You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.Dismiss alert
I think programming is done in libraries and application only contain configuration.
This means if you do programming, then you are inside a library. Even if the library is only used in one place up to now .... but maybe you are successful and you get new customers ...
That's why I think dependencies in Python are done via install_requires in setup.py.
For me requirements.txt is only the result of a successful continuous integration run, created by "pip freeze". This is a good working set since all tests were ok.
Please hit me with arguments and tell me what's wrong with my point of view.
Hi @guettli, I agree with you the page can be dramatically improved. I think it was written 3-4 years ago and there's been some changes in handling app dependencies for Python and my explanation can be made much better.
If I've understood your comment correctly, I'm not sure I agree with the requirements.txt being only an output of the build process. A requirements.txt file is standard for installing dependencies, especially pegged dependencies, when you're building applications. setup.py is typically used within libraries you are distributing.
I am unsure whether the current text gives new comers a clear and simple guide line.
https://www.fullstackpython.com/application-dependencies.html
Library vs Application
I think programming is done in libraries and application only contain configuration.
This means if you do programming, then you are inside a library. Even if the library is only used in one place up to now .... but maybe you are successful and you get new customers ...
That's why I think dependencies in Python are done via install_requires in setup.py.
For me requirements.txt is only the result of a successful continuous integration run, created by "pip freeze". This is a good working set since all tests were ok.
Please hit me with arguments and tell me what's wrong with my point of view.
Back to topic:
I think "Library vs Application" could be improved on this page: https://www.fullstackpython.com/application-dependencies.html
What do you think?
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: