@ -197,7 +197,7 @@ supervisor config file and let it handle the server for you.</p>
</pre></div>
</td></tr></table></div>
</div>
</summary><categoryterm="python"></category><categoryterm="apache"></category><categoryterm="proxy"></category><categoryterm="gunicorn"></category><categoryterm="uwsgi"></category></entry><entry><title>Publishing in PyPi</title><linkhref="http://balkian.com/publishing-in-pypi.html" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2014-09-27T10:00:00+02:00</updated><author><name>J. Fernando Sánchez</name></author><id>tag:balkian.com,2014-09-27:publishing-in-pypi.html</id><summarytype="html"><p>Developing a python module and publishing it on Github is cool, but most
</summary><categoryterm="python"></category><categoryterm="apache"></category><categoryterm="proxy"></category><categoryterm="gunicorn"></category><categoryterm="uwsgi"></category></entry><entry><title>Publishing on PyPi</title><linkhref="http://balkian.com/publishing-on-pypi.html" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2014-09-27T10:00:00+02:00</updated><author><name>J. Fernando Sánchez</name></author><id>tag:balkian.com,2014-09-27:publishing-on-pypi.html</id><summarytype="html"><p>Developing a python module and publishing it on Github is cool, but most
of the times you want others to download and use it easily. That is the
role of PyPi, the python package repository. In this post I show you how
to publish your package in less than 10 minutes.</p>
@ -197,7 +197,7 @@ supervisor config file and let it handle the server for you.</p>
</pre></div>
</td></tr></table></div>
</div>
</summary><categoryterm="python"></category><categoryterm="apache"></category><categoryterm="proxy"></category><categoryterm="gunicorn"></category><categoryterm="uwsgi"></category></entry><entry><title>Publishing in PyPi</title><linkhref="http://balkian.com/publishing-in-pypi.html" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2014-09-27T10:00:00+02:00</updated><author><name>J. Fernando Sánchez</name></author><id>tag:balkian.com,2014-09-27:publishing-in-pypi.html</id><summarytype="html"><p>Developing a python module and publishing it on Github is cool, but most
</summary><categoryterm="python"></category><categoryterm="apache"></category><categoryterm="proxy"></category><categoryterm="gunicorn"></category><categoryterm="uwsgi"></category></entry><entry><title>Publishing on PyPi</title><linkhref="http://balkian.com/publishing-on-pypi.html" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2014-09-27T10:00:00+02:00</updated><author><name>J. Fernando Sánchez</name></author><id>tag:balkian.com,2014-09-27:publishing-on-pypi.html</id><summarytype="html"><p>Developing a python module and publishing it on Github is cool, but most
of the times you want others to download and use it easily. That is the
role of PyPi, the python package repository. In this post I show you how
to publish your package in less than 10 minutes.</p>
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