Daily Python News Question, Tips and Tricks, Best Practices on Python Programming Language Find more reddit channels over at @r_channels
Need a little guidance
Hey, I’m a beginner Django programmer. I’ve been working with Django for the past 3 months and have built a few projects like a task manager, PDF generator, email sender, etc. I’m currently stuck on the Django REST framework — not understanding much of it. I’m more of a hands-on/project-based learner; watching lectures doesn’t really work for me. I’m hoping a real Django developer could guide me a bit — not looking for an internship, certification, or anything formal, just some guidance. I’d be really greatful.
/r/django
https://redd.it/1lcmvg2
SaaS opportunity
I am a 17 year old full time Django developer at a digital company based in the Uk, and a while ago me and my friend decided to put our skills to use by starting a SaaS side project built with Django. We have got a MVP pretty much developed
I am looking for a Django developer(s) who would be interested in joining us.
We are applying for funding which would massively help and therefore we would like another developer to accelerate development and hopefully it can turn into something more full time in the future if all goes well.
I know it’s not the most lucrative opportunity but if you like to learn and develop Django, and are enthusiastic about development you might enjoy it.
Please DM or comment if you are interested
/r/django
https://redd.it/1lc6u72
PySpring - A Python web framework inspired by Spring Boot.
I've been working on something exciting - PySpring, a Python web framework that brings Spring Boot's elegance to Python. If you're tired of writing boilerplate code and want a more structured approach to web development, this might interest you!
\- What's cool about it:
* Auto dependency injection (no more manual wiring!)
* Auto configuration management
* Built on FastAPI for high performance
* Component-based architecture
* Familiar Spring Boot-like patterns
* Recent PRs:
* [Route Mapping Decorators Implementation #3](https://github.com/PythonSpring/pyspring-core/pull/3)
* [Add Support for Qualifiers and Component Registration Validation](https://github.com/PythonSpring/pyspring-core/pull/1)
* GitHub: [https://github.com/PythonSpring/pyspring-core](https://github.com/PythonSpring/pyspring-core)
* Example Project: [https://github.com/NFUChen/PySpring-Example-Project](https://github.com/NFUChen/PySpring-Example-Project)
Note: This project is in active development. I'm working on new features and improvements regularly. Your feedback and contributions would be incredibly valuable at this stage!If you like the idea of bringing Spring Boot's elegant patterns to Python or believe in making web development more structured and maintainable, I'd really appreciate if you could:
* Star the repository
* Share this with your network
* Give it a try in your next project
Every star and share helps this project grow and reach more developers who might benefit from it. Thanks for your support! 🙏I'm actively maintaining this and would love your feedback! Feel free to star, open issues, or contribute. Let me know what you
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1lc3s8t
Is that possible?
Is that possible to write a python web-based system that performs security testing, just like a terminal-based tool?
/r/flask
https://redd.it/1ladx9c
Best logging strategy
Currently, I’m logging the entire request and response, including the body. However, this is consuming too much storage and network bandwidth. Is it necessary to log all the details of a request cycle, or is there a recommended strategy to reduce this overhead? I want to make sure that it doesn't become a blind spot in case of an attack.
/r/django
https://redd.it/1lc263o
Why most of Django repos don't have a license file in Github?
Same as title.
It makes impossible to use it for projects because unlicensed repos are closed source.
/r/django
https://redd.it/1lbw0ky
Sunday Daily Thread: What's everyone working on this week?
# Weekly Thread: What's Everyone Working On This Week? 🛠️
Hello /r/Python! It's time to share what you've been working on! Whether it's a work-in-progress, a completed masterpiece, or just a rough idea, let us know what you're up to!
## How it Works:
1. Show & Tell: Share your current projects, completed works, or future ideas.
2. Discuss: Get feedback, find collaborators, or just chat about your project.
3. Inspire: Your project might inspire someone else, just as you might get inspired here.
## Guidelines:
Feel free to include as many details as you'd like. Code snippets, screenshots, and links are all welcome.
Whether it's your job, your hobby, or your passion project, all Python-related work is welcome here.
## Example Shares:
1. Machine Learning Model: Working on a ML model to predict stock prices. Just cracked a 90% accuracy rate!
2. Web Scraping: Built a script to scrape and analyze news articles. It's helped me understand media bias better.
3. Automation: Automated my home lighting with Python and Raspberry Pi. My life has never been easier!
Let's build and grow together! Share your journey and learn from others. Happy coding! 🌟
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1lbmt5u
Django admin in Nextjs
https://redd.it/1lbmqzz
@pythondaily
NameError Issue with Flask
I'm trying to make a battle simulator with flask, and I've encountered a really weird issue. The initial index.html renders fine, but when I click on a button that links to another page (that has proper html), i get this NameError: logging is not defined.
My program doesn't use logging, has never used logging, and it doesn't get resolved even after I imported it. My program worked fine, but after I tried downloading an old logging module that subsequently failed (in Thonny if that's important) I've been unable to fix this issue. I've cleared my pycache, I've checked if anything was actually/partially installed. I even tried duplicating everything to a new directory and the issue persisted.
When I replaced my code with a similar project I found online, it worked completely fine, so my code is the issue (same modules imported, same dependencies, etc). However, as I've said, my code worked well before and didn't directly use anything from logging
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1zRAJHpZ1GAntbbYB2MsRDKLeZWplHKIzMJ6h2ggMzuU/edit?usp=sharing (Link to all the code)
Working index.html
When I click on \\"Start Battle!\\" This shows up \(If this is too blurry, the link above has the error text as well\)
The code that is shown in the traceback seems to be weirdly arbitrary. I don't
/r/flask
https://redd.it/1lb967q
My First Project With Python FeedBacks
Hii, i started to student python for 8 moths ago and I finally end my first project, I created a simple crud and would like opinions about my code.
Any feedback for me is very important
github: https://github.com/Kelabr/profindustry
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1lbi5uc
Building an ERP: ready-made platforms vs custom development
I’m a software engineer, and a client has asked me to deliver a fast B2B solution. I’d never heard of Odoo before and I’m curious whether it could really save me time on the infrastructure side. I’m looking for a platform I can customize with my own code and integrations, and so far I’ve shortlisted ERPNext, Odoo, and Axelor as ready-made options.
Long story short, I’m building a portal where electronics suppliers can log in and upload products to the company for which I’m developing the ERP; that company will then resell those items to smaller retailers at a steep discount. Major chains such as Micro Center, Electronic Express, and Abt Electronics will need access as well. The company essentially acts as an intermediary, handling all purchase requests, shipment tracking, and invoicing.
My question: Is it really better to leverage one of these ready-made frameworks, or would building the system from scratch give me a more solid and scalable solution?
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1lb5jk5
Is there a reason for needing to import so many libraries?
Me and a friend are working on a school project for which we **have to** use flask for the backend. I realised that we needed to import a metric fuckton of libraries for buttons, forms and that type of stuff.
Is there a reason for that?
/r/flask
https://redd.it/1lbaaqw
Premier: Instantly Turn Your ASGI App into an API Gateway
Hey everyone! I've been working on a project called Premier that I think might be useful for Python developers who need API gateway functionality without the complexity of enterprise solutions.
## What My Project Does
Premier is a versatile resilience framework that adds retry, cache, throttle logic to your python app.
It operates in three main ways:
1. Lightweight Standalone API Gateway - Run as a dedicated gateway service
2. ASGI App/Middleware - Wrap existing ASGI applications without code changes
3. Function Resilience Toolbox - Flexible yet powerful decorators for cache, retry, timeout, and throttle logic
The core idea is simple: add enterprise-grade features like caching, rate limiting, retry logic, timeouts, and performance monitoring to your existing Python web apps with minimal effort.
### Key Features
- Response Caching - Smart caching with TTL and custom cache keys
- Rate Limiting - Multiple algorithms (fixed/sliding window, token/leaky bucket) that work with distributed applications
- Retry Logic - Configurable retry strategies with exponential backoff
- Request Timeouts - Per-path timeout protection
- Path-Based Policies - Different features per route with regex matching
- YAML Configuration - Declarative configuration with namespace support
### Why Premier
Premier lets you instantly add API gateway features to your existing ASGI applications without introducing heavy, complex tech stacks like Kong or
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1lb52n0
🎉 Update on django-lastdayofmonth integration
Hi everyone!
I recently released **django-lastdayofmonth v1.1.0**, officially tested with **Django 3.2 – 5.2** and **Python 3.10 – 3.12**. The package provides a convenient, database-agnostic ORM function for determining the last day of any month.
The main highlights since the original proposal:
* ✅ **Official Django 5.2 support** (just released!)
* ✅ Simplified usage — no longer requires adding to `INSTALLED_APPS`
* ✅ Fully tested and stable across supported Django and Python versions.
📌 **Link to PyPI:**
[https://pypi.org/project/django-lastdayofmonth/](https://pypi.org/project/django-lastdayofmonth/)
📌 **GitHub Repository:**
[https://github.com/nobilebeniamino/django-lastdayofmonth](https://github.com/nobilebeniamino/django-lastdayofmonth)
I'd still love to see this functionality become a core part of Django, making date calculations easier for everyone.
If you find this feature valuable, please consider showing your support by adding a 👍 reaction to the GitHub issue below:
👉 [**Django Issue #38**](https://github.com/django/new-features/issues/38) 👈
Thanks again for your help and support—let's see if we can make Django even better together! 🚀
/r/django
https://redd.it/1lb1tgk
MCPGex - MCP server for finding, testing and refining regex patterns
Hello,
Wanted to showcase my recently published project, MCPGex, which may be of use to many of you that want to find, test, and refine regex patterns with LLMs.
What My Project Does
MCPGex is an MCP server that allows LLMs to test and validate regex patterns against test cases. It provides a systematic way to develop regex patterns by defining or generating expected outcomes and iteratively testing patterns until all requirements are satisfied. LLMs sometimes fail to capture the correct regex pattern on the first or even second try, so MCPGex allows them to test their regex patterns out.
Target Audience
MCPGex is for anyone who uses regex patterns and would like to have a quick way to generate regex patterns that work. Instead of searching for regex patterns when you forget them, you can ask to have them generated. Of all the regex tasks given thus far, MCPGex has provided the LLM the ability to successfully get the right pattern.
Comparison
As far as I know, there is nothing similar to MCPGex that allows LLMs to test and refine their generated regex patterns. I may be mistaken, and if I am, feel free to correct me! :)
You can go to the project GitHub page by
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1lav4s8
Question about reusing/sharing apps
Hello everyone,
I'm currently starting a new project and have a question about sharing apps between separate projects.
I'm building something that will need two different servers that have different purposes and deployments, but still will need to interact largely with the same data, so to avoid repeating myself and also inevitably making mistakes in maintaining the same thing twice, I wanted to have all those things in apps that are shared between those two projects.
As they are generally closely tied together, I want to develop this in a monorepo type structure for now. My structure right now looks something like this:
backend
- server1
- server2
- sharedapp1
- sharedapp2
- ...
Each of the servers has its own venv
managed by uv
.
Now, I am unsure on how the proper way is to import an app here. I found two ways that generally work:
1: Package them as a pip package with a setup.py
and install them to the individual servers
/r/djangolearning
https://redd.it/1lb4br2
Monday Daily Thread: Project ideas!
# Weekly Thread: Project Ideas 💡
Welcome to our weekly Project Ideas thread! Whether you're a newbie looking for a first project or an expert seeking a new challenge, this is the place for you.
## How it Works:
1. **Suggest a Project**: Comment your project idea—be it beginner-friendly or advanced.
2. **Build & Share**: If you complete a project, reply to the original comment, share your experience, and attach your source code.
3. **Explore**: Looking for ideas? Check out Al Sweigart's ["The Big Book of Small Python Projects"](https://www.amazon.com/Big-Book-Small-Python-Programming/dp/1718501242) for inspiration.
## Guidelines:
* Clearly state the difficulty level.
* Provide a brief description and, if possible, outline the tech stack.
* Feel free to link to tutorials or resources that might help.
# Example Submissions:
## Project Idea: Chatbot
**Difficulty**: Intermediate
**Tech Stack**: Python, NLP, Flask/FastAPI/Litestar
**Description**: Create a chatbot that can answer FAQs for a website.
**Resources**: [Building a Chatbot with Python](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a37BL0stIuM)
# Project Idea: Weather Dashboard
**Difficulty**: Beginner
**Tech Stack**: HTML, CSS, JavaScript, API
**Description**: Build a dashboard that displays real-time weather information using a weather API.
**Resources**: [Weather API Tutorial](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9P5MY_2i7K8)
## Project Idea: File Organizer
**Difficulty**: Beginner
**Tech Stack**: Python, File I/O
**Description**: Create a script that organizes files in a directory into sub-folders based on file type.
**Resources**: [Automate the Boring Stuff: Organizing Files](https://automatetheboringstuff.com/2e/chapter9/)
Let's help each other grow. Happy
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1lcesq1
The GIL is actually going away — Have you tried a no-GIL Python?
I know this topic is too old and was discussed for years. But now it looks like things are really changing, thanks to the PEP 703. Python 3.13 has an experimental no-GIL build.
As a Python enthusiast, I digged into this topic this weekend (though no-GIL Python is not ready for production) and wrote a summary of how Python struggled with GIL from the past, current to the future:
🔗 Python Is Removing the GIL Gradually
And I also setup the no-GIL Python on my Mac to test multithreading programs, it really worked.
Let’s discuss GIL, again — cause this feels like one of the biggest shifts in Python’s history.
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1lccbj2
I'm a front-end developer (HTML/CSS), and for a client, I need to build a GUI using Python.
Hi everyone!
I'm a front-end developer (HTML/CSS), and for a client, I need to build a GUI using Python.
I've looked into a few options, and PyWebView caught my eye because it would let me stay within my comfort zone (HTML/CSS/JS) and avoid diving deep into a full Python GUI framework like PySide or Tkinter.
The application will be compiled (probably with PyInstaller or similar) and will run locally on the client's computer, with no connection to any external server.
My main concern is about PyWebView’s security in this context:
Are there any risks with using this kind of tech locally (e.g., unwanted code execution, insecure file access, etc.)?
Is PyWebView a reasonable and safe choice for an app that will be distributed to end users?
I'd really appreciate any feedback or best practices from those who've worked with this stack!
Thanks in advance
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1lbyfss
🏠 I built a Django Real Estate website years ago with just basic features. Look what it became! [SHOWCASE]
Hey r/Django! 👋
I wanted to share something I'm pretty excited about. A few years back, I started working on a simple real estate website using Django. Back then, it was just basic stuff - you know, show some properties, maybe a contact form, nothing fancy.But over time, I kept adding more features whenever I learned something new or had a cool idea. Now it's turned into this pretty comprehensive real estate platform!
What started as:
* Basic property listings
* Simple contact forms
* User registration/login
Screenshots:
[Home page](https://preview.redd.it/ujipexhh837f1.png?width=1850&format=png&auto=webp&s=6354b35eac4af100067499403a21c67418fb4d18)
[Project details](https://preview.redd.it/8ngylybk837f1.png?width=1850&format=png&auto=webp&s=15996b9c5880b00684a1e7e68a26dabeca731551)
[Login](https://preview.redd.it/5w2lh4a4937f1.png?width=1850&format=png&auto=webp&s=6fbb688164b3bfe6a0cc75633b475c5f7ac413e3)
https://preview.redd.it/vwwshyy5937f1.png?width=1850&format=png&auto=webp&s=d6188fbae0c292195440b9df005cdaf56dc15800
Has grown into:
* Advanced search with fancy tabs (Projects, For Rent, For Sale)
* User wishlist system (you can save properties!)
* Real estate project management (for new developments)
* Admin dashboard for managing everything
* Property inquiry system
* User profiles and dashboards
* Photo galleries with lightbox
* Responsive design that works on mobile
* Tech stack:
* Django 5.2.3
* Bootstrap for UI
* JavaScript for interactive stuff
* SQLite (but can use PostgreSQL)
Cool features I'm proud of:
* The search interface looks modern with glass effects
* Progress bars showing project completion status
* AJAX wishlist functionality
* Comprehensive admin panel
* Generated sample data with Faker for testing
It's been a fun journey watching this project grow from a simple idea to something that actually looks professional. The code is on GitHub if anyone wants to check it out: [https://github.com/manjurulhoque/django-real-state](https://github.com/manjurulhoque/django-real-state) **added tons of screenshots** in the README
/r/django
https://redd.it/1lbzp1i
Open Source Unsiloed AI Chunker (EF2024)
Hey , Unsiloed CTO here!
Unsiloed AI (EF 2024) is backed by Transpose Platform & EF and is currently being used by teams at Fortune 100 companies and multiple Series E+ startups for ingesting multimodal data in the form of PDFs, Excel, PPTs, etc. And, we have now finally open sourced some of the capabilities. Do give it a try!
Also, we are inviting cracked developers to come and contribute to bounties of upto 1000$ on algora. This would be a great way to get noticed for the job openings at Unsiloed.
Bounty Link- https://algora.io/bounties
Github Link - https://github.com/Unsiloed-AI/Unsiloed-chunker
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1lbqd5n
Learning Backend for the first time with Flask but hate styling the frontend
Hey is it okay to use AI for developing the frontend for my flask app projects? I hate CSS and know only Python and not JS. I tried but I just hate to take css up from a blank page. I hate styling even with Bootstrap. It is not that I don't want my projects or website to look good, the thing is only that I don't like writing or learning the code to design pages.
So if I am making those projects for my portfolio as a backend developer, is it okay to use AI for the frontend?
/r/flask
https://redd.it/1larrwz
Best Resources to Learn Django ?
I already have experience with Flask and have built a couple of small projects using it. Now I'm planning to dive into Django and would love to hear from the community
What are the best resources (courses, tutorials, YouTube channels, books) for learning Django ?
/r/djangolearning
https://redd.it/1lb98qc
how django handles multiple users at the same time
Hey guys, in my almost completed inventory management app i have two types of users (admin and operator), and it is possible and will likely happen, that, once i deploy the app both users will use it at the same time.
an example:
imagine an admin is adding a specific quantity of stock to a product or a new product (functionalities that are specific to this user type) and the operator is removing stock of the same or other product, how is django going to deal with this?
thanks in advance
/r/django
https://redd.it/1lbhqhb
Why is Django not the most popular framework?
Python is the most popular programming language with AI/ML becoming centerstage. Then why is Django not the most popular web framework? It seems natural that when models are hosted via API and need a web interface for users, then the Python developers who built the model would opt for Django since it is also in Python.
But I don't see as active an involvement on YouTube for Django compared to Next.js, React, and other Frontend frameworks. Am I misinterpreting it or missing something in my understanding?
I also realised that it's not straightforward to integrate frontend technologies such as Tailwind CSS as it is for other frontend frameworks.
Django has strong security and a fully developed Admin interface which saves lot of development time but still I see that it's not as popular as other frameworks such as Laravel or Next.js.
I am at a point where I need to pick a framework as a goto framework for all my future web development and I am at the moment torn between options and indecisiveness.
I foresee having AI components in my apps and needing to interact with trained models at some point. And I am reluctant if I pick Django,
/r/django
https://redd.it/1lba2to
Local LLM Memorization – A fully local memory system for long-term recall and visualization
Hey r/Python!
I've been working on my first project called LLM Memorization — a fully local memory system for your LLMs, designed to work with tools like LM Studio, Ollama, or Transformer Lab.
The idea is simple: If you're running a local LLM, why not give it a memory?
# What My Project Does
Logs all your LLM chats into a local SQLite database
Extracts key information from each exchange (questions, answers, keywords, timestamps, models…)
Syncs automatically with LM Studio (or other local UIs with minor tweaks)
Removes duplicates and performs idea extraction to keep the database clean and useful
Retrieves similar past conversations when you ask a new question
Summarizes the relevant memory using a local T5-style model and injects it into your prompt
Visualizes the input question, the enhanced prompt, and the memory base
Runs as a lightweight Python CLI, designed for fast local use and easy customization
# Why does this matter?
Most local LLM setups forget everything between sessions.
That’s fine for quick Q&A — but what if you’re working on a long-term project, or want your model to remember what matters?
With LLM Memorization, your memory stays on your machine.
No cloud. No API calls. No privacy concerns. Just a growing personal knowledge
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1lb9fcr
P 3Blue1Brown Follow-up: From Hypothetical Examples to LLM Circuit Visualization
About a year ago, I watched this 3Blue1Brown LLM tutorial on how a model’s self-attention mechanism is used to predict the next token in a sequence, and I was surprised by how little we know about what actually happens when processing the sentence "A fluffy blue creature roamed the verdant forest."
A year later, the field of mechanistic interpretability has seen significant advancements, and we're now able to "decompose" models into interpretable circuits that help explain how LLMs produce predictions. Using the second iteration of an LLM "debugger" I've been working on, I compare the hypothetical representations used in the tutorial to the actual representations I see when extracting a circuit that describes the processing of this specific sentence. If you're into model interpretability, please take a look! https://peterlai.github.io/gpt-circuits/
/r/MachineLearning
https://redd.it/1laqsz2
Recent Noteworthy Package Releases
Over the last 7 days, I've noticed these significant upgrades in the Python package ecosystem.
**NumPy 2.3.0**
**google-adk 1.3.0**
**pip-system-certs 5.0**
**django-multiselectfield 1.0.0**
**shap 0.48.0**
**django-waffle 5.0.0**
**schemathesis 4.0.0**
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1laazsd
My HDR Photo Maker
https://github.com/Coolythecoder/HDR-Photo-Maker is my repo and converts SDR to HDR.
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1laqarr
I built "Submind" – a beautiful PyQt6 app to batch transcribe and auto-translate subtitles
# What My Project Does
**Submind** is a minimal, modern PyQt6-based desktop app that lets you transcribe audio or video files into `.srt` Subtitles using OpenAI’s Whisper model.
🎧 **Features**:
* Transcribe single or multiple files at once (batch mode)
* Optional auto-translation into another language
* Save the original and translated subtitles separately
* Whisper runs locally (no API key required)
* Clean UI with tabs for single/batch processing
It uses the open-source Whisper model ([https://github.com/openai/whisper](https://github.com/openai/whisper)) and supports common media formats like `.mp3`, `.mp4`, `.wav`, `.mkv`, etc.
# Target Audience
This tool is aimed at:
* Content creators or editors who work with subtitles frequently
* Students or educators needing quick lecture transcription
* Developers who want a clean UI example integrating Whisper
* Anyone looking for a fast, local way to convert media to `.srt`
It’s not yet meant for large-scale production, but it’s a polished MVP with useful features for individuals and small teams.
# Comparison
I didn't see any Qt Apps for Whisper yet. Please comment if you have seen any.
# Try it out
GitHub: [rohankishore/Submind](https://github.com/rohankishore/Submind)
Let me know what you think! I'm open to feature suggestions — I’m considering adding drag-and-drop, speaker labeling, and live waveform preview soon. 😄
/r/Python
https://redd.it/1lap8mz