Skip to main content

An open, community-driven venue of conference and event venues

Project description

Event Venue Registry

Tests PyPI PyPI - Python Version PyPI - License Documentation Status Codecov status Cookiecutter template from @cthoyt Ruff Contributor Covenant

An open, community-driven registry of conference and event venues.

EVR assigns persistent identifiers (PIDs) to make referencing venues FAIR. This is similar to how ORCID assigns PIDs to researchers and ROR assigns PIDs to research organizations.

This benefits researchers assembling information about in-person conferences and events by enabling them to refer in an unambiguous way to the venue where it takes place.

💪 Getting Started

Get all venues with:

import evr

venues = evr.load_venues()

🚀 Installation

The most recent release can be installed from PyPI with:

python3 -m pip install evr

The most recent code and data can be installed directly from GitHub with:

python3 -m pip install git+https://github.com/cthoyt/evr.git

👐 Contributing

Contributions, whether filing an issue, making a pull request, or forking, are appreciated. See CONTRIBUTING.md for more information on getting involved.

👋 Attribution

⚖️ License

The code in this package is licensed under the MIT License.

🍪 Cookiecutter

This package was created with @audreyfeldroy's cookiecutter package using @cthoyt's cookiecutter-snekpack template.

🛠️ For Developers

See developer instructions

The final section of the README is for if you want to get involved by making a code contribution.

Development Installation

To install in development mode, use the following:

git clone git+https://github.com/cthoyt/evr.git
cd evr
python3 -m pip install -e .

Updating Package Boilerplate

This project uses cruft to keep boilerplate (i.e., configuration, contribution guidelines, documentation configuration) up-to-date with the upstream cookiecutter package. Update with the following:

python3 -m pip install cruft
cruft update

More info on Cruft's update command is available here.

🥼 Testing

After cloning the repository and installing tox with python3 -m pip install tox tox-uv, the unit tests in the tests/ folder can be run reproducibly with:

tox -e py

Additionally, these tests are automatically re-run with each commit in a GitHub Action.

📖 Building the Documentation

The documentation can be built locally using the following:

git clone git+https://github.com/cthoyt/evr.git
cd evr
tox -e docs
open docs/build/html/index.html

The documentation automatically installs the package as well as the docs extra specified in the pyproject.toml. sphinx plugins like texext can be added there. Additionally, they need to be added to the extensions list in docs/source/conf.py.

The documentation can be deployed to ReadTheDocs using this guide. The .readthedocs.yml YAML file contains all the configuration you'll need. You can also set up continuous integration on GitHub to check not only that Sphinx can build the documentation in an isolated environment (i.e., with tox -e docs-test) but also that ReadTheDocs can build it too.

Configuring ReadTheDocs

  1. Log in to ReadTheDocs with your GitHub account to install the integration at https://readthedocs.org/accounts/login/?next=/dashboard/
  2. Import your project by navigating to https://readthedocs.org/dashboard/import then clicking the plus icon next to your repository
  3. You can rename the repository on the next screen using a more stylized name (i.e., with spaces and capital letters)
  4. Click next, and you're good to go!

📦 Making a Release

Configuring Zenodo

Zenodo is a long-term archival system that assigns a DOI to each release of your package.

  1. Log in to Zenodo via GitHub with this link: https://zenodo.org/oauth/login/github/?next=%2F. This brings you to a page that lists all of your organizations and asks you to approve installing the Zenodo app on GitHub. Click "grant" next to any organizations you want to enable the integration for, then click the big green "approve" button. This step only needs to be done once.
  2. Navigate to https://zenodo.org/account/settings/github/, which lists all of your GitHub repositories (both in your username and any organizations you enabled). Click the on/off toggle for any relevant repositories. When you make a new repository, you'll have to come back to this

After these steps, you're ready to go! After you make "release" on GitHub (steps for this are below), you can navigate to https://zenodo.org/account/settings/github/repository/cthoyt/evr to see the DOI for the release and link to the Zenodo record for it.

Registering with the Python Package Index (PyPI)

You only have to do the following steps once.

  1. Register for an account on the Python Package Index (PyPI)
  2. Navigate to https://pypi.org/manage/account and make sure you have verified your email address. A verification email might not have been sent by default, so you might have to click the "options" dropdown next to your address to get to the "re-send verification email" button
  3. 2-Factor authentication is required for PyPI since the end of 2023 (see this blog post from PyPI). This means you have to first issue account recovery codes, then set up 2-factor authentication
  4. Issue an API token from https://pypi.org/manage/account/token

Configuring your machine's connection to PyPI

You have to do the following steps once per machine.

$ uv tool install keyring
$ keyring set https://upload.pypi.org/legacy/ __token__
$ keyring set https://test.pypi.org/legacy/ __token__

Note that this deprecates previous workflows using .pypirc.

Uploading to PyPI

After installing the package in development mode and installing tox with python3 -m pip install tox tox-uv, run the following from the console:

tox -e finish

This script does the following:

  1. Uses bump-my-version to switch the version number in the pyproject.toml, CITATION.cff, src/evr/version.py, and docs/source/conf.py to not have the -dev suffix
  2. Packages the code in both a tar archive and a wheel using uv build
  3. Uploads to PyPI using uv publish.
  4. Push to GitHub. You'll need to make a release going with the commit where the version was bumped.
  5. Bump the version to the next patch. If you made big changes and want to bump the version by minor, you can use tox -e bumpversion -- minor after.

Releasing on GitHub

  1. Navigate to https://github.com/cthoyt/evr/releases/new to draft a new release
  2. Click the "Choose a Tag" dropdown and select the tag corresponding to the release you just made
  3. Click the "Generate Release Notes" button to get a quick outline of recent changes. Modify the title and description as you see fit
  4. Click the big green "Publish Release" button

This will trigger Zenodo to assign a DOI to your release as well.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

evr-0.0.1.tar.gz (20.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

evr-0.0.1-py3-none-any.whl (11.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file evr-0.0.1.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: evr-0.0.1.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 20.6 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: uv/0.5.9

File hashes

Hashes for evr-0.0.1.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 93a041c8c21739ed933d0ebc5066122e79407536a31152717ca973f8d10a19db
MD5 d729335e51e4e2f035d751017880bf75
BLAKE2b-256 7d9f04ca11e5d03f33aad00dd7b362632add14acdc7a8bf77a33c73bc9e416aa

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file evr-0.0.1-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: evr-0.0.1-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 11.6 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: uv/0.5.9

File hashes

Hashes for evr-0.0.1-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 76ee491db10f2dd5776aedd4932e279507d876d8e62d5525c30a331ec77da871
MD5 9750ae1a5939204977bfb1ba9ac1cafa
BLAKE2b-256 001396ef80f9b6c4191ca71d6c62f6587ea6d6072e9cd1869a1e0be0eb373164

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page