@jeeva Thanks! I’ll check it out
🎇 David Zaslavsky 🎇
Software engineer, former particle physicist, occasional blogger. I support the principle of cake.
Posting habits: ~80% #Monsterdon, ~10% #Python/#tech, ~10% funny/uplifting/entertaining content. Rare politics-related posts, always using popular hashtags so they can be filtered out. I typically don’t boost posts with images unless they have #AltText.
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@Feeee23 Cool, well, I’m not the greatest expert on Sanderson’s works but I think you could either go on to read the rest of the Mistborn series (books 4-7), which is what I did, or if you’re interested in his epic series, The Stormlight Archive, you could start that after book 3 of Mistborn and then roughly interleave books of Mistborn and Stormlight, which I think I would have slightly preferred in retrospect. If you take the latter approach, I definitely recommend finishing Mistborn books 4-7 before starting book 5 of The Stormlight Archive, because that book references some things introduced in Mistborn. (Even book 4 of Stormlight obliquely mentions a couple things from Mistborn, but that’s not quite so important.)
And no pressure to follow back BTW - I mean, of course you can if you want to, but it’s not expected. 🙂
@Feeee23 Nice, I’m probably gonna add a bunch of these to my list as well. I started and ended this year with Brandon Sanderson and I’m looking for more books enjoyed by people with similar tastes.
(would it be weird if I follow you on The Story Graph?)


@evenwicht The --debug option will show URLs. But you’d probably have an easier time with unearth (https://pypi.org/project/unearth/), which by default will just print the URL and other metadata without downloading the wheel file. Or, the API offered by PyPI is a published standard (https://packaging.python.org/en/latest/specifications/simple-repository-api/), so in principle you can get wheel URLs by just following the instructions in that standard - you can even open some (rather large) HTML pages in your browser and click a few links and get the wheel URLs that way.
#Python