Hey there thx for the explanation. Got a question about your setup or rather your settings for PyCharm. I haven't used it in a while because all my Python needs are met by VS Code however I really like the way of that code completion whenever you start to type in a line. Is this a feature that comes out of the box with PyCharm or is it Copilot/Tabnine stuff?
Only had to deal with YAML before in the context of Dart pubspec files, didn't know about all these extra power features it packed, Thank You! If you'd allow a suggestion for a future subject: Mojo, the hot (technically) new superset of Python! It's all the buzz right now, as it is heavily performance and AI focused, said to be the recommended way of interfacing with Google's MLIR. Right now access is on wait list basis, but there's no specific requirements for signing up -- worth getting into early.
Until how many "records" the YAML are considered useful? 1,000,000 with 10 fields len=80? more? less? Considering TOML with the same question, what would be the answer? Thank you
Excellent description of YAML. Well done, sir
😮😮good to know about this YAML
Thank you for this very useful video!
This is excellent. Thanks for all your effort.
Great one, thanks for sharing!
Great video, as always, and by the way, your Spanish translation is great as well👍
Thank you! 😃
Hey there thx for the explanation. Got a question about your setup or rather your settings for PyCharm. I haven't used it in a while because all my Python needs are met by VS Code however I really like the way of that code completion whenever you start to type in a line. Is this a feature that comes out of the box with PyCharm or is it Copilot/Tabnine stuff?
FYI that & and * is like pointers in C and C++ (a reference)
Only had to deal with YAML before in the context of Dart pubspec files, didn't know about all these extra power features it packed, Thank You!
If you'd allow a suggestion for a future subject:
Mojo, the hot (technically) new superset of Python!
It's all the buzz right now, as it is heavily performance and AI focused, said to be the recommended way of interfacing with Google's MLIR. Right now access is on wait list basis, but there's no specific requirements for signing up -- worth getting into early.
Thanks for the recommendation! I signed up for their wait list, it looks really cool.
Until how many "records" the YAML are considered useful? 1,000,000 with 10 fields len=80? more? less?
Considering TOML with the same question, what would be the answer?
Thank you
great overview!
Yes very well done
Very nice tutorial
Thank you
Thanks for pprint
I thought it was "Yet another markup language"
it used to be. they changed their acronym
Prefer TOML. Indently also made a video about that.
Similar toml file...
First!
Friends don't let friends.. yaml or python.