Mahmoud Hashemi's Projects
Awesomer awesome list management and analysis, originally designed for Awesome Python Applications: https://github.com/mahmoud/awesome-python-applications
⚱️ Lightweight, self-contained templating for Python 2 and 3, a la Dust templates
Awesome list of repositories of awesome lists 🤷♀️
:pill: Curated list of falsehoods programmers believe in.
💿 Free software that works great, and also happens to be open-source Python.
🔩 Like builtins, but boltons. 250+ constructs, recipes, and snippets which extend (and rely on nothing but) the Python standard library. Nothing like Michael Bolton.
a throwaway bit of stuff for whitehouse press briefings for the internet archive govt data hackathon 2017
📅 The web's go-to resource for Calendar Versioning info.
Automatic categorization for MediaWiki
C-C-C-C-Category Cycle Breaker (breaking the category cycles on wikipedia, currently based on dumps for cycle-finding)
Sharp and sparky static site generation.
🏔️ A functional web framework that streamlines explicit development practices while eliminating global state.
Data Generator
delta force
Lightweight, super fast C/C++ (& Python) library for sequence alignment using edit (Levenshtein) distance.
Exogenic linkrot for limited sharing. An example application for Clastic, Strata, and Lithoxyl.
EspyMetrics is a pure-Python analytics service that tracks Python usage. It is the reference project for Enterprise Software with Python.
A web tool and command line utility to make sense of VTA (http://www.vta.org/) Light Rail schedules.
fork of etavta for playing around with openshift
Ultralightweight Python templating
a few solutions here and there
🗿 Straightforward CLI parsing and dispatching microframework
backport of lib2to3, with enhancements
☄️ Python's nested data operator (and CLI), for all your declarative restructuring needs. Got data? Glom it! ☄️
:books: The simple, open source tab archiver for Chrome and Firefox
a little maintenance utility for tumblr blogs
gunicorn 'Green Unicorn' is a WSGI HTTP Server for UNIX, fast clients and sleepy applications.
Oh, y'know, some Wikipedia thoughts.