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Mastering Python 2E

You're reading from   Mastering Python 2E Write powerful and efficient code using the full range of Python's capabilities

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2022
Last Updated in May 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800207721
Length 710 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Rick Hattem Rick Hattem
Author Profile Icon Rick Hattem
Rick Hattem
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Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started – One Environment per Project FREE CHAPTER 2. Interactive Python Interpreters 3. Pythonic Syntax and Common Pitfalls 4. Pythonic Design Patterns 5. Functional Programming – Readability Versus Brevity 6. Decorators – Enabling Code Reuse by Decorating 7. Generators and Coroutines – Infinity, One Step at a Time 8. Metaclasses – Making Classes (Not Instances) Smarter 9. Documentation – How to Use Sphinx and reStructuredText 10. Testing and Logging – Preparing for Bugs 11. Debugging – Solving the Bugs 12. Performance – Tracking and Reducing Your Memory and CPU Usage 13. asyncio – Multithreading without Threads 14. Multiprocessing – When a Single CPU Core Is Not Enough 15. Scientific Python and Plotting 16. Artificial Intelligence 17. Extensions in C/C++, System Calls, and C/C++ Libraries 18. Packaging – Creating Your Own Libraries or Applications 19. Other Books You May Enjoy
20. Index

Testing multiple environments with tox

Now that we have written our tests and are able to run them for our own environment, it’s time to make sure that others can easily run the tests too. tox can create sandboxed environments for all specified Python versions (assuming they are installed) and runs them automatically and in parallel if needed. This is especially useful to test if your dependency specification is up to date. While you may have a lot of packages installed in your local environment, someone else might not have those packages.

Getting started with tox

Before we can do anything, we need to install the tox command. A simple pip install will suffice:

$ pip3 install --upgrade tox

After the install, we can start by creating a tox.ini file to specify what we want to run. The easiest way is by using tox-quickstart, but if you already have a functioning tox.ini from a different project you can easily copy and modify that:

$ tox-quickstart
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