Representation of continuous timeseries.
- development: the project is actively being worked on
Full documentation can be found at: continuous-timeseries.readthedocs.io. We recommend reading the docs there because the internal documentation links don't render correctly on GitHub's viewer.
If you want to use Continuous Timeseries as an application, then we recommend using the 'locked' version of the package. This version pins the version of all dependencies too, which reduces the chance of installation issues because of breaking updates to dependencies.
The locked version of Continuous Timeseries can be installed with
=== "pip"
sh pip install 'continuous-timeseries[locked]'
If you want to use Continuous Timeseries as a library, for example you want to use it as a dependency in another package/application that you're building, then we recommend installing the package with the commands below. This method provides the loosest pins possible of all dependencies. This gives you, the package/application developer, as much freedom as possible to set the versions of different packages. However, the tradeoff with this freedom is that you may install incompatible versions of Continuous Timeseries's dependencies (we cannot test all combinations of dependencies, particularly ones which haven't been released yet!). Hence, you may run into installation issues. If you believe these are because of a problem in Continuous Timeseries, please raise an issue.
The (non-locked) version of Continuous Timeseries can be installed with
=== "pip"
sh pip install continuous-timeseries
Additional dependencies can be installed using
=== "pip" ```sh # To add pandas-related dependencies pip install 'continuous-timeseries[pandas]'
# To add plotting dependencies
pip install 'continuous-timeseries[plots]'
# To add progress bar-related dependencies
pip install 'continuous-timeseries[progress]'
# To add scipy-related dependencies
pip install 'continuous-timeseries[scipy]'
# To add all optional dependencies
pip install 'continuous-timeseries[full]'
```
For development, we rely on uv for all our dependency management. To get started, you will need to make sure that uv is installed (instructions here (we found that the self-managed install was best, particularly for upgrading uv later).
For all of our work, we use our Makefile
.
You can read the instructions out and run the commands by hand if you wish,
but we generally discourage this because it can be error prone.
In order to create your environment, run make virtual-environment
.
If there are any issues, the messages from the Makefile
should guide you through.
If not, please raise an issue in the
issue tracker.
For the rest of our developer docs, please see [development][development].
This project was generated from this template: copier core python repository. copier is used to manage and distribute this template.