Alternatives to Web2py logo

Alternatives to Web2py

Django, Bottle, Flask, Laravel, and JavaScript are the most popular alternatives and competitors to Web2py.
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43
+ 1
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What is Web2py and what are its top alternatives?

It is a free open source full-stack framework for rapid development of fast, scalable, secure and portable database-driven web-based applications. Written and programmable in Python
Web2py is a tool in the Frameworks (Full Stack) category of a tech stack.

Top Alternatives to Web2py

  • Django
    Django

    Django is a high-level Python Web framework that encourages rapid development and clean, pragmatic design. ...

  • Bottle
    Bottle

    It is distributed as a single file module and has no dependencies other than the Python Standard Library. It has fast and pythonic built-in template engine and support for mako, jinja2 and cheetah templates. ...

  • Flask
    Flask

    Flask is intended for getting started very quickly and was developed with best intentions in mind. ...

  • Laravel
    Laravel

    It is a web application framework with expressive, elegant syntax. It attempts to take the pain out of development by easing common tasks used in the majority of web projects, such as authentication, routing, sessions, and caching. ...

  • JavaScript
    JavaScript

    JavaScript is most known as the scripting language for Web pages, but used in many non-browser environments as well such as node.js or Apache CouchDB. It is a prototype-based, multi-paradigm scripting language that is dynamic,and supports object-oriented, imperative, and functional programming styles. ...

  • Python
    Python

    Python is a general purpose programming language created by Guido Van Rossum. Python is most praised for its elegant syntax and readable code, if you are just beginning your programming career python suits you best. ...

  • Node.js
    Node.js

    Node.js uses an event-driven, non-blocking I/O model that makes it lightweight and efficient, perfect for data-intensive real-time applications that run across distributed devices. ...

  • HTML5
    HTML5

    HTML5 is a core technology markup language of the Internet used for structuring and presenting content for the World Wide Web. As of October 2014 this is the final and complete fifth revision of the HTML standard of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). The previous version, HTML 4, was standardised in 1997. ...

Web2py alternatives & related posts

Django logo

Django

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4.2K
The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines
38.5K
4.2K
PROS OF DJANGO
  • 675
    Rapid development
  • 488
    Open source
  • 426
    Great community
  • 380
    Easy to learn
  • 277
    Mvc
  • 232
    Beautiful code
  • 223
    Elegant
  • 208
    Free
  • 203
    Great packages
  • 194
    Great libraries
  • 80
    Comes with auth and crud admin panel
  • 79
    Restful
  • 78
    Powerful
  • 76
    Great documentation
  • 72
    Great for web
  • 57
    Python
  • 43
    Great orm
  • 41
    Great for api
  • 32
    All included
  • 29
    Fast
  • 25
    Web Apps
  • 23
    Clean
  • 23
    Easy setup
  • 21
    Used by top startups
  • 19
    Sexy
  • 19
    ORM
  • 15
    The Django community
  • 14
    Allows for very rapid development with great libraries
  • 14
    Convention over configuration
  • 11
    King of backend world
  • 10
    Full stack
  • 10
    Great MVC and templating engine
  • 8
    Mvt
  • 8
    Fast prototyping
  • 7
    Its elegant and practical
  • 7
    Easy to develop end to end AI Models
  • 7
    Batteries included
  • 6
    Cross-Platform
  • 6
    Very quick to get something up and running
  • 6
    Have not found anything that it can't do
  • 5
    Zero code burden to change databases
  • 5
    Great peformance
  • 5
    Python community
  • 5
    Easy Structure , useful inbuilt library
  • 4
    Easy to use
  • 4
    Map
  • 4
    Easy to change database manager
  • 4
    Full-Text Search
  • 4
    Just the right level of abstraction
  • 4
    Many libraries
  • 4
    Modular
  • 4
    Easy
  • 3
    Scaffold
  • 1
    Node js
  • 1
    Built in common security
  • 1
    Great default admin panel
  • 1
    Scalable
  • 1
    Gigante ta
  • 1
    Cons
  • 1
    Fastapi
  • 0
    Rails
CONS OF DJANGO
  • 26
    Underpowered templating
  • 22
    Autoreload restarts whole server
  • 22
    Underpowered ORM
  • 15
    URL dispatcher ignores HTTP method
  • 10
    Internal subcomponents coupling
  • 8
    Not nodejs
  • 8
    Configuration hell
  • 7
    Admin
  • 5
    Not as clean and nice documentation like Laravel
  • 4
    Python
  • 3
    Not typed
  • 3
    Bloated admin panel included
  • 2
    Overwhelming folder structure
  • 2
    InEffective Multithreading
  • 1
    Not type safe

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Shared insights
on
TensorFlowTensorFlowDjangoDjangoPythonPython

Hi, I have an LMS application, currently developed in Python-Django.

It works all very well, students can view their classes and submit exams, but I have noticed that some students are sharing exam answers with other students and let's say they already have a model of the exams.

I want with the help of artificial intelligence, the exams to have different questions and in a different order for each student, what technology should I learn to develop something like this? I am a Python-Django developer but my focus is on web development, I have never touched anything from A.I.

What do you think about TensorFlow?

Please, I would appreciate all your ideas and opinions, thank you very much in advance.

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Dmitry Mukhin
Engineer at Uploadcare · | 25 upvotes · 2.6M views

Simple controls over complex technologies, as we put it, wouldn't be possible without neat UIs for our user areas including start page, dashboard, settings, and docs.

Initially, there was Django. Back in 2011, considering our Python-centric approach, that was the best choice. Later, we realized we needed to iterate on our website more quickly. And this led us to detaching Django from our front end. That was when we decided to build an SPA.

For building user interfaces, we're currently using React as it provided the fastest rendering back when we were building our toolkit. It’s worth mentioning Uploadcare is not a front-end-focused SPA: we aren’t running at high levels of complexity. If it were, we’d go with Ember.js.

However, there's a chance we will shift to the faster Preact, with its motto of using as little code as possible, and because it makes more use of browser APIs. One of our future tasks for our front end is to configure our Webpack bundler to split up the code for different site sections. For styles, we use PostCSS along with its plugins such as cssnano which minifies all the code.

All that allows us to provide a great user experience and quickly implement changes where they are needed with as little code as possible.

See more
Bottle logo

Bottle

68
5
A lightweight WSGI micro web-framework for Python
68
5
PROS OF BOTTLE
  • 2
    Great documentation
  • 2
    Super easy to use
  • 1
    Faster
CONS OF BOTTLE
    Be the first to leave a con

    related Bottle posts

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    Flask

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    60
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    • 7
      User friendly
    • 6
      Secured
    • 5
      Unopinionated
    • 2
      Secure
    • 2
      Customizable
    • 1
      Simple to use
    • 1
      Powerful
    • 1
      Rapid development
    • 1
      Flask
    • 1
      Easy to get started
    • 1
      Easy to develop and maintain applications
    • 1
      Easy to setup and get it going
    • 1
      Easy to use
    • 1
      Documentation
    • 1
      Beautiful code
    • 1
      Orm
    • 1
      Not JS
    • 1
      Perfect for small to large projects with superb docs.
    • 1
      Easy to integrate
    • 1
      Speed
    • 1
      Get started quickly
    • 1
      Python
    • 1
      Minimal
    • 1
      Lightweight
    • 0
      Flexibilty
    • 0
      Well designed
    • 0
      Productive
    • 0
      Awesome
    • 0
      Open source
    • 0
      Expressive
    • 0
      Love it
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    • 10
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    • 7
      Context
    • 5
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    • 1
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    James Man
    Software Engineer at Pinterest · | 47 upvotes · 3M views
    Shared insights
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    One of our top priorities at Pinterest is fostering a safe and trustworthy experience for all Pinners. As Pinterest’s user base and ads business grow, the review volume has been increasing exponentially, and more content types require moderation support. To solve greater engineering and operational challenges at scale, we needed a highly-reliable and performant system to detect, report, evaluate, and act on abusive content and users and so we created Pinqueue.

    Pinqueue-3.0 serves as a generic platform for content moderation and human labeling. Under the hood, Pinqueue3.0 is a Flask + React app powered by Pinterest’s very own Gestalt UI framework. On the backend, Pinqueue3.0 heavily relies on PinLater, a Pinterest-built reliable asynchronous job execution system, to handle the requests for enqueueing and action-taking. Using PinLater has significantly strengthened Pinqueue3.0’s overall infra with its capability of processing a massive load of events with configurable retry policies.

    Hundreds of millions of people around the world use Pinterest to discover and do what they love, and our job is to protect them from abusive and harmful content. We’re committed to providing an inspirational yet safe experience to all Pinners. Solving trust & safety problems is a joint effort requiring expertise across multiple domains. Pinqueue3.0 not only plays a critical role in responsively taking down unsafe content, it also has become an enabler for future ML/automation initiatives by providing high-quality human labels. Going forward, we will continue to improve the review experience, measure review quality and collaborate with our machine learning teams to solve content moderation beyond manual reviews at an even larger scale.

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    Hey, so I developed a basic application with Python. But to use it, you need a python interpreter. I want to add a GUI to make it more appealing. What should I choose to develop a GUI? I have very basic skills in front end development (CSS, JavaScript). I am fluent in python. I'm looking for a tool that is easy to use and doesn't require too much code knowledge. I have recently tried out Flask, but it is kinda complicated. Should I stick with it, move to Django, or is there another nice framework to use?

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    Laravel logo

    Laravel

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    3.9K
    A PHP Framework For Web Artisans
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    • 392
      Growing community
    • 370
      Composer friendly
    • 344
      Open source
    • 325
      The only framework to consider for php
    • 221
      Mvc
    • 210
      Quickly develop
    • 168
      Dependency injection
    • 156
      Application architecture
    • 143
      Embraces good community packages
    • 73
      Write less, do more
    • 71
      Orm (eloquent)
    • 66
      Restful routing
    • 57
      Database migrations & seeds
    • 55
      Artisan scaffolding and migrations
    • 41
      Great documentation
    • 40
      Awesome
    • 30
      Awsome, Powerfull, Fast and Rapid
    • 29
      Build Apps faster, easier and better
    • 28
      Eloquent ORM
    • 26
      JSON friendly
    • 26
      Modern PHP
    • 26
      Promotes elegant coding
    • 25
      Most easy for me
    • 24
      Easy to learn, scalability
    • 23
      Beautiful
    • 22
      Blade Template
    • 21
      Test-Driven
    • 15
      Security
    • 15
      Based on SOLID
    • 13
      Clean Documentation
    • 13
      Easy to attach Middleware
    • 13
      Cool
    • 12
      Simple
    • 12
      Convention over Configuration
    • 11
      Easy Request Validatin
    • 10
      Simpler
    • 10
      Easy to use
    • 10
      Fast
    • 9
      Get going quickly straight out of the box. BYOKDM
    • 9
      Its just wow
    • 8
      Laravel + Cassandra = Killer Framework
    • 8
      Simplistic , easy and faster
    • 8
      Friendly API
    • 7
      Less dependencies
    • 7
      Super easy and powerful
    • 6
      Great customer support
    • 6
      Its beautiful to code in
    • 5
      Speed
    • 5
      Eloquent
    • 5
      Composer
    • 5
      Minimum system requirements
    • 5
      Laravel Mix
    • 5
      Easy
    • 5
      The only "cons" is wrong! No static method just Facades
    • 5
      Fast and Clarify framework
    • 5
      Active Record
    • 5
      Php7
    • 4
      Ease of use
    • 4
      Laragon
    • 4
      Laravel casher
    • 4
      Easy views handling and great ORM
    • 4
      Laravel Forge and Envoy
    • 4
      Cashier with Braintree and Stripe
    • 3
      Laravel Passport
    • 3
      Laravel Spark
    • 3
      Intuitive usage
    • 3
      Laravel Horizon and Telescope
    • 3
      Laravel Nova
    • 3
      Rapid development
    • 2
      Laravel Vite
    • 2
      Scout
    • 2
      Deployment
    • 1
      Succint sintax
    CONS OF LARAVEL
    • 54
      PHP
    • 33
      Too many dependency
    • 23
      Slower than the other two
    • 17
      A lot of static method calls for convenience
    • 15
      Too many include
    • 13
      Heavy
    • 9
      Bloated
    • 8
      Laravel
    • 7
      Confusing
    • 5
      Too underrated
    • 4
      Not fast with MongoDB
    • 1
      Slow and too much big
    • 1
      Not using SOLID principles
    • 1
      Difficult to learn

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    Need help deciding technology stack. Thanks.

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    David Watson
    at Realtime App Solutions · | 15 upvotes · 108.4K views

    Coming from a non-web development environment background, I was a bit lost a first and bewildered by all the varying tools and platforms, and spent much too long evaluating before eventualy deciding on Laravel as the main core of my development.

    But as I started development with Laravel that lead me into discovering Vue.js for creating beautiful front-end components that were easy to configure and extend, so I decided to standardise on Vue.js for most of my front-end development.

    During my search for additional Vue.js components, a chance comment in a @laravel forum , led me to discover Quasar Framework initially for it's wide range of in-built components ... but once, I realised that Quasar Framework allowed me to use the same codebase to create apps for SPA, PWA, iOS, Android, and Electron then I was hooked.

    So, I'm now using mainly just Quasar Framework for all the front-end, with Laravel providing a backend API service to the Front-end apps.

    I'm deploying this all to DigitalOcean droplets via service called Moss.sh which deploys my private GitHub repositories directly to DigitalOcean in realtime.

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    JavaScript logo

    JavaScript

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    8.1K
    Lightweight, interpreted, object-oriented language with first-class functions
    371.1K
    8.1K
    PROS OF JAVASCRIPT
    • 1.7K
      Can be used on frontend/backend
    • 1.5K
      It's everywhere
    • 1.2K
      Lots of great frameworks
    • 899
      Fast
    • 746
      Light weight
    • 425
      Flexible
    • 392
      You can't get a device today that doesn't run js
    • 286
      Non-blocking i/o
    • 237
      Ubiquitousness
    • 191
      Expressive
    • 55
      Extended functionality to web pages
    • 49
      Relatively easy language
    • 46
      Executed on the client side
    • 30
      Relatively fast to the end user
    • 25
      Pure Javascript
    • 21
      Functional programming
    • 15
      Async
    • 13
      Full-stack
    • 12
      Its everywhere
    • 12
      Future Language of The Web
    • 12
      Setup is easy
    • 11
      JavaScript is the New PHP
    • 11
      Because I love functions
    • 10
      Like it or not, JS is part of the web standard
    • 9
      Everyone use it
    • 9
      Can be used in backend, frontend and DB
    • 9
      Easy
    • 9
      Expansive community
    • 8
      For the good parts
    • 8
      Easy to hire developers
    • 8
      No need to use PHP
    • 8
      Most Popular Language in the World
    • 8
      Powerful
    • 8
      Can be used both as frontend and backend as well
    • 7
      It's fun
    • 7
      Its fun and fast
    • 7
      Popularized Class-Less Architecture & Lambdas
    • 7
      Agile, packages simple to use
    • 7
      Supports lambdas and closures
    • 7
      Love-hate relationship
    • 7
      Photoshop has 3 JS runtimes built in
    • 7
      Evolution of C
    • 7
      Hard not to use
    • 7
      Versitile
    • 7
      Nice
    • 6
      Easy to make something
    • 6
      Can be used on frontend/backend/Mobile/create PRO Ui
    • 6
      1.6K Can be used on frontend/backend
    • 6
      Client side JS uses the visitors CPU to save Server Res
    • 6
      It let's me use Babel & Typescript
    • 5
      Clojurescript
    • 5
      Everywhere
    • 5
      Scope manipulation
    • 5
      Function expressions are useful for callbacks
    • 5
      Stockholm Syndrome
    • 5
      Promise relationship
    • 5
      Client processing
    • 5
      What to add
    • 4
      Because it is so simple and lightweight
    • 4
      Only Programming language on browser
    • 1
      Subskill #4
    • 1
      Test2
    • 1
      Easy to understand
    • 1
      Not the best
    • 1
      Easy to learn
    • 1
      Hard to learn
    • 1
      Easy to learn and test
    • 1
      Love it
    • 1
      Test
    • 0
      Hard 彤
    CONS OF JAVASCRIPT
    • 22
      A constant moving target, too much churn
    • 20
      Horribly inconsistent
    • 15
      Javascript is the New PHP
    • 9
      No ability to monitor memory utilitization
    • 8
      Shows Zero output in case of ANY error
    • 7
      Thinks strange results are better than errors
    • 6
      Can be ugly
    • 3
      No GitHub
    • 2
      Slow
    • 0
      HORRIBLE DOCUMENTS, faulty code, repo has bugs

    related JavaScript posts

    Zach Holman

    Oof. I have truly hated JavaScript for a long time. Like, for over twenty years now. Like, since the Clinton administration. It's always been a nightmare to deal with all of the aspects of that silly language.

    But wowza, things have changed. Tooling is just way, way better. I'm primarily web-oriented, and using React and Apollo together the past few years really opened my eyes to building rich apps. And I deeply apologize for using the phrase rich apps; I don't think I've ever said such Enterprisey words before.

    But yeah, things are different now. I still love Rails, and still use it for a lot of apps I build. But it's that silly rich apps phrase that's the problem. Users have way more comprehensive expectations than they did even five years ago, and the JS community does a good job at building tools and tech that tackle the problems of making heavy, complicated UI and frontend work.

    Obviously there's a lot of things happening here, so just saying "JavaScript isn't terrible" might encompass a huge amount of libraries and frameworks. But if you're like me, yeah, give things another shot- I'm somehow not hating on JavaScript anymore and... gulp... I kinda love it.

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    Conor Myhrvold
    Tech Brand Mgr, Office of CTO at Uber · | 44 upvotes · 13.3M views

    How Uber developed the open source, end-to-end distributed tracing Jaeger , now a CNCF project:

    Distributed tracing is quickly becoming a must-have component in the tools that organizations use to monitor their complex, microservice-based architectures. At Uber, our open source distributed tracing system Jaeger saw large-scale internal adoption throughout 2016, integrated into hundreds of microservices and now recording thousands of traces every second.

    Here is the story of how we got here, from investigating off-the-shelf solutions like Zipkin, to why we switched from pull to push architecture, and how distributed tracing will continue to evolve:

    https://eng.uber.com/distributed-tracing/

    (GitHub Pages : https://www.jaegertracing.io/, GitHub: https://github.com/jaegertracing/jaeger)

    Bindings/Operator: Python Java Node.js Go C++ Kubernetes JavaScript OpenShift C# Apache Spark

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    Python logo

    Python

    250.3K
    6.9K
    A clear and powerful object-oriented programming language, comparable to Perl, Ruby, Scheme, or Java.
    250.3K
    6.9K
    PROS OF PYTHON
    • 1.2K
      Great libraries
    • 965
      Readable code
    • 848
      Beautiful code
    • 789
      Rapid development
    • 692
      Large community
    • 439
      Open source
    • 394
      Elegant
    • 283
      Great community
    • 274
      Object oriented
    • 222
      Dynamic typing
    • 78
      Great standard library
    • 62
      Very fast
    • 56
      Functional programming
    • 52
      Easy to learn
    • 47
      Scientific computing
    • 36
      Great documentation
    • 30
      Productivity
    • 29
      Matlab alternative
    • 29
      Easy to read
    • 25
      Simple is better than complex
    • 21
      It's the way I think
    • 20
      Imperative
    • 19
      Very programmer and non-programmer friendly
    • 19
      Free
    • 17
      Powerfull language
    • 17
      Machine learning support
    • 16
      Fast and simple
    • 14
      Scripting
    • 12
      Explicit is better than implicit
    • 11
      Ease of development
    • 10
      Clear and easy and powerfull
    • 9
      Unlimited power
    • 8
      It's lean and fun to code
    • 8
      Import antigravity
    • 7
      Print "life is short, use python"
    • 7
      Python has great libraries for data processing
    • 6
      Although practicality beats purity
    • 6
      Fast coding and good for competitions
    • 6
      There should be one-- and preferably only one --obvious
    • 6
      High Documented language
    • 6
      Readability counts
    • 6
      Rapid Prototyping
    • 6
      I love snakes
    • 6
      Now is better than never
    • 6
      Flat is better than nested
    • 6
      Great for tooling
    • 5
      Great for analytics
    • 5
      Web scraping
    • 5
      Lists, tuples, dictionaries
    • 4
      Complex is better than complicated
    • 4
      Socially engaged community
    • 4
      Plotting
    • 4
      Beautiful is better than ugly
    • 4
      Easy to learn and use
    • 4
      Easy to setup and run smooth
    • 4
      Simple and easy to learn
    • 4
      Multiple Inheritence
    • 4
      CG industry needs
    • 3
      List comprehensions
    • 3
      Powerful language for AI
    • 3
      Flexible and easy
    • 3
      It is Very easy , simple and will you be love programmi
    • 3
      Many types of collections
    • 3
      If the implementation is easy to explain, it may be a g
    • 3
      If the implementation is hard to explain, it's a bad id
    • 3
      Special cases aren't special enough to break the rules
    • 3
      Pip install everything
    • 3
      No cruft
    • 3
      Generators
    • 3
      Import this
    • 2
      Can understand easily who are new to programming
    • 2
      Securit
    • 2
      Should START with this but not STICK with This
    • 2
      A-to-Z
    • 2
      Because of Netflix
    • 2
      Only one way to do it
    • 2
      Better outcome
    • 2
      Good for hacking
    • 2
      Batteries included
    • 2
      Procedural programming
    • 1
      Sexy af
    • 1
      Automation friendly
    • 1
      Slow
    • 1
      Best friend for NLP
    • 0
      Powerful
    • 0
      Keep it simple
    • 0
      Ni
    CONS OF PYTHON
    • 53
      Still divided between python 2 and python 3
    • 28
      Performance impact
    • 26
      Poor syntax for anonymous functions
    • 22
      GIL
    • 19
      Package management is a mess
    • 14
      Too imperative-oriented
    • 12
      Hard to understand
    • 12
      Dynamic typing
    • 12
      Very slow
    • 8
      Indentations matter a lot
    • 8
      Not everything is expression
    • 7
      Incredibly slow
    • 7
      Explicit self parameter in methods
    • 6
      Requires C functions for dynamic modules
    • 6
      Poor DSL capabilities
    • 6
      No anonymous functions
    • 5
      Fake object-oriented programming
    • 5
      Threading
    • 5
      The "lisp style" whitespaces
    • 5
      Official documentation is unclear.
    • 5
      Hard to obfuscate
    • 5
      Circular import
    • 4
      Lack of Syntax Sugar leads to "the pyramid of doom"
    • 4
      The benevolent-dictator-for-life quit
    • 4
      Not suitable for autocomplete
    • 2
      Meta classes
    • 1
      Training wheels (forced indentation)

    related Python posts

    Conor Myhrvold
    Tech Brand Mgr, Office of CTO at Uber · | 44 upvotes · 13.3M views

    How Uber developed the open source, end-to-end distributed tracing Jaeger , now a CNCF project:

    Distributed tracing is quickly becoming a must-have component in the tools that organizations use to monitor their complex, microservice-based architectures. At Uber, our open source distributed tracing system Jaeger saw large-scale internal adoption throughout 2016, integrated into hundreds of microservices and now recording thousands of traces every second.

    Here is the story of how we got here, from investigating off-the-shelf solutions like Zipkin, to why we switched from pull to push architecture, and how distributed tracing will continue to evolve:

    https://eng.uber.com/distributed-tracing/

    (GitHub Pages : https://www.jaegertracing.io/, GitHub: https://github.com/jaegertracing/jaeger)

    Bindings/Operator: Python Java Node.js Go C++ Kubernetes JavaScript OpenShift C# Apache Spark

    See more
    Shared insights
    on
    TensorFlowTensorFlowDjangoDjangoPythonPython

    Hi, I have an LMS application, currently developed in Python-Django.

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