This video is great! It unveils so many cool features that great tables provide in a straightforward way! I quickly get the point: I must try it now, because I have already known how to do building beautiful table by myself!🎉
Posit's open source team has a great designer called Greg Swinheart. Not totally sure, but I think you're seeing a some animation by him. Rich was asked about his slides at Posit Conf 2024, and he said he uses Keynote with the Magic Moves transition a lot, which might be the animation you're seeing between slides.
I don't think a swift port is on the development roadmap, but there's certainly no harm in putting in a github-issue requesting it. I think there's still a lot of work to get python great_tables in feature parity with gt, and just a lot more ways to build out gt & great_tables, so the table folks will likely be focused in R and Python for some time.
@@economicurtis I’m sure that’s right. I was more or less being cheeky. Fact is, gt() was a huge step forward for me in R. So powerful, so flexible. I’m sure the Python community will embrace its tremendous value, too.
Posit's open source team has a great designer called Greg Swinheart. Not totally sure, but I think you're seeing a some animation by him. Rich was asked about his slides at Posit Conf 2024, and he said he uses Keynote with the Magic Moves transition a lot, which might be the animation you're seeing between slides.
This is great guys
this is fantastic guys!
Former CFO and Python enthusiast. Nice job! I am looking forward to exploring the possibilities.
Fantastic! Can't believe I've just come across this.
This video is great! It unveils so many cool features that great tables provide in a straightforward way! I quickly get the point: I must try it now, because I have already known how to do building beautiful table by myself!🎉
Great. Now I can create beautiful table in Python
Thanks for doing this! Super helpful for getting into gt :)
P.S. I am pumped this was done with polars as well!
Posit's open source team has a great designer called Greg Swinheart. Not totally sure, but I think you're seeing a some animation by him. Rich was asked about his slides at Posit Conf 2024, and he said he uses Keynote with the Magic Moves transition a lot, which might be the animation you're seeing between slides.
Excellent work 👏
Excellent content!!! Tnks
I admit I’m a fanboy of this package on R. So great to see it working so well on Python, too! Now, how about a Swift port? 😉
I don't think a swift port is on the development roadmap, but there's certainly no harm in putting in a github-issue requesting it. I think there's still a lot of work to get python great_tables in feature parity with gt, and just a lot more ways to build out gt & great_tables, so the table folks will likely be focused in R and Python for some time.
@@economicurtis I’m sure that’s right. I was more or less being cheeky. Fact is, gt() was a huge step forward for me in R. So powerful, so flexible. I’m sure the Python community will embrace its tremendous value, too.
Beautiful! Will definitely try this one out. What software are you using for making the presentation slides, by the way?
Posit's open source team has a great designer called Greg Swinheart. Not totally sure, but I think you're seeing a some animation by him. Rich was asked about his slides at Posit Conf 2024, and he said he uses Keynote with the Magic Moves transition a lot, which might be the animation you're seeing between slides.
2.5 cats and a coffee table ❤