Message337414
| Author |
Anthony Sottile |
| Recipients |
Anthony Sottile, Chris Billington, Ivan.Pozdeev, Peter L3, SilentGhost, __Vano, barry, brett.cannon, cheryl.sabella, christian.heimes, eric.smith, eric.snow, ethan smith, ionelmc, jaraco, mhammond, ncoghlan, pitrou, steve.dower, takluyver, terry.reedy, veky |
| Date |
2019年03月07日.17:32:09 |
| SpamBayes Score |
-1.0 |
| Marked as misclassified |
Yes |
| Message-id |
<1551979929.48.0.0677026334069.issue33944@roundup.psfhosted.org> |
| In-reply-to |
| Content |
> What I'm dismissing is that "pip install some-package" can define a global startup task for your interpreter. I shouldn't get debugging or code coverage enabled every time I run "python" just because I installed some package
At least for the coverage tools they all play nice and require an environment variable to be set for them to take. For example, `coverage-enable-subprocess` requires `COVERAGE_PROCESS_START=...` in order to start: https://github.com/bukzor/coverage_enable_subprocess/blob/9a0f4df99f0d008eba305c673dfae4269c6c5642/setup.py#L14
> I should have to start that package somehow.
`pip install` is a pretty good opt-in already imo
> Instead of just shipping "my_module.foo", you ship "my_module.py" and "_my_module.foo", where "my_module.py" looks like:
but that's exactly my point, now you have to ship extra junk python files when it's a way better experience to have the hooks _just work_ |
|
History
|
|---|
| Date |
User |
Action |
Args |
| 2019年03月07日 17:32:09 | Anthony Sottile | set | recipients:
+ Anthony Sottile, mhammond, barry, brett.cannon, terry.reedy, jaraco, ncoghlan, pitrou, eric.smith, christian.heimes, ionelmc, SilentGhost, __Vano, eric.snow, takluyver, steve.dower, veky, Ivan.Pozdeev, ethan smith, cheryl.sabella, Chris Billington, Peter L3 |
| 2019年03月07日 17:32:09 | Anthony Sottile | set | messageid: <1551979929.48.0.0677026334069.issue33944@roundup.psfhosted.org> |
| 2019年03月07日 17:32:09 | Anthony Sottile | link | issue33944 messages |
| 2019年03月07日 17:32:09 | Anthony Sottile | create |
|