boltons

🔩 Like builtins, but boltons. 250+ constructs, recipes, and snippets which extend (and rely on nothing but) the Python standard library. Nothing like Michael Bolton.

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Python

Boltons

boltons should be builtins.






Boltons is a set of over 230 BSD-licensed, pure-Python utilities
in the same spirit as — and yet conspicuously missing from —
the standard library, including:

Full and extensive docs are available on Read The Docs. See
what’s new by checking the CHANGELOG.

Boltons is tested against Python 3.7-3.13, as well as PyPy3.

Installation

Boltons can be added to a project in a few ways. There’s the obvious one:

pip install boltons

On macOS, it can also be installed via MacPorts:

sudo port install py-boltons

Then, thanks to PyPI, dozens of boltons are just an import away:

from boltons.cacheutils import LRU
my_cache = LRU()

However, due to the nature of utilities, application developers might
want to consider other options, including vendorization of individual
modules into a project. Boltons is pure-Python and has no
dependencies. If the whole project is too big, each module is
independent, and can be copied directly into a project. See the
Integration section of the docs for more details.

Third-party packages

The majority of boltons strive to be “good enough” for a wide range of
basic uses, leaving advanced use cases to Python’s myriad specialized
3rd-party libraries
. In many cases the respective boltons module
will describe 3rd-party alternatives worth investigating when use
cases outgrow boltons. If you’ve found a natural “next-step”
library worth mentioning, see the next section!

Gaps

Found something missing in the standard library that should be in
boltons? Found something missing in boltons? First, take a
moment to read the very brief architecture statement to make
sure the functionality would be a good fit.

Then, if you are very motivated, submit a Pull Request. Otherwise,
submit a short feature request on the Issues page, and we will
figure something out.