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Source channel @githubtrending · Post #15049 · Aug 12

#java#distributed_systems#durable_execution#grpc#java#javascript#microservice_orchestration#orchestration_engine#orchestrator#reactjs#spring_boot#workflow_automation#workflow_engine#workflow_management#workflows Conductor is an open-source tool that helps you manage and automate complex workflows involving many microservices and systems. It makes your workflows flexible, reliable, and scalable by handling retries, errors, and monitoring automatically. You can define workflows as code in JSON, use various task types, and manage workflows dynamically without tightly coupling services. It offers an easy-to-use web interface and supports multiple databases like Redis and MySQL. This helps you build, run, and monitor workflows efficiently, saving time and reducing errors in managing distributed applications. It also has SDKs for Java, Python, JavaScript, Go, and C# to integrate easily with your projects. https://github.com/conductor-oss/conductor

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djangoproject

@djangoproject · Post #206 · 12/06/2016, 03:28 PM

http://www.enlistq.com/10-python-idioms-to-help-you-improve-your-code/ If you have ever tried to learn a new language (not a programming language), you know that we always think in our native language before we translate it to the new language. This can lead to you forming some sentences that don’t make sense in the new language but are perfectly normal in your native language. For example, in a lot of languages, you ‘open’ an electronic gadget such as fan, AC or cell phone. When you say that in English, it means to literally open the gadget instead of turning it on. The same is true for programming languages. As we pick up new languages, such as #python, we are using our prior knowledge of programming in another language (q, java, c++ etc) and translating that to python. Many times, your code will work but it won’t be ‘#pretty’ or #fast. In python terms, your code won’t be ‘#pythonic’.