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A library that allows the embedding of configuration information in Python code. Martian can then grok the system and do the appropriate configuration registrations. One example of a system that uses Martian is the system where it originated: Grok
Data used by python-matplotlib
Fonts used by python-matplotlib
Stateful programmatic web browsing, after Andy Lester's Perl module WWW::Mechanize. The library is layered: mechanize.Browser (stateful web browser), mechanize.UserAgent (configurable URL opener), plus urllib2 handlers. Features include: ftp:, http: and file: URL schemes, browser history, high-level hyperlink and HTML form support, HTTP cookies, HTTP-EQUIV and Refresh, Referer [sic] header, robots.txt, redirections, proxies, and Basic and Digest HTTP authentication. mechanize's response objects are (lazily-) .seek()able and still work after .close(). Much of the code originally derived from Perl code by Gisle Aas (libwww-perl), Johnny Lee (MSIE Cookie support) and last but not least Andy Lester (WWW::Mechanize). urllib2 was written by Jeremy Hylton.
Profilehooks is a collection of decorators for profiling functions.
Documentation and example files for the psycopg python PostgreSQL database adapter.
This module uses the Python Imaging Library (PIL) to allow for the generation of QR Codes.
RDFLib is a Python library for working with RDF, a simple yet powerful language for representing information. The library contains parsers and serializers for RDF/XML, N3, NTriples, Turtle, TriX, RDFa and Microdata. The library presents a Graph interface which can be backed by any one of a number of Store implementations. The core rdflib includes store implementations for in memory storage, persistent storage on top of the Berkeley DB, and a wrapper for remote SPARQL endpoints. A SPARQL 1.1 engine is also included.
Robot Framework is a generic test automation framework for acceptance testing and acceptance test-driven development (ATDD). It has easy-to-use tabular test data syntax and utilizes the keyword-driven testing approach. Its testing capabilities can be extended by test libraries implemented either with Python or Java, and users can create new keywords from existing ones using the same syntax that is used for creating test cases.