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Source channel @githubtrending · Post #15523 · Feb 25

#typescript#agent#agentic#agentic_framework#agentic_workflow#ai#ai_agents#bytedance#deep_research#harness#langchain#langgraph#langmanus#llm#multi_agent#nodejs#podcast#python#superagent#typescript DeerFlow 2.0 is an open-source super agent harness that orchestrates multiple sub-agents, memory systems, and sandboxed execution environments to accomplish complex tasks. Built on LangGraph and LangChain, it combines research, coding, and content creation capabilities with extensible skills and tools. The platform features isolated Docker containers for safe execution, long-term memory that learns your preferences, and the ability to spawn sub-agents that work in parallel on different task angles. You benefit from dramatically reduced research and automation time—tasks that typically take hours complete in minutes—while maintaining full transparency and control over agent decisions through human-in-the-loop collaboration. Whether you need deep research reports, data analysis, slide decks, or custom workflows, DeerFlow handles multi-step complexity without requiring extensive coding knowledge. https://github.com/bytedance/deer-flow

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djangoproject

@djangoproject · Post #574 · 02/25/2018, 02:34 PM

http://www.paulbrownmagic.com/blog/python_partial_application Python Partial: Code Your Intention Of all the functional programming inspired features in Python, partial application must be the best kept secret that you really need to know. Partial application lets you create highly abstract functions and make them more specific for use, pass a function arguments without calling it yet, and so much more. #tuple#sort

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djangoproject

@djangoproject · Post #153 · 09/03/2016, 08:20 PM

http://wla.berkeley.edu/~cs61a/fa11/lectures/streams.html In this chapter, we continue our discussion of real-world applications by developing new tools to process #sequential#data. In Chapter 2, we introduced a sequence interface, implemented in Python by built-in data types such as #tuple and #list. #Sequences supported two operations: querying their length and accessing an element by index. In Chapter 3, we developed a user-defined implementations of the sequence interface, the Rlist class for representing recursive lists. These sequence types proved effective for representing and accessing a wide variety of sequential #datasets.