I've been using this https://gist.github.com/1548742 to generate package skeletons for django apps. Configures a django-nose test runner for setup.py, package data sniffer, etc.
I wouldn't count the need for a good JVM implementation as a plus mark in a Ruby vs Python comparison. Jython is used when you need to interact with Java libs, not because the C implementation of Python language is…
You've just echoed my experience with chef but I'm still on the fence as to whether I think it was a success or not and whether I'd use it again. We were able to achieve everything we wanted but to say it took a metric…
Depends, if I look at my local job listings where there's one ruby listing for every 10 python ones I'd say different but I'll admit that that ratio is abnormally high but indicates that the same trend governs most…
I've been using this https://gist.github.com/1548742 to generate package skeletons for django apps. Configures a django-nose test runner for setup.py, package data sniffer, etc.
I wouldn't count the need for a good JVM implementation as a plus mark in a Ruby vs Python comparison. Jython is used when you need to interact with Java libs, not because the C implementation of Python language is…
You've just echoed my experience with chef but I'm still on the fence as to whether I think it was a success or not and whether I'd use it again. We were able to achieve everything we wanted but to say it took a metric…
Depends, if I look at my local job listings where there's one ruby listing for every 10 python ones I'd say different but I'll admit that that ratio is abnormally high but indicates that the same trend governs most…