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Hands-On Application Development with PyCharm

You're reading from   Hands-On Application Development with PyCharm Build applications like a pro with the ultimate python development tool

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837632350
Length 652 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (2):
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Quan Nguyen Quan Nguyen
Author Profile Icon Quan Nguyen
Quan Nguyen
Bruce M. Van Horn II Bruce M. Van Horn II
Author Profile Icon Bruce M. Van Horn II
Bruce M. Van Horn II
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Table of Contents (24) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: The Basics of PyCharm
2. Chapter 1: Introduction to PyCharm – the Most Popular IDE for Python FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Installing and Configuring PyCharm 4. Part 2: Improving Your Productivity
5. Chapter 3: Customizing Interpreters and Virtual Environments 6. Chapter 4: Editing and Formatting with Ease in PyCharm 7. Chapter 5: Version Control with Git in PyCharm 8. Chapter 6: Seamless Testing, Debugging, and Profiling 9. Part 3: Web Development in PyCharm
10. Chapter 7: Web Development with JavaScript, HTML, and CSS 11. Chapter 8: Building a Dynamic Web Application with Flask 12. Chapter 9: Creating a RESTful API with FastAPI 13. Chapter 10: More Full Stack Frameworks – Django and Pyramid 14. Chapter 11: Understanding Database Management in PyCharm 15. Part 4: Data Science with PyCharm
16. Chapter 12: Turning On Scientific Mode 17. Chapter 13: Dynamic Data Viewing with SciView and Jupyter 18. Chapter 14: Building a Data Pipeline in PyCharm 19. Part 5: Plugins and Conclusion
20. Chapter 15: More Possibilities with Plugins 21. Chapter 16: Your Next Steps with PyCharm 22. Index 23. Other Books You May Enjoy

A note on naming files and folders

Before we get further into creating the next project, I want to give you some advice based on a principle I always point out to my students. The internet abhors spaces. Spaces are not allowed in URLs as-is because they are reserved characters. When you include a space in a URL, it needs to be URL-encoded as %20 to be considered valid. Web servers automatically handle this encoding, but manually encoding spaces can lead to readability issues in URLs, and it can cause issues when trying to run your projects on your local computer.

In a web project, most of your project paths will become URLs at some point. This can happen even when your project isn’t even intended for the web. To add to the problem, different operating systems treat characters differently in their filesystems. Windows filenames are case insensitive. If you name your file or folder MyProject, and then try to create a folder called myproject, you’ll get a collision since...

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