Security News
Introducing the Socket Python SDK
The initial version of the Socket Python SDK is now on PyPI, enabling developers to more easily interact with the Socket REST API in Python projects.
Notice: patsy
is no longer under active development. As of August 2021,
Matthew Wardrop (@matthewwardrop) and Tomás Capretto (@tomicapretto) have taken
on responsibility from Nathaniel Smith (@njsmith) for keeping the lights on, but
no new feature development is planned. The spiritual successor of this project
is Formulaic, and we
recommend that users migrate
when possible. For the time being, until major software packages have successfully
transitioned, we will attempt to keep patsy
working in its current state with
current releases in the Python ecosystem.
Patsy is a Python library for describing statistical models (especially linear models, or models that have a linear component) and building design matrices. Patsy brings the convenience of R "formulas" to Python.
bs
pip install patsy
(or, for traditionalists: python setup.py install
)
2-clause BSD, see LICENSE.txt for details.
FAQs
A Python package for describing statistical models and for building design matrices.
We found that patsy demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 3 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Security News
The initial version of the Socket Python SDK is now on PyPI, enabling developers to more easily interact with the Socket REST API in Python projects.
Security News
Floating dependency ranges in npm can introduce instability and security risks into your project by allowing unverified or incompatible versions to be installed automatically, leading to unpredictable behavior and potential conflicts.
Security News
A new Rust RFC proposes "Trusted Publishing" for Crates.io, introducing short-lived access tokens via OIDC to improve security and reduce risks associated with long-lived API tokens.