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Socket Now Supports pylock.toml Files
Socket now supports pylock.toml, enabling secure, reproducible Python builds with advanced scanning and full alignment with PEP 751's new standard.
A tiny, secure, URL-friendly, unique string ID generator for Python.
Install Nano ID using pip:
pip install nanoid
The main module uses URL-friendly symbols (A-Za-z0-9_-) and returns an ID with 21 characters (to have a collision probability similar to UUID v4).
from nanoid import generate
generate() # => NDzkGoTCdRcaRyt7GOepg
Symbols -,.()
are not encoded in the URL. If used at the end of a link they could be identified as a punctuation symbol.
If you want to reduce ID length (and increase collisions probability), you can pass the length as an argument.
from nanoid import generate
generate(size=10) # => "IRFa-VaY2b"
Don’t forget to check the safety of your ID length in ID collision probability calculator.
If you want to change the ID's alphabet or length you can use the internal generate module.
from nanoid import generate
generate('1234567890abcdef', 10) # => "4f9zd13a42"
Non-secure API is also available:
from nanoid import non_secure_generate
non_secure_generate('1234567890abcdef', 10)
nanoid-dictionary
with popular alphabets to use.FAQs
A tiny, secure, URL-friendly, unique string ID generator for Python
We found that nanoid demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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Socket now supports pylock.toml, enabling secure, reproducible Python builds with advanced scanning and full alignment with PEP 751's new standard.
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