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Making Python even more convenient by extending list and dict and pathlib and more.

Project description

Welcome to alexlib

Fill your life with one-liners, take your code to artistic level of brevity and readability while simultaneously being more productive by typing less boilerplate lines of code that are needless to say.

This package extends many native Python classes to equip you with an uneasy-to-tame power. The major classes extended are:

  • list is extended to List

    • Forget that for loops exist, because with this class, for loops are implicitly used to apply a function to all items. Inevitably while programming, one will encounter objects of the same type and you will be struggling to get a tough grab on them. List is a powerful structure that put at your disposal a grip, so tough, that the objects you have at hand start behaving like one object. Behaviour is ala-JavaScript implementation of forEach method of Arrays.
  • dict is extended to Struct.

    • Combines the power of dot notation like classes and key access like dictionaries.
  • pathlib.Path is extended to P

    • P objects are incredibly powerful for parsing paths, no more than one line of code is required to do any operation. Take a shufti at this:
    path = tb.P("dataset/type1/meta/images/file3.ext")
    >> path[0]  # allows indexing!
    P("dataset")
    >> path[-1]  # nifty!
    P("file3.ext")
    >> path[2:-1]  # even slicing!
    P("meta/images/file3.ext")
    

    This and much more, is only on top of the indespensible pathlib.Path functionalities.

  • Additionally, the package provides many other new classes, e.g. Read and Save. Together with P, they provide comprehensible support for file management. Life cannot get easier with those. Every class inherits attributes that allow saving and loading in one line.

Furthermore, those classes are inextricably connected. For example, globbing a path P object returns a List object. You can move back and forth between List and Struct and DataFrame with one method, and so on.

Install

In the commandline: pip install alexlib.

Being a thin extension on top of almost pure Python, you need to worry not about your venv, the package is not aggressive in requirements, it installs itself peacefully, never interfere with your other packages. If you do not have numpy, matplotlib and pandas, it simply throws ImportError at runtime, that's it.

Getting Started

That's as easy as taking candy from a baby; whenever you start a Python file, preface it with following in order to unleash the library:

import alexlib.toolbox as tb

A Taste of Power

Suppose you want to know how many lines of code in your repository. The procedure is to glob all .py files recursively, read string code, split each one of them by lines, count the lines, add up everything from all strings of code.

To achieve this, all you need is an eminently readable one-liner.

tb.P.cwd().search("*.py", r=True).read_text().split('\n').apply(len).to_numpy().sum()

How does this make perfect sense?

  • search returns List of P path objects
  • read_text is a P method, but it is being run against List object. Behind the scenes, responsible black magic fails to find such a method in List and realizes it is a method of items inside the list, so it runs it against them and thus read all files and containerize them in another List object and returns it.
  • A similar story applies to split which is a method of strings in Python.
  • Next, apply is a method of List. Sure enough, it lives up to its apt name and applies the passed function len to all items in the list and returns another List object that contains the results.
  • .to_numpy() converts List to numpy array, then .sum is a method of numpy, which gives the final result.

Methods naming convention like apply and to_numpy are inspired from the popular pandas library, resulting in almost non-existing learning curve.

Friendly interactive tutorial.

Please refer to Here on the main git repo.

Full docs:

Click Here

Author

Alex Al-Saffar. email

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