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[[Anchor(1)]]
#1.
'''Introduction to Pyparsing: An Object-oriented Easy-to-Use Toolkit for Building Recursive Descent Parsers'''

Paul McGuire / Alan Weber & Associates, Inc.

pyparsing is a pure-Python module, containing a class library for
easily creating recursive-descent parsers. pyparsing's syntax
provides tools for both simple tokenization and data structuring and
interpretation. I will give an overview of the basic features of
pyparsing, and a *very quick* overview of the advanced features. I
will close with 3 or 4 application examples, time-permitting. (For
more detail on the type of information I have to present on pyparsing,
you can visit my SourceForge project web page at
http://pyparsing.sourceforge.net.)

                                         

----
[[Anchor(2)]]
#2.
'''Agile Documentation: using tests as documentation'''

Grig Gheorghiu

Agile Documentation means having unit tests serve a double role:
testing your code and documenting it at the same time. I borrowed the
term "Agile Documentation" from an article called "Double Duty"
written by Brian Button.

In the talk, I will show how doctest and epydoc make it very easy to
automatically generate documentation in the form of Test Lists and
Test Maps. To see how it all integrates together, check out
http://agile.unisonis.com/epydoc/blogmgmt/

I will also show how the Django project generates API reference Web
pages automatically from doctest-based unit tests.

I will finish my talk by mentioning the Wiki functionality of FitNesse
as a mechanism for using acceptance tests as documentation.

The talk is based on the following blog entries I posted:

http://agiletesting.blogspot.com/2005/02/agile-documentation-with-doctest-and.html

http://agiletesting.blogspot.com/2005/08/agile-documentation-in-django-project.html

http://agiletesting.blogspot.com/2004/11/writing-fitnesse-tests-in-python.html





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[[Anchor(4)]]
#4.
'''An Interactive Adventure Game Engine Built Using Pyparsing'''

Paul McGuire / Alan Weber & Associates, Inc.

A pure-Python command interpreter engine for creating text adventure
games. Used as an example of creating a custom "little language", in
this case, the domain being a simple text-based adventure game.
Provides a complete example of using pyparsing to structure input
commands, with an internal Command structure to implement command
behavior.

----
[[Anchor(5)]]
#5.
'''Desktop Application Programming With PyGTK and Glade'''

Michael Urban / Lion Research Center

GTK is the standard toolkit used in the Gnome desktop
environment. Python, combined with PyGTK and the Glade visual designer
is rapidly becoming the Visual Basic of the Gnome world for quickly
and easily building fully featured GUI applications. However,
applications written in Python and PyGTK are not restricted to Gnome
or Linux. In fact, Python PyGTK applications can successfully compete
with Java Swing applications in all areas, including cross-platform
capability, features, and performance.

In this tutorial presentation, I will show how to use the Glade visual
designer plus the PyGTK module to quickly and easily build GTK
applications using Python. Since GTK was originally written for
programming the GIMP image manipulation program, we get a lot of very
powerful image manipulation capability for free in GTK. As such, the
tutorial will be focused around a simple image processing program that
will give us the ability to preview images in a file window, load
images for viewing, and rescale images. I will close the tutorial by
giving a demonstration of a significantly complex real world Python
PyGTK application that exercises many of the features of PyGTK
including image editing, tables with custom table cell renderers,
resizable dividers, and complex data entry forms.

----
[[Anchor(6)]]
#6.
'''Vertebral Fracture Analysis'''

Wesley J. Chun / CyberWeb Consulting

Vertebral Fracture Analysis

Several years ago, at PyCon 2003, I presented a general paper on how
Synarc, a medical imaging company in San Francisco, developed medical
applications using Python. This time, I would like to focus on one
specific project which was my primary responsibility as a Senior
Software Engineer there.

The VFract application is used as part of a set of radiology services
offered by Synarc. In addition to data entry and image digitization,
Synarc provides reading services using software such as VFract to
obtain critical patient data necessary for pharmaceutical companies
participating in clinical trials to determine the effectiveness of
developing medicines. The use of such software helps automate and
expedite patient assessment during the course of these clinical
trials, overall accelerating the time it takes to get new medicines
and treatments to market. The use of VFract has consistently resulted
in about 60% of the company's annual revenue.

The VFract application is one that has been painstakingly developed
for use by doctors (specifically radiologists) to perform vertebral
fracture analysis. Spinal fractures are a primary result of
osteoporsis, a disease afflicting 50% of all women over age fifty.
(Interestingly enough, it also affects one in eight men older than
fifty.) There are no "symptoms" of osteoporosis; in other words,
"nothing happens" until fractures start showing up. There is also no
known cure to oseteoporosis, but many believe it is highly
preventable.

VFract can be used to determine whether new medicines are able to
either prevent or retard vertebral fracture. (Sadly, once fracture
occurs, there is no healing nor reversal.) VFract is used by Synarc
staff doctors to analyze patients over time, i.e., during the course
of a clinical trial. In actuality, VFract is a suite of applications
which perform multiple phases of patient assessment. Each phase uses
a different application which contributes a different data set to the
overall analysis of a single patient's dataset.

The first phase is vertebral identification. This is where a doctor
or trained medical technician determine what the vertebral bodies are
(bones of the spinal column) and labels them on-screen with the help
of the Label application.

Once the first phase is complete, any of three assessment phases can
occur. Which phases are executed is determined by the contract
between Synarc and the pharmaceutical drug company. Needlesstosay,
each phase has a certain financial obligation, some more expensive
than others, so whichever assessment phase(s) are chosen are based on
need and budget. One of the phases, Quantitative Morphometry, using
the VFract application QM, can be performed by either a doctor or
trained medical application while the other two, Semi-Quantitative
(VFract SQ application) and Binary Semi-Quantitative (VFract BSQ
application) must be performed by a radiologist.

In this talk, we will discuss all four of the VFract applications, the
open source components used to build them (specifically the use of
Python as the primary development language), as well as what the general
system hardware architecture is made up of.


----
[[Anchor(8)]]
#8.
'''Scripting .NET with IronPython'''

Martin Maly / Microsoft

IronPython is a fast implementation of the Python programming language
on the .NET Framework. While it stays true to the beauty and
simplicity of Python language, IronPython offers Python programmers
seamless access to the riches of .NET libraries and applications in a
fully dynamic environment.

This talk will focus on practical side of utilizing the power of
IronPython beyond the interactive console development and
exploration. It will demonstrate how to use IronPython to add rich
scripting support to existing .NET applications. This will allow us
not only to explore and animate the application but also extend its
functionality with custom Python code. We will also demonstrate how
IronPython can be used to bring together and orchestrate a wide
variety of .NET components and services.

This talk is targeted at both Python programmers looking to take
advantage the .NET Framework and at .NET programmers looking to learn
how Python can make their jobs easier.




----
[[Anchor(11)]]
#11.
'''Effective AJAX with TurboGears'''

Kevin Dangoor / Blazing Things LLC

Modern web browsers, combined with programming frameworks like
TurboGears, allow for a rich interaction model that was not possible
previously. This interaction model, which is commonly being referred
to as AJAX regardless of whether XML is involved or not, brings new
usability challenges. Just as people have gotten used to browser user
interface elements that have become de facto standards, AJAX rises up
to challenge user expectations.

This talk, and the accompanying paper, will briefly discuss some of
the pitfalls and include demonstrations and code that illustrate ways
to do AJAX so that users are pleasantly surprised, rather than
frustrated.

Each discussion will include an example implementation done with
Python and TurboGears with highlights of how the technique is actually
implemented.

Though TurboGears will be used as the demonstration framework,
previous experience with TurboGears will not be required to understand
the talk or the examples.


----
[[Anchor(12)]]
#12.
'''Stackless Python in EVE Online'''

Kristján Valur Jónsson / ccp games inc.

The massively multiplayer online role-playing game Eve Online,
developed by CCP games in Reykjavík, Iceland, makes heavy use of
Stackless Python to implement game features. This presentation shows
how Stackless Python has been used throughout the code to create a
seamless environment of cooperative multitasking in the game engine
and how Python code and C code interacts in a complex real-world
environment.
 
----
[[Anchor(13)]]
#13.
'''Cuaima MetaInstaller. New tool for managing System Installations.'''

Jesus Rivero / Latinux

The intended use of this timeslot is to introduce "Cuaima" a new
Web-Oriented (LGPL) software program we are writing to simplify the
installation of custom GNU/Linux Distributions.

Cuaima is a MetaInstaller for GNU/Linux and *BSD Operating Systems that runs
on top of a (Python) WebServer to provide local, remote and massive
installations of these *NIX flavoured Systems. The installer is capable of
installing any kind of Distribution and configuring it properly with
preconfigured files or custom parameters such as the Distribution to be
installed, user parameters, root's password, network configuration, etc.
Cuaima takes the whole process of installation to another level.

Cuaima is written almost entirely in Python. The rest of the code is
Javascript for client-side tasks such as field validator's and an
implementation of XMLRPC to provide real-time installation-progress
information.

Cuaima is part of a larger sets of tools that is in the planning stage now
to provide End-Users and Enterprises the ability to create Custom GNU/Linux
Distributions for determined and particular uses.

It is proposed that the Cuaima MetaInstaller be the Official Installer for
the Official Venezuelan Republic GNU/Linux Distribution.

Official HomeSite: http://cuaima.latinux.org


----
[[Anchor(14)]]
#14.
'''Osh: An Open-Source Python-Based Object-Oriented Shell'''

Jack Orenstein / Archivas, Inc.

Osh is not a shell. It is an executable implementing a language that
supports the composition of commands through piping. The objects piped
from one command to the next can be Python primitives (numbers, lists,
maps, etc.); other types such as dates/times, or database rows; or can
represent various OS resources such as files and processes.
Conversions between objects and strings simplify integration with the
Unix environment. The commands included with osh manipulate objects,
access databases, and execute commands remotely, including parallel
execution on nodes in a cluster. In a single osh invocation, all
commands run in a single process. (Multithreading is used only when
executing commands on a cluster.)

Osh is implemented in and exposes Python:

- The objects passed between commands are Python objects. Many of the
  data manipulation commands are geared toward tuples and lists, (see
  examples below).

- Several data manipulation commands have function arguments. The
  functions are expressed in Python, (see examples below).

- Interaction with remote nodes uses pickling to transmit parse trees
  containing commands and arguments, and for returning command output.

----
[[Anchor(16)]]
#16.
'''Decimal for beginners'''

Facundo Batista
In the paper I'll explain what is Decimal, how to use it, and when to use it.


----
[[Anchor(17)]]
#17.
'''Large-scale, cross-platform synchronization using embedded python'''

Alexis Lê-Quôc / Wireless Generation

Wireless Generation uses python to allow the synchronization of
student assessments, from 70k teachers assessing over 1.5 million
students. Because python is a high-level language it is fit to solve
problems both as an embedded cross-platform client and as a
server-side component. This talk will present a few opportunities
where python shone on the client-side:

- cross-platform support
- ease of integration with c++ libraries
- focus on higher-level logic with higher-level code
- savings in development time

----
[[Anchor(18)]]
#18.
'''Internet Access via Anti-Virus Policy Enforcement Software and Messaging Service'''

Jason Hoerr & Frank Wilder / Albright College / P-Wave, Inc.

The presentation will cover the use of Python/wxPython/Perl/MySQL to
create a set of tools to control access to the Internet for over 900
personal computers on a college campus. Access to the Internet is
based on valid registration of the computer on the college network and
the confirmation of a valid antivirus definition file. The tools set
consist of a program that runs on each client machine as a service,
another program that is used to display messages on the client machine
and a set of code that manages the actual connection to the Internet
via virtual network switching on Cicso switches based on setting in a
MySQL database.

----
[[Anchor(19)]]
#19.
'''State-of-the-art Python IDEs'''

Jonathan Ellis / Berkeley Data Systems

This talk will build on the review of 6 IDEs done by the Utah Python
UG and summarized here:
http://spyced.blogspot.com/2005/09/review-of-6-python-ides.html.
In the interest of time, this talk would focus on the most promising
four IDEs: Komodo, PyDev, and Wing, which are in the review-of-6, and
SPE, which is not.

----
[[Anchor(21)]]
#21.
'''Developing an Internationalized Application in Python: Chandler a case study'''

Brian Kirsch / Open Source Application Foundation

Internationalization is the most often overlooked aspect of
Application development. It is a mistaken belief that
Internationalization can easily be added at anytime. This mistake
ultimately results in developers frantically scrambling to patch
together a solution for an architecture which was never designed for
it. Too many products end up in a rewrite when the team finally
discovers just how fundamental a role Internationalization plays.

This talk will cover general concepts on how to design
Internationalized Applications, as well as focus in depth on the
specific choices made for Chandler including leveraging Open Source
libraries and designing for multiple Operating Systems.

----
[[Anchor(23)]]
#23.
'''Processing XML with ElementTree'''

Andrew Kuchling / PSF

ElementTree provides a simple library for processing XML that feels
natural to Python programmers. This talk is a 45-minute tutorial
showing how to perform basic tasks with ElementTree.



----
[[Anchor(24)]]
#24.
'''What is Nabu?'''

Martin Blais / Furius

Nabu is a simple framework for general extraction of data from documents which
exploits the power of expression of simple text files as a medium to fill a
database with entries of various typed informations. It leverages
ReStructuredText_ and the docutils_ document tree as a channel to provide
structure for the formatting of the generic input information.

During this talk I intend to show an example of building a simple publishing
application, probably a blog-like program using a very simple setup (CGI
scripts), a little bit of Python code and text files.


----
[[Anchor(25)]]
#25.
'''TurboGears Tutorial'''

Mark Ramm

I will provide a tutorial for those interested in learning the basics
of the TuboGears web programming megaframework.

----
[[Anchor(26)]]
#26.
'''Packaging Programs with py2exe'''

Jimmy Retzlaff / Aver Development Corporation

py2exe is a Python distutils extension which converts Python scripts
into executable Windows programs, able to run without requiring a
Python installation. This talk by the maintainer of py2exe will cover
the simple use, options, more complex use, and future of py2exe.




----
[[Anchor(28)]]
#28.
'''SAGE: Software For Algebra and Geometry Experimentation'''

William Stein / Dept. of Math., Univ of California, San Diego

I will describe the Python-based computer algebra system SAGE:
Software For Algebra and Geometry Experimentation:
http://modular.ucsd.edu/sage/.

This is a system that several of my colleagues and I have been writing
for the last 18 months. We are using Python, Pyrex, and several major
C/C++ libraries to create a unified powerful open source tool for
research in cryptography, number theory, algebraic geometry and group
theory. SAGE appears to be the first system to address all these area
and use a mainstream interpreter (Python) instead of a custom-designed
mathematics language.

(SAGE is currently funded by NSF grant 0400386, and I'm organizing a
2-day workshop on SAGE two weeks before PYCON.)


----
[[Anchor(29)]]
#29.
'''Python in Business : Thyme, a business-oriented Python development framework.'''

John Pinner / Clockwork Software Systems

At PyCon 2005, I presented PayThyme, Clockwork's industrial-strength
UK statutory payroll. There was some surprise that we had licensed
such a commercial application under the GPL. Since then PayThyme has
been used by over 1000 companies and at London's LinuxWorld expo was
the outright winner of Best Open Source Application.

PayThyme's development platform is Thyme, our own Python development
framework based on Python, C and PyQt. It allows us to develop
business applications very quickly indeed.

This presentation describes Thyme, the rationale behind its design,
demonstrates it in use, and shows how we are updating and extending
it.


----
[[Anchor(30)]]
#30.
'''Python at Home : In Control'''

John Pinner / Clockwork Software Systems

Once upon a time, a long time ago, I installed central heating in our
home, a wet system with gas-fired boiler and a (then) state-of-the-art
control system. Recently I replaced the boiler, but was disappointed
to find that there was no modern equivalent to the old control system.

It didn't take long to realise that it shouldn't be impossible to
create a new and improved controller using PC technology. After all,
all we needed was a few relays to switch things on and off, some
temperature sensors to measure what was going on, a spare PC, and some
software to glue it all together.

So was born a Python-based project to control our heating system, the
objective being to maximise comfort and minimise running costs. It has
been both fun and satisfying putting it into practice.

The presentation will describe the control system and its development.


----
[[Anchor(31)]]
#31.
'''Extending the life of CVS with Python'''

Anthon van der Neut / Pinnacle SYstems

This talk describes how Python is used to overcome problems, and
automate several administrative tasks in a multi-location,
multi-project CVS and CVSup-mirroring setup, as well as a flexible
build system for sources contained in these repositories.


----
[[Anchor(34)]]
#34.
'''The State of Dabo'''

Ed Leafe / The Dabo Project

Dabo is a 3-tier desktop application framework written in Python. Its
database tier allows it to be used with just about any relational
database backend, such as PostgreSQL, MySQL, SQLite and others. Its UI
tier wraps the popular wxPython toolkit, and provides a much more
consistent and Pythonic API for developing GUI applications. It also
makes binding UI controls to data as simple as setting two properties
of the control. Its business object middle tier provides flexibility
and power in ensuring that the application data is validated against
your business rules, and that business processes are kept independent
of your choice of UI or database.

Since Dabo was first shown at PyCon DC 2005, it has continued to be
developed, and has matured significantly. The session will begin with
an overview of the framework, discussing the target audience for Dabo
and how the framework can help make application development much
easier and much more maintainable. It will then cover several of the
new developments in Dabo, such as the design tools, such as the Form
Designer and the Report Designer.

There will also be a section on using the dabo.ui module independently
of the rest of the framework. Over the past year, several wxPython
developers have started to use Dabo's UI tier to develop their
applications, even though they are not working with databases. This
surprised us at first, but these developers have inspired us to focus
on making the dabo.ui module more complete, by adding support for
several non-data related controls as well as creating a drawing object
framework that gives much better control of the direct drawing on the
UI surface than the raw wxPython API does. So I will include a section
in the talk contrasting raw wxPython with dabo.ui, showing how much
simpler creating a UI app in Dabo is.


----
[[Anchor(35)]]
#35.
'''PyPy architecture session'''

Holger Krekel / merlinux GmbH

Co-talker: Armin Rigo

After reaching important milestones, the PyPy project is now (starting
autumn 2005) heading towards building a specializing JIT-compiler,
stackless features and translation to higher level languages into the
code base. In this session we will present and interactively discuss
with the audience the basic architectural pictures. We are going to
emphasize the various emerging possibilities for further development
part of which will be an ongoing effort of the European Union's funded
part of the PyPy project.

In particular, we'll describe the following architectural pictures
and point out extension and optimization possibilities:

- Language Implementation: Bytecode Interpreter and Object Space interaction
- Translation to low level languages (C/LLVM)
- Translation to higher level languages (e.g. Squeak/Java)
- JIT-compiler architecture (very-low-level/l3 interpreter)
- Interweaving of Garbage Collection, threading and stackless
  operations into the translation process



----
[[Anchor(36)]]
#36.
'''Python Can Survive In The Enterprise'''

David Stanek / AG Interactive

A commonly observed myth about the Python programming language is that
"it doesn't scale," particularly in the context of web
applications. Thankfully, this is far from the truth; Python in fact
provides the possibility to scale to significant enterprise levels. As
evidence in Python's favor, we will discuss the scaling challenges and
successes of AG Interactive.

AG Interactive develops and operates a family of large, high-traffic
websites using Python. Our websites are focused primarily on the
electronic greeting card and social self-expression industries, where
it's essential to be available when our customers need to connect with
one another. The most widely-recognizable brands in our network are
AmericanGreetings.com, BlueMountain.com, and Egreetings.com; in
addition, we provide the online greetings capabilities for such
industry leaders as AOL, MSN, and Yahoo, as well as supporting
numerous other partner integrations. Our websites deliver a monthly
average of approximately 30 million page views, but we also encounter
profound seasonal and holiday traffic spikes that can demand over 90
million page views within a 48-hour period. A typical day in our
off-season is roughly equivalent to a sustained
Slashdotting. Additionally, the needs of our business are constantly
growing; to fulfill them, we implement and deploy hundreds of projects
each year. Python allows us to accomplish this without exploding our
staffing needs.

We will discuss the infrastructure that we've put in place to respond
to these challenges, how we have architected to scale to many sites as
well as high volumes of traffic, and how Python allows it all to
happen. We hope by our example to provide an inspiration for others to
achieve success with Python in high-capacity, scalable solutions.

----
[[Anchor(37)]]
#37.
'''Beyond Scripting: Using Python to create a medical information system with graphical template and database schema design'''

Matthew Harriger / University of Nebraska Medical Center

Python is often described as a "scripting language". While python is
an excellent choice for simple scripting tasks, it is also ideal for
developing complex applications. The Department of Surgery at the
University of Nebraska Medical Center is creating a medical
information system called intuaCare using Python, wxPython and other
open-source tools and libraries.

intuaCare and intuiDesign are wxPython-based applications that provide
point-of-care access to patient records. intuaDesign is a graphical
template/interface designer that gives users the ability to create
their own data entry screens via drag-and-drop and also generates the
appropriate database tables for the storage of data. The forms
generated by intuaDesign are then used by intuaCare to collect and
display clincal data. The data collected is stored in a local database
on the device, and synchronized to a master Oracle database when a
network connection is available.

This presentation will cover our reasons for selecting Python and
wxPython as the platform for intuaCare, and some of the features we
were able to implement using Python that would have been more
difficult in other languages. A brief demonstration of intuaCare and
intuaDesign will be included in the presentation.


----
[[Anchor(38)]]
#38.
'''PyPy -- where we are now'''

Michael Hudson / Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf

Christian Tismer


PyPy, the notorious Python-in-Python project reached a significant
milestone in the summer of 2005: being able to produce a standalone
python interpreter with no dependencies on any of CPython's C code.

This talk will describe as much of the toolchain that got us to this
point as it's possible to cram into 30 minutes :).


----
[[Anchor(39)]]
#39.
'''The Rest Of The Web Stack'''

Ian Bicking / Imaginary Landscape

This presentation describes the complete technology stack and
methodology that has been developed at Imaginary Landscape, for the
development and deployment of applications and web sites in a
heterogeneous environment.

Much attention is payed to the programming portion of web application
development. But successful web application development requires a
lot of infrastructure and methodology beyond programming itself. This
talk covers these parts of the process:

* Deploying applications.

* Keeping deployments and dependencies isolated.

* Identifying and managing the configuration of the applications.

* Handling application customizations.

* Source control.

* Customization.

* Cross-application navigation.

* Authentication across application and language boundaries.

* Integrating applications written in other languages for other
  environments.

* Handling static files associated with applications.

Some new tools will be presented, but the emphasis is on how to bring
together a diversity of existing open source tools for a complete
development process. While many of these tools will be familiar,
often they are presented in terms of what you *can* do, not what you
*should* do, and this talk presents a series of shoulds.

The motivation behind this toolset is the quick production and
maintenance of small, decoupled applications, as well as their
deployment in multiple contexts.

Some of the tools covered:

* Subversion

* Apache

* Server-side includes

* mod_auth_tkt

* SCGI

* easy_install

* Paste Deploy

* Paste Script

* buildutils


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[[Anchor(40)]]
#40.
'''SAM: Transforming a commandline tool to Web 3000 (c)'''

Matt Harrison / SpikeSource

This presentation discusses Spike Asset Manager (SAM
http://developer.spikesource.com/wiki/index.php/Projects:sam ), the
reasons python was chosen as implementation language as well the
benefits python has provided.

SAM is a tool that detects open source components on a system (windows, linux, mac). By the time PyCon rolls around SAM will have transformed from a relatively simple cross platform command line application to a network aware server capable of detecting other instances. IT users will be able to control all instances from either the command line or a gui (fancy AJAX provided in a web broswer because some systems may be headless).

This talk will discuss the evolution of SAM, the design decisions made
and a few of the open source projects it uses (PDIS Xpath,
ElementTree, Path, Cheetah, json-py, MochiKit, WebStack, pyzeroconf,
py2exe and more). The intended audience is python users who are
interested in AJAX, Web2.0 or converting a commandline app into a web
enabled app.

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[[Anchor(41)]]
#41.
'''Teaching Python - Anecdotes from the Field'''

Vern Ceder / Canterbury School

Since 2001, Canterbury School in Ft Wayne, IN has been teaching a
brief unit of Python as part of a required 9th grade Intro to Computer
course. In 2004 we also added a 4 day unit of Python programming to
our required 8th grade computer course. In addition, I will be
presenting a tutorial on Python programming to K-12 teachers at the
2006 Indiana Computer Educators (ICE) conference, the 5th largest
conference in the US aimed at K-12 technology teachers.

This presentation will deal with the issues encountered in using
Python to introduce programming to non-programmers. I will assess how
effective in my experience Python has been in that role, and will
include samples of student code and reactions to Python from students
and from the teachers attending the ICE tutorial.


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[[Anchor(45)]]
#45.
'''Implementation of the Python Bytecode Compiler'''

Jeremy Hylton / Google

This talk describes the internals of the Python bytecode compiler. It
describes the new bytecode compiler that will be released with Python 2.5.

The Python virtual machine and bytecode compiler use well-known
techniques for interpreters. The aim of this talk is to document the
specific use of those techniques in C Python. It is intended for
developers interested in modifying or extending the language or its
implementation -- or anyone curious about language internals.

The talk covers the architecture of the compiler from parsing to
bytecode generation. The high-level outline of topics covered is:
  - Lexical analysis and parsing
  - Abstract syntax
  - Semantic analysis
  - Code generation
  - Execution


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[[Anchor(46)]]
#46.
'''Making Apples from Applesauce: The Evolution of cvs2svn'''

Brian W. Fitzpatrick / Google, Inc.

While the goal of the Subversion project is to "provide a compelling
alternative to CVS", the goal of the cvs2svn project is to enable CVS
switchers to take all of their history with them to
Subversion. cvs2svn started life as a short Python script that
converted no CVS tags and branches, but it survived several rewrites
and quickly grew to a 5000 line powerhouse. Today, cvs2svn not only
converts CVS tags and branches, but it gracefully handles dozens of
RCS edge cases and has been used to convert thousands of CVS
repositories. This talk reviews the evolution, design, and
implementation of cvs2svn and how we managed to discover things about
CVS repositories that most people didn't think were possible.

(This has grown out of a talk I gave to ChiPy in April 2005 and a
Python lightning talk I gave at OSCON EU 2005).

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[[Anchor(47)]]
#47.
'''agile open-source methods, businesses and EU-funding '''

Beatrice Düring, /Change Maker,

Holger Krekel / Merlinux


There is a growing number of open-source developers
organized and connected to company and money related work.
We report our experiences from the first year of the PyPy
project which has a 7 company/university consortium and a
1.3 Million Euro research grant from the European Union.

We'd like to present and discuss models and experiences
for connecting open-source/hacking culture driven development
to money related projects and goals with the audience.

We are going to briefly describe the organisation of the PyPy project,
showing how formal stakeholders and OSS Python community interact
through agile practices like sprinting. We will also reflect on the
aspect of diversity, combining technical and non technical people and
skills and learnings from this.

We will relate the various agile techniques used in PyPy
and other projects/companies to the agile practices known from
the work in the Agile Alliance (XP, Scrum, Crystal) in order to show how
agile techniques have been adopted and evolved by the Python community.

Lastly we will also share our experience of various challenges and
possibilities when integrating the different cultures and skills from
the OSS perspective, EU perspective and the Chaos Pilot/process management
perspective - managing diversities.

Links to background information on the talk:
    http://codespeak.net/pypy/dist/pypy/doc/dev_method.html
    http://codespeak.net/pypy/dist/pypy

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[[Anchor(48)]]
#48.
'''Extensible Desktop Applications: Abusing the Zope 3 Project'''

Nathan R. Yergler / Creative Commons

In 2004, Creative Commons released ccPublisher 1.0, an application
designed to allow users to easily tag and upload works to the Internet
Archive.

ccPublisher 2, due for beta in December 2005, is nearly a complete
rewrite of the orginal application. The release will add no new
features, but will instead focus on providing an extensible, dynamic
implementation of the original feature set. During the development of
ccPublisher 2 and through conversations with individuals who wished to
customize the application, it became clear that even a well
architected, object-oriented implementation was too high a barrier for
entry for some individuals.

Using products from the Zope 3 project,
the new implementation allows users to edit straight-forward
configuration files in order to "configure" the application with new
components or features. Pieces appropriated from the Zope 3 project
include the event model, interfaces, subscribers, adapters, and the
ZCML engine. These pieces allow developers to create extensions and
enhancements to ccPublisher without requiring complete, in depth
knowledge of the application. In short, minor things are easy, major
things are manageable.

The release due in December is actually the second rewrite of
ccPublisher, and demonstrates the flexibility and usefulness of the
Zope 3 project. The original iteration used Zope interfaces to define
a strict, structured API. This design called for developers to
subclass objects in order to customize the application's
functionality, in class object-oriented style. As the implementation
grew, however, it became apparent we were trading one problem for
another: a massive, tightly integrated code base for a
slightly-less-massive, tightly integrated code base that required a
developer to know lots of details about how the system fit together.

Using events, adapters and subscribers from the Zope 3 project, the
new iteration allows developers to customize areas of interest without
delving into the inner workings of the entire system. For example, a
developer who wishes to implement a new upload target does not need to
know what metadata fields are collected; they only need to know how to
handle "Publish" events, and know that an object impementing a
particular interface is passed as the parameter. This wide-spread
decoupling had the added benefit of making it easy to enable
"extensions" to the application (i.e., post to my blog when I upload
new media), as well as full-scale customizations.

The talk will dicuss how we went about designing an application that
would be easily modifiable and extensible by other developers, and in
the process improved the maitainability and clarity of our own code.
It will also focus on using infrastructure pieces developed as part of
the Zope 3 project for an application in a completely different domain
(desktop v. web-based). Finally, we will provide brief coverage of
challenges that have arisen during deployment. These include bundling
ZCML configuration with our Python code in a Py2Exe or Py2App bundle
and boostrapping an application which is able to load 3rd party
extensions from other developers.


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[[Anchor(50)]]
#50.
'''Using Django to supercharge Web development'''

Adrian Holovaty / The Washington Post

This presentation will give an overview of Django, an open-source,
full-stack, Python Web framework (djangoproject.com). I'm the lead
developer of Django, having built it from the ground up for the past
two years.

The talk will include an overview of Django's architecture and
philosophies, specific information on what functionality Django gives
you out of the box, and basic code samples.

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[[Anchor(52)]]
#52.
'''New Tools for Testing Web Applications with Python'''

Tres Seaver / Palladion Software

As web applications have evolved from the relative simplicity of CGI
to the current "slim client" models, heavy with Javascript,
asynchronous communication, and elaborate client-side processing, the
need for increasingly powerful and sophisticated tools for testing
such applications has grown as well.


This talk surveys several new Python-based tools and frameworks for
testing web applications, and suggests strategies for using them to
improve the quality and maitainability of web applications.


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[[Anchor(53)]]
#53.
'''vobject - An iCalendar Library'''

Jeffrey Harris / Open Source Applications Foundation

In recent years there has been an explosion of interest in
standardized calendaring based on iCalendar (RFC2445). In 2004,
several groups perceived a need for and independently implemented
general Python iCalendar libraries. vobject sprung out of the Open
Source Application Foundation's need for Chandler to interoperate with
CalDAV servers and other calendar clients.

vobject has no dependence on any Chandler libraries, and its license diverges from Chandler and uses an Apache license instead of GPL.

vobject features parsing and serialization of iCalendar objects,
including converting python standard timezone classes to and from
iCalendar VTIMEZONE. It also integrates with the dateutil package to
provide expansion of recurrence rules.

vobject's homepage is http://vobject.skyhouseconsulting.com

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[[Anchor(54)]]
#54.
'''Zanshin: Zen and the Art of Network Client Programming'''

Grant Baillie / Open Source Applications Foundation

One of the key features of Chandler, OSAF's open source personal
information manager (PIM), is to provide robust and interoperable
sharing of data between users. The networking part of sharing
leverages is a protocol library, named "zanshin", that heavily
leverages existing python technologies such as Twisted, the
event-driven networking framework. To be able to share interoperably,
we have adopted established IETF standards like ICalendar, HTTP and
WebDAV, as well as the emerging CalDAV standard.

The goal of this presentation and paper is to present a case study in
implementing interoperable, standards-based network clients in Python.
I plan to discuss some of the design and implementation trade-offs
we've made in Chandler, focusing mainly on the work done for sharing
calendars, but touching also on other areas of personal information
management, such as email.

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[[Anchor(55)]]
#55.
'''IronPython Implementation'''

Jim Hugunin / Microsoft Corporation

IronPython is a fast implementation of the Python programming language
targeting the EMCA standard Common Language Infrastructure (CLI).
This talk will focus on the basic implementation strategies used in
IronPython and on several of the more interesting difficulties that
were overcome. This talk is targeted at programmers working on Python
implementations as well as those who are interested in more of the
details of how an implementation works under the hood.

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[[Anchor(56)]]
#56.
'''Python tools for regional hydrologic modeling in South Florida'''

Vic / Kelson

The South Florida Water Management District (SFWMD) is responsible for
the operation and management of the engineered hydrologic system in
south Florida. The engineered system of canals, structures, pump
stations, dikes, and levees is managed in order to balance the needs
for flood control, water supply, agriculture, and environmental
protection. Engineers and managers at SFWMD make use of numerous
computer models for analysis of the performance of the hydrologic
system in response to various stresses, e.g. hurricanes or
droughts. At the regional scale (several counties in size), the South
Florida Water Management Model (SFWMM) has been the most-commonly used
model code, and a wide variety of tools have been developed in support
of SFWMM.

During the past decade, SFWMD has been developing a new, more general
computational model code, called SFRSM (South Florida Regional
Simulation Model). SFRSM is a finite volume code, based on an
unstructured grid of triangles. It is an object-oriented design,
implemented in C++ on Unix / Linux, and makes use of a variety of
commonly available file formats, including NetCDF and HEC-DSS. SFRSM
has two major components, HSE (Hydrologic Simulation Engine) and MSE
(Management Simulation Engine). HSE is responsible for simulating the
natural movement of water through overland flow, groundwater flow, and
in canals and other conveyances, while MSE simulates the management
decision process, using operational rules. At this time, HSE is more
mature, and a calibrated HSE model of the entire regional system will
be complete by the end of 2005.

The author has been involved in the development of SFRSM for 7 years,
first as a member of the development team, and then as a contractor
with SFWMD. This talk is focused on the work the author and others
have done to develop a set of tools for use with SFRSM. They are all
written in Python, and have been in development for several
years. Currently, the toolkit includes a set of classes for
postprocessing of model output, a graphical model visualization
component, and tools for model calibration analysis, including
automated calibration tools. Python is expected to become the language
of choice for the future development of tools for SFRSM.

The talk will include:

   1. A brief explanation of what SFRSM does
   2. A discussion of the file formats and Python tools for handling them
   3. A discussion of the postprocessing components
   4. Some examples of the use of the toolkit


----
[[Anchor(57)]]
#57.
'''pysense: Humanoid Robots, a Wearable System, and Python'''

Dr. Charles C. Kemp (Charlie) / MIT CSAIL

Aaron Edsinger

In this talk, I will discuss the use of Python at the humanoid
robotics lab at MIT CSAIL, and give a brief overview and demonstration
of pysense, a collection of Python code that we will be releasing as
open source prior to (or in conjunction with) PyCon 2006.

At the humanoid robotics lab at MIT, Python now runs on most of our
platforms. Two systems in particular fundamentally rely on Python,
Domo a humanoid robot ( http://people.csail.mit.edu/edsinger/domo.htm
) and Duo ( http://people.csail.mit.edu/cckemp/ ) a wearable
system. In spite of the real-time constraints of robot perception and
control, we have found that Python can play an important role in most
aspects of our research through pure Python and SWIG wrapped C++
modules.

Both platforms use a common Python code base named pysense for
visualization, perception, and annotation. We are currently preparing
to officially release this software as open source (svn access is now
granted by request). Pysense consists of an efficient OpenGL based
display for 3D information and video; image iterators for capturing
from a variety of cameras in Linux; real-time computer vision
algorithms including methods for motion processing, segmentation, and
object detection; and tools for browsing and annotating video
databases for machine learning.

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[[Anchor(58)]]
#58.
'''Introduction to Zope Application Development'''

Paul Winkler / Siemens Molecular Imaging

This talk distills into tutorial form the fundamentals of application
development for the Zope platform, with some best practices and
practical advice along the way. It fills the oft-noted gap between
the online Zope Book (which covers only through-the-web development)
and the Zope Developers' Guide (which is a reference, not a tutorial).

In an attempt to be forward-looking, the talk will use Zope 3 / Five
features in preference to Zope 2 features whenever possible and
appropriate for the novice Zope developer. Five is a moving target,
and this aspect of the talk will be evolving with the state of the art.

Requirements:

* Familiarity with object-oriented programming in Python
* Familiarity with HTML

----
[[Anchor(59)]]
#59.
'''Introduction to CMF Application Development'''

Paul Winkler / Siemens Molecular Imaging

Prerequisite: My "Intro To Zope Application Development" talk, or
equivalent Zope development experience.

This tutorial covers the fundamentals of developing or extending
content management applications using the Zope CMF framework,
leveraging some of the Zope 3 features that are available today via
the Five integration layer.

Why discuss vanilla CMF when all the press goes to Plone and CPS?
It is very useful to gain a basic bottom-up understanding of Plone and
CPS. CMF technology is the foundation, and everything in this talk
applies equally to Plone and CPS. Additionally, for some projects
Plone or CPS may be too heavyweight and it may be desirable to start
with a smaller base.


----
[[Anchor(60)]]
#60.
'''Mission-Critical Python and the Brave New Web'''

Ivan Krstic / Zagreb Children's Hospital

Zagreb Children's Hospital is the largest children's hospital in
Croatia. In the summer of 2002, the Hospital's cardiology ward started
an effort to create a next-generation electronic medical record
application to replace an antiquated, and increasingly unreliable,
COBOL mainframe solution. The new application, implemented in Perl,
ran flawlessly for two years; inspired by its success, the Hospital
decided to move all of its core systems to open source, and write a
large web application to interface with most aspects of standard
hospital operation.

We found Perl was no longer a good fit for a project of this scope,
and turned to Python after carefully evaluating our options. Given the
extreme software demands of a hospital environment, we decided against
using existing solutions, and wrote our own application engine called
Radian. The engine pre-dates the now wildly popular Ruby on Rails
framework, but features a similarly strong emphasis on agile
development. The Radian core, however, comes with unmatched security
features, and specialized performance and scalability layers that
incorporate lessons learned from building solutions that scale to
millions of users, hundreds of servers, and many hundreds of gigabytes
of database data.

We'll talk about our experiences with Python as a language for truly
mission-critical deployments. Radian is being released as free
software, and will make its public debut in this talk -- we'll also
explain why many present solutions aren't well-suited to
extreme-demand environments. Finally, we'll show how Radian addresses
these problems, and give a quick tour of the functionality that sets
it apart from similar systems, which will be of interest both to
application developers looking to rapidly build extremely scalable and
secure Python applications, and to developers of existing Python web
frameworks looking to improve support for such applications in their
own products.

----
[[Anchor(62)]]
#62.
'''Docutils Developers Tutorial: Architecture, Extending, and Embedding'''

David Goodger / CDP Capital


----
[[Anchor(63)]]
#63.
'''Django tutorial'''

Jacob Kaplan-Moss / World Online

Django is a high-level web development framework for rapid development
of database-backed web sites and applications. This tutorial will
introduce Django, explain a few of the philosophies behind it, and
walk through the steps involved in quickly building a full-featured
web site/application with Django.


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[[Anchor(64)]]
#64.
'''Creating Presentations With Docutils and S5'''

David Goodger / CDP Capital

A quick how-to/tutorial: how to write presentation slides, handouts,
and speaker's notes using reStructuredText and S5
(http://meyerweb.com/eric/tools/s5/), Eric Meyer's "Simple
Standards-based Slide Show System". We will cover installing
Docutils, writing the presentation text, generating the slides,
tweaking the stylesheets, and setting up the browser for projecting
the slides.


----
[[Anchor(65)]]
#65.
'''Understanding Unicode'''

David Goodger / CDP Capital

----
[[Anchor(66)]]
#66.
'''Building Pluggable Software with Eggs'''

Ian Bicking / Imaginary Landscape

People have been building pluggable software in Python for some time,
but the result is often difficult to manage and eclectic -- both
within and between projects.

Python Eggs -- a new packaging system built on distutils -- provide
packages with a more formalized metadata structure, versioning, and
other useful features. Several of these features, put together,
produce a fairly complete process for pluggability. Eggs are being
used for plugins in several systems, including setuptools itself,
Paste, and Trac.

Best practice for using these tools is still being developed. This
presentation will focus on the current understanding of how to best
put pieces together, for both flexibility and transparency.

This presentation will focus on the concrete steps to making an
application for framework extensible and pluggable using eggs, and
point out both pitfalls and opportunities.

This presentation will cover:

* What Python Eggs are

* Relation to setuptools and easy_install

* Implicit and explicit loading of eggs, including version
  specifications and dependencies

* Programmatically finding and installing eggs

* entry_points -- named and categorized routines that your package
  provides

* Finding other metadata associated with a package



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[[Anchor(67)]]
#67.
'''Gamma: An Atom Publishing Protocol implementation for Zope 3'''

Michael Bernstein / Agile Mind

Gamma is a general-purpose Zope 3 implementation of the Atom
Publishing Protocol initially targeted at weblog-like applications,
but useful as a standards-based repository for many other types of
applications as well. In this presentation, I will describe the
implementation and demonstrate using it to add a standard API to
content-management-like applications, as well as extending it with
domain specific functionality.


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[[Anchor(69)]]
#69.
'''Python in Your Pocket: Python for Series 60'''

Matt Croydon

Python for Series 60 has come a long way since it was released last
winter. This session will provide an overview of Python on mobile
phones, demonstrate how easy it is to develop applications with a
native look and feel, explore the many aspects of a phone that can be
controlled programmatically and showcase several applications written
in Python.

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[[Anchor(70)]]
#70.
'''Simplifying Red-Black Trees'''

J Adrian Zimmer / OSSM

Ordered binary trees can enable efficient lookup of ordered data.
Starting at the root, an algorithm decides whether the desired
value has been found or will appear in the left or right subtree.
The lookup algorithm proceeds recursively down the tree until
it is finds what it wants or is directed to an empty subtree.

Lookup is efficient if the tree is short and fat. Keeping the tree
short and fat when doing insertions and deletions is not particularly
easy -- if it is to be done efficiently. The red-black tree is one
model used to guide this process. Like others it uses a methods of
morphing a tree called "rebalancing". Rebalancing involve numerous
cases with plenty of symmetry.

This presentation is essentially a case study in one way Python can
handle symmetry. The aspect of Python which is most useful to us is
its handling of functions as first class objects.

When walking a tree, we want to alter our thinking about nodes. We
start thinking about a node as having a left and a right child. After
we have walked a node, it has a walked and an unwalked child. We also
want to change the way our parent thinks about its children -- not
"consciously" but in terms of how that parent would take part in a
rotation. In object-oriented terms, we want to change at least one of
the parent's methods.

A complete implementation of red-black tree lookup, insertion, and
deletion, will be the basis of this presentation. As the title
indicates, the implementation emphasizes readability over efficiency
but that does not mean it is inefficient. Additional storage is
needed only for nodes between the the "current" node and the root.
The algorithm does a few more things as it process nodes during a
search but not many.

The breakdown of cases need not be different here than for published
versions, but it is. Partly this is because the need to distinguish
left from right when rebalancing is gone. This means we can remove
some subcases based on going different directions in the past two
stags. Partly the different case breakdown results from the author's
continuing search for a case breakdown that makes beautiful intuitive
sense. Whether he is any closer to that goal than what is already
published is likely to be a matter of taste.


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[[Anchor(71)]]
#71.
'''entransit, a content deployment system'''

Examines a system be able to marshall changesets from a client to a
server application. the server application in turns applies the
content to a set of operations which results in:

  - xml representation of content on the filesystem

  - rdmbs indexes of content for ease of querying

  - rdf xml file that describes relationships between xml filesystem contnet

  - abiltiy to apply business logic e.g. URIRewriting and Indexing, for instance with Xapian.

We will demonstrate the usage and internals of the system with the
Plone/Zope CMS which will deploy to a separate environment where zope
3 will display and search the information. Zope 3 will be running
WITHOUT the ZODB. Finally we will release the pre-canned frontends
that can use the default configuration of entransit for the following
environments: PHP, .NET, Java and mod_python.


----
[[Anchor(72)]]
#72.
'''bazaar-ng distributed version control'''

Martin Pool / Canonical

bazaar-ng is a friendly open-source distributed version control system
written in Python. The lead developer of bazaar-ng will explain
bazaar-ng, the problems it solves, and why it's interesting to Python
developers.

Agenda

 * branch visualization
 * brief demo/tutorial
 * overview of model
 * how we use bazaar-ng to build Ubuntu and launchpad
 * some interesting version control algorithms (if time permits)

Why me?

Martin Pool is the lead developer of bazaar-ng, and an employee of
Canonical, the corporate parent of Ubuntu. He has given popular talks
on distcc, rsync and bazaar-ng at linux.conf.au and other conferences.

More information:
  http://bazaar-ng.org/
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CategoryPyCon2006
CategoryPyConPlanning

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