unit testing code in one of my modules that appears to
> run without an error, but the unit test fails anyhow. Have a look at
> the output below -- the TestResult seems to have no errors and no
> failures, yet I get a system exit.
unittest.main() ALWAYS rais
Matteo wrote:
> One hurdle to overcome is transferring array data from Numeric/Numpy
> into VTK. I have a sort of ad-hoc method to do that (mainly for volume
> data). If anyone knows of any elegant solution, or a module to ease the
> pain, I'd like to hear about it.
https://svn.enthought.com/enth
billie wrote:
> Uhm... It seems that IPython got some problems:
> http://ipython.scipy.org/doc/manual/node12.html
>
> In details:
>
>>Note that this does not make IPython a full-fledged system shell. In
>>particular, it has >no job control, so if you type Ctrl-Z (under Unix),
>>you'll suspend py
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I'm new to ipython, and i found it a very cool product.
Glad you like it, though in the future I recommend you post on the ipython
list. I very rarely scan c.l.py these days, unfortunately.
> $ ipython
> Python 2.5 (r25:51908, Sep 19 2006, 09:52:17) [MSC v.1310 32 bit
Mike C. Fletcher wrote:
> OpenGL-ctypes is designed with a fairly well abstracted array-handling
> API. Basically any array type can be registered with handlers that let
> you tell the system how to do basic operations; get an array's size,
> shape, data-type, convert to a given data-format, bui
You can get path objects conveniently through %sc, and !!, e.g.:
sc files=ls
for p in files.paths: # or files.p
print p,p.mtime
- Fix '%run -d' with Python 2.4 (pdb changed in Python 2.4).
- Various other small fixes and enhancement
Bo Peng wrote:
>
> I think I find what I need:
>
> http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/355319
That's a nice, lightweight one. Note that if you want to have all the bells
and whistles of ipython (and you have ipython already), then a simple
if __name__ == '__namin__':
f
ohms377 wrote:
> Dear python users,
>
> In interactive mode, I was wondering if there is a way to list all
> declared variables and functions (and from global workspace).
In [1]: def foo(): pass
...:
In [2]: x=1
In [3]: a='hello'
In [4]: import re
In [5]: whos
Variable TypeData/
Bill Mill wrote:
> On 5/10/05, Kenneth Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Hello All,
>>
>> I am new to Python and i was wondering what graphing utlities would be
>> available to me. I have already tried BLT and after weeks of unsuccesful
>> installs i'd like to find something else. Anything
Torsten Bronger wrote:
> HallÃchen!
>
> Fernando Perez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> [...]
>>
>> And I'd also second the matplotlib suggestion, to which I've by
>> now fully switched after years of faithful gnuplot usage.
>> Matplot
Torsten Bronger wrote:
> HallÃchen!
>
> Fernando Perez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> [...]
>>
>> Well, it's true that the latex-type (called mathtext) support in
>> matplotlib is not really up to par with true latex (kerning is off
>> in p
Hi,
I'm trying to write a regex that matches a \r char if and only if it
is not followed by a \n (I want to translate text files from unix
newlines to windows\dos).
I tried this, but it doesn't work:
p = re.compile(r'(\r)[^\n]', re.IGNORECASE)
it still matches a string such as r'\r\n'
--
http:
he priority list) to do
tab-completion on named function arguments. Submitted by George Sakkis
. See the thread at
http://www.scipy.net/pipermail/ipython-dev/2005-April/000436.html
for more details.
* Various other fixes for obscure bugs, but all of which caused reported
IPython crashe
Hi,
i was just wondering about the need to put "self" as the first
parameter in every method a class has because, if it's always needed,
why the obligation to write it? couldn't it be implicit?
Or is it a special reason for this being this way?
Thanks.
--
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Matt Feinstein wrote:
> On Wed, 01 Jun 2005 08:11:36 -0700, Scott David Daniels
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>>Propose some fixes to the documents that will make this easier for
>>the next one in line. You don't even need to get it exactly right;
>>the person after you can fix the mistakes you
Rolf Wester wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have a Python console application that is intended to be used
> interactively and I have to add plotting capabilities (multiple XY plots
> and if possible 2D-surface plots). I'm loocking for a reasonably fast
> plotting library (not GPL'ed, needs not be for free) th
Paul McNett wrote:
> Cameron Laird wrote:
>> Infidel. While I sure feel that way about csh(1), it
>> surprises me you'd criticize ksh(1) so. 'Fact, 'mong
>> all the *sh-s, I *recommend* ksh for programming. May-
>> be the two of us see things differently.
>
> I keep wondering how difficult it
Hi all,
by reading through the docs, the func_closure attribute of function objects is
listed as writable. Yet, nowhere does it say _how_ to write to it. I am
trying to do a run-time modification of a function's closure, where I want to
modify the value of one of the variables in the closure. B
Rahul wrote:
>
> Hi.
> The reason is simple enough. I plan to do some academic research
> related to computer algebra for which i need some package which i can
> call as a library. Since i am not going to use the package
> myself..(rather my program will)..it will be helpful to have a python
> pa
Michael Hoffman wrote:
> Fernando Perez wrote:
>
> > I am trying to do a run-time modification of a function's closure,
> > where I want to modify the value of one of the variables in the closure.
>
> Out of curiosity, why?
Oh, I was just trying to play a lit
Bill Mill wrote:
> On 6/8/05, Fernando Perez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Rahul wrote:
>>
>> >
>> > Hi.
>> > The reason is simple enough. I plan to do some academic research
>> > related to computer algebra for which i need some package
Greg Ewing wrote:
> As far as I know, there is currently no supported way
> of directly creating or modifying cell objects from Python;
> it can only be done by some obscure trickery. So the docs
> are telling the truth here, in a way. :-)
In a twisted, convoluted way :)
But thanks for the clari
Jeff Epler wrote:
> [sent to python-list and poster]
>
> Did you follow the direction that Python.h be included before any system
> header?
>
> This is mentioned at least in
> http://docs.python.org/ext/simpleExample.html
OK, I'll try to make it work this way. It's not totally trivial, b/c
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I have been a long time Matlab user. I Python, I miss Matlab's whos
> command.
you might want to look at ipython. whos, and a bit more come for free:
planck[~]> ipython -pylab
Python 2.3.4 (#1, Feb 2 2005, 12:11:53)
Type "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> That is nice. I didn't know iPython can do whos. Will try it.
>
> iPython seems to infinitely configurable. Hope it will not suck too
> much of my time into it.
It is. It probably will. It did to me :)
At least, I hope it will have been time well spent.
Best,
f
Pei-Yu CHAO wrote:
> Hi ALL:
>
> I have only been switched from matlab to python few
> months ago. I having trouble of plotting images from a
> matrix size of 8x1 (unfortunately that is the size
> of my data.)
>
> for example,
> x = rand(8,1)
> inshow(x)
>
Read the docstrings, they
Hi all,
I'm finding the following behavior truly puzzling, but before I post a bug
report on the site, I'd rather be corrected if I'm just missing somethin
obvious.
Consider the following trivial script:
# Simple script that imports something from the stdlib
from math import sin, pi
wav = lambd
Ian Clark wrote:
> Fernando Perez wrote:
>> Hi all,
>>
>> (snip)
>>
>> I'm really, really puzzled by this. From reading the execfile() docs, I had
>> the hunch to change the call to:
>>
>> execfile(fname,{})
>>
>> and
Ferenczi Viktor wrote:
> Properties are very useful, since ordinary attribute access can be
> transparently replaced with properties if the developer needs to add code
> when it's set or needs to calculate it's value whenever it is read.
>
> As an additional benefit this could allow developers t
Larry Bates wrote:
> Greg Donald wrote:
>> Anyone know what's up with environment variables when using ipython?
[...]
> In Cpython you get this with:
>
> import os
> os.environ['EDITOR']
Yup, same in ipython :) Just to clarify, env is just a convenience function
in ipython that simply does thi
Hi all,
The IPython team is happy to release version 0.8.0, with a lot of new
enhancements, as well as many bug fixes.
We hope you all enjoy it, and please report any problems as usual.
WHAT is IPython?
1. An interactive shell superior to Python's default. IPython has many
fea
Massimo Di Pierro wrote:
> P.S. Michele Simionato. I have heard your name before? Is it possible
> we have met in Pisa in 1990-1996? I am also a Quantum Field Theorist
> and there is not many of us.
More than you think, it seems. Some of us were even using python to process
Lattice QCD computati
Massimo Di Pierro wrote:
> happy to hear that.
> you may want take a loot at http://mdp.cti.depaul.edu/vqcd
> It is mostly python stuff and will post the code soon.
Ah, memories :) I'm not working on QCD anymore, but I did write a bunch of
code a while back to script Mayavi (the old one, not the
Schüle Daniel wrote:
> Hello,
>
> In [19]: def simple_integral(func,a,b,dx = 0.001):
> : return sum(map(lambda x:dx*x, func(arange(a,b,dx
> :
>
> In [20]: simple_integral(sin, 0, 2*pi)
> Out[20]: -7.5484213527594133e-08
>
> ok, can be thought as zero
>
> In [21]: simple
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> gmpy itself is or should be pretty trivial to build on any platform
> (and I'll always happily accept any fixes that make it better on any
> specific platform, since it's easy to make them conditional so they'll
> apply to that platform only), but the underlying GMP is
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Feb 25, 3:09 pm, Fernando Perez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Alex, have you had a look at SAGE?
>>
>> http://modular.math.washington.edu/sage/
>>
>> it uses GMP extensively, so they've had to patch it to work aroun
Hi all,
consider the following small example:
"""
Small test to try to understand a strange subtlety with closures
"""
def outer(nmax):
aa = []
for n in range(nmax):
def a(y):
return (y,n)
print 'Closure and cell id:',id(a.func_closure),\
id(a.
Diez B. Roggisch wrote:
> It's a FAQ. The reason is that the created closures don't capture the
> _value_, but the _name_. Plus of course the locals()-dictionary outside
> the function a to perform the lookup of that name. Which has the value
> bound to it in the last iteration.
>
> Common cure
Jakub Hegenbart wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm studying the descriptor protocol and its usage from the following
> document:
>
> http://users.rcn.com/python/download/Descriptor.htm
>
> There is some sample code:
>
> http://users.rcn.com/python/download/Descriptor.htm#descriptor-example
>
> that behaves
Hi,
I'm getting an odd error while trying to call the __init__ method of a
super class:
BaseField.__init__(self)
TypeError: unbound method __init__() must be called with BaseField
instance as first argument (got nothing instead)
This is the code:
class BaseField(object):
def _addFieldsTo
Hi,
I'musing urllib to download pages from a site. How can I detect if a given
url is being redirected somewhere else? I want to avoid this, is it possible?
Thanks in advance!
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Hello [EMAIL PROTECTED],
import urllib
url_opener = urllib.URLopener() # create URLopener
#You could also work with urllib.FancyURLopener
try:
data = url_opener.open("http://www.somedomain.com/index.html";) #
open index.html
except IOError, error_code:
if error_code[0] == "http error":
if erro
Hello Fernando,
I hope that's of some help! I think you may want to delve deeper
into
FancyURLopener...
The problem is that I'm using a subclass of FancyOpener and it doesn't
raise those exceptions.
Ok, forget it, I should have read the "fine" manual. O:-)
Hi,
How can my script tell which version of python is running it?
Thanks
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Hi,
Is the standard output thread-safe? Can I use print from several threads
without having to use a mutex?
Thanks
--
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Hi,
I have a class that descends from threading.Thread. One method should block
the thread during x seconds and then call another method. How can I do this?
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Hello Fredrik,
> Fernando Rodríguez wrote:
>
>> Is the standard output thread-safe? Can I use print from several
>> threads without having to use a mutex?
>>
> if you use sys.stdout.write on the standard sys.stdout stream, each
> write operation is "atomic&quo
I'm trying to save an image created from two arrays (I'm using numpy and
PIL):
n=(b4a-b3a)/(b4a+b3a);
ndvi = Image.fromarray(n)
ndvi.save("F:\Fire_scar_mapping\ILS3\ndvi_test","TIFF")
...but I get the following error message:
IOError: [Errno 22] invalid mode ('wb') or filename:
'F:\\Fir
Does anyone know if there is already a Python library for Myo [1] Gesture
Control Armband? There are other gesture controls with Python libraries?
Thanks in advance
[1] https://www.thalmic.com/en/myo/
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Python for Zombies [1] is the first MOOC in portuguese to teach programming.
Today we have 10.000 enrolled in 1013 cities from Brazil. We started five
months ago. The website is a Django application.
[1] http://pycursos.com/python-para-zumbis/
--
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y
uncached exception info that may go to stderr/stdout to show up in the
logfiles.
Any ideas?
Thanks a lot,
--
Fernando
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature
--
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ing logging in this manner?
Cheers,
--
Fernando
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature
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On Mon, Feb 16, 2009 at 10:11:51AM -0800, Scott David Daniels wrote:
> Fernando M. Maresca wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 16, 2009 at 05:07:45AM -0800, Garrett Cooper wrote:
>>> You can actually set sys.std[err|out] to your ?file? descriptor of
>>> choice in python
>&
At first I also disliked print's new syntax, but later I realised it
could be useful.
However, I agree that the parentheses are annoying. Not because of the
parens theirselves, but because of the Shift key.
Why programmers stilll can't have special keyboards with parens keys
that doesn't need pre
On Dec 4, 5:45 pm, Andreas Waldenburger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Thu, 4 Dec 2008 11:52:38 -0600 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>
>
> > >>> As you have probably guessed: nothing changed here.
> > >>> Also see:http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0666/
>
> > >> What? Do you mean it's pos
Also, remember that since the latter functions will always overwrite
the first, you can just reverse the order of the imports:
from package2 import *
from package1 import *
This should preserve the functions of package1 over the other ones.
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ny changes even if i
execute readmodule again.
any idea?, thanks in advance
--
Fernando San MartÃn Woerner
Jefe de InformÃtica
Galilea S.A.
--
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ge.py
## Structure
Structure of the project in tree format.
├── CONTRIBUTING.md
├── LICENSE
├── Makefile
├── MANIFEST.in
├── module_name.py
├── README.md
├── requirements
│ ├── dev.txt
│ └── prod.txt
├── requirements.txt
├── setup.cfg
├── setup.py
├── tests.py
└── tox.ini
Fernando Felix
--
@all
I released version 1.0.0 with a tiny glossary and explanation of each file in
the boilerplate.
@Chris
I made the boilerplate with intent that everyone can understand, download and
use quickly. So, I didn't put extra dependence like cookiecutter (that depends
jinja, that depends markupsaf
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