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- <h1>Company Announcement | Pydantic</h1>
- </header>
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- <a href="https://pydantic.dev/announcement/" title="Lien vers le contenu original">Source originale</a>
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- <hr>
- <p>I've decided to start a company based on the principles that I believe have led to Pydantic's success.</p>
-
- <p>I have closed a seed investment round led by <a href="https://www.sequoiacap.com">Sequoia</a>, with participation from
- <a href="https://partechpartners.com/">Partech</a>, <a href="https://irregex.vc">Irregular Expressions</a> and some amazing angel investors
- including <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/bryanhelmig/">Bryan Helmig</a> (co-founder and CTO of Zapier),
- <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/tristanhandy/">Tristan Handy</a> (founder and CEO of Dbt Labs) and
- <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/dmcramer/">David Cramer </a>(co-founder and CTO of Sentry).</p>
- <h2 id="2-why">Why?</h2>
-
- <p>I've watched with fascination as Pydantic has grown to become the most widely used Python data validation library, with over 40m downloads a month. </p>
-
- <p class="plot-title">Pydantic Downloads from PyPI vs. Django</p>
-
- <p><img src="https://pydantic.dev/imgs/pydantic-vs-django-downloads.fdc147d.png" alt="Pydantic Downloads from PyPI vs. Django"></p>
-
- <p>By my rough estimate, Pydantic is used by 12% of professional web developers! <a href="#3-quot12-of-professional-web-developersquot-claim">†</a></p>
-
- <p>But Pydantic wasn't the first (or last) such library. Why has it been so successful?</p>
-
- <p>I believe it comes down to two things:</p>
- <ol>
- <li>We've always made developer experience the first priority.</li>
- <li>We've leveraged technologies which developers already understand — most notably, Python type annotations.</li>
- </ol>
- <p>In short, we've made Pydantic easy to get started with, and easy to do powerful things with.</p>
-
- <p>I believe the time is right to apply those principles to other, bigger challenges.</p>
-
- <p>"The Cloud" is still relatively new (think about what cars or tractors looked like 15 years after their conception), and
- while it has already transformed our lives, it has massive shortcomings. I think we're uniquely positioned to address
- some of these shortcomings.</p>
-
- <p>We'll start by transforming the way those 12% of web developers who already know and trust Pydantic use cloud services
- to build and deploy web applications. Then, we'll move on to help the other 88%!</p>
- <h3 id="3-cloud-services-suck-at-least-for-us-developers">Cloud services suck (at least for us developers)</h3>
-
- <p>Picture the driving position of a 1950s tractor — steel seat, no cab, knobs sticking out of the engine compartment near
- the component they control, hot surfaces just waiting for you to lean on them. Conceptually, this isn't surprising — the
- tractor was a tool to speed up farming; its driver was an afterthought, and as long as they could manage to operate it
- there was no value in making the experience pleasant or comfortable.</p>
-
- <p><img src="https://pydantic.dev/imgs/tractor.8345002.svg" alt="1950s tractor"></p>
-
- <p>Today's cloud services have the look and feel of that tractor. They're conceived by infrastructure people who care about
- efficient computation, fast networking, and cheap storage. The comfort and convenience of the developers who need to
- drive these services to build end-user facing applications has been an afterthought.</p>
-
- <p>Both the tractor and the cloud service of the past made sense: The majority of people who made the purchasing decisions
- didn't operate them, and those who did had little influence. Why bother making them nice to operate?</p>
-
- <blockquote>
- <p><em>"At least it's not a <del>cart horse</del> Windows box in the corner — quit complaining!"</em></p>
- </blockquote>
-
- <p>Just as the experience of driving tractors transformed as their drivers' pay and influence increased, so cloud services
- are going through a transformation as their operators' pay and influence increases significantly. </p>
-
- <p>There are many examples now of services and tools that are winning against incumbents because of great developer
- experience:</p>
- <ul>
- <li><a href="https://stripe.com">Stripe</a> is winning in payments despite massive ecosystem of incumbents</li>
- <li><a href="https://sentry.io/welcome/">Sentry</a> is winning in application monitoring, even though you can send, store, and view the same data in CloudWatch et al. more cheaply</li>
- <li><a href="https://vercel.com/">Vercel</a> is winning in application hosting by focusing on one framework — Next.js</li>
- <li><a href="https://www.tiobe.com/tiobe-index/">Python</a> is winning against other programming languages, even though it's not backed by a massive corporation</li>
- <li><a href="https://docs.pydantic.dev/">Pydantic</a> is winning in data validation for Python, even though it's far from the first such library</li>
- </ul>
- <p>In each case the developer experience is markedly better than what came before, and developers have driven adoption.</p>
-
- <p>There is a massive opportunity to create cloud services with great developer experience at their heart.
- I think we're well positioned to be part of it.</p>
- <h3 id="3-developers-are-still-drowning-under-the-weight-of-duplication">Developers are still drowning under the weight of duplication</h3>
-
- <p>The story of the cloud has been about reducing duplication, abstracting away infrastructure and boilerplate:
- co-location facilities with servers, cages and wires gave way to VMs. VMs gave way to PaaS offerings where you
- just provide your application code. Serverless is challenging PaaS by offering to remove scaling worries.</p>
-
- <p>At each step, cloud providers took work off engineers which was common to many customers.</p>
-
- <p>But this hasn't gone far enough. Think about the last web application you worked on —
- how many of the views or components were unique to your app?</p>
-
- <p>Sure, you fitted them together in a unique way, but many (20%, 50%, maybe even 80%?) will exist hundreds or thousands of
- times in other code bases. Couldn't many of those components, views, and utilities be shared with other apps without
- affecting the value of your application? Again, reducing duplication, and reducing the time and cost of building an
- application.</p>
-
- <p>At the same time, serverless, despite being the trendiest way to deploy applications for the last few years, has made
- much of this worse — complete web frameworks have often been switched out for bare-bones entry points which lack
- even the most basic functionality of a web framework like routing, error handling, or database integration.</p>
-
- <p>What if we could build a platform with the best of all worlds? Taking the final step in reducing the boilerplate
- and busy-work of building web applications — allowing developers to write nothing more than the core logic which
- makes their application unique and valuable?</p>
-
- <p>And all with a developer experience to die for.</p>
- <h2 id="2-what-specifically-are-we-building">What, specifically, are we building?</h2>
-
- <p>I'm not sharing details yet :).</p>
-
- <p>The immediate plan is to hire the brightest developers I can find and work with them to refine our vision and exactly
- what we're building while we finish and release Pydantic V2.</p>
-
- <p>While I have some blueprints in my head of the libraries and services we want to build, we have a lot of options
- for exactly where to go; we won't constrain what we can design by making any commitments now.</p>
-
- <p><strong>If you're interested in what we're doing, hit subscribe on
- <a href="https://github.com/pydantic/pydantic/issues/5063">this GitHub issue</a>.
- We'll comment there when we have
- more concrete information.</strong></p>
- <h2 id="2-the-plan">The plan</h2>
-
- <p>The plan, in short, is this:</p>
- <ol>
- <li>Hire the best developers from around the world (see <a href="#2-were-hiring">"We're Hiring"</a> below)</li>
- <li>Finish and release Pydantic V2, and continue to maintain, support and develop Pydantic over the years</li>
- <li>Build cloud services and developer tools that developers love</li>
- </ol>
- <p>Pydantic, the open source project, will be a cornerstone of the company. It'll be a key technical component
- in what we're building and an important asset to help convince developers that the commercial tools and services
- we build will be worth adopting. It will remain open source and MIT licenced, and support and development will
- accelerate.</p>
-
- <p>I'm currently working full time on Pydantic V2 (learn more from the <a href="https://docs.pydantic.dev/blog/pydantic-v2/">previous blog post</a>).
- It should be released later this year, hopefully in Q1. V2 is a massive advance for Pydantic — the core has been
- re-written in Rust, making Pydantic V2 around 17x faster than V1. But there are lots of other goodies: strict mode,
- composable validators, validation context, and more. I can't wait to get Pydantic V2 released and see how the community
- uses it.</p>
-
- <p>We'll keep working closely with <a href="https://github.com/topics/pydantic">other open source libraries</a> that use and depend
- on Pydantic as we have up to this point, making sure the whole Pydantic ecosystem continues to thrive.</p>
-
- <p><em>On a side note: Now that I'm paid to work on Pydantic, I'll be sharing all future open source sponsorship among
- other open source projects we rely on.</em></p>
- <h2 id="2-were-hiring">We're hiring</h2>
-
- <p>If you're a senior Python or full stack developer and think the ideas above are exciting, we'd love to hear from you.
- Please email <a href="/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection#254644574040575665555c41444b514c460b414053"><span class="__cf_email__" data-cfemail="aecdcfdccbcbdcddeeded7cacfc0dac7cd80cacbd8">[email protected]</span></a> with a brief summary of your skills and experience,
- including links to your GitHub profile and your CV.</p>
- <h2 id="2-appendix">Appendix</h2>
- <h3 id="3-quot12-of-professional-web-developersquot-claim">"12% of professional web developers" claim</h3>
-
- <p>At first glance this seems like a fairly incredible number, where does it come from?</p>
-
- <p>According to the
- <a href="https://survey.stackoverflow.co/2022/#section-most-popular-technologies-web-frameworks-and-technologies">StackOverflow developer survey 2022</a>,
- FastAPI is used by 6.01% of professional developers.</p>
-
- <p>According to my survey of Pydantic users, Pydantic's usage is split roughly into:</p>
- <ul>
- <li>25% FastAPI</li>
- <li>25% other web development</li>
- <li>50% everything else</li>
- </ul>
- <p>That matches the numbers from PyPI downloads, which shows that (as of 2023-01-31)
- <a href="https://pepy.tech/project/pydantic">Pydantic has 46m</a> downloads in the last 30 days, while
- <a href="https://pepy.tech/project/fastapi">FastAPI has 10.7m</a> — roughly 25%.</p>
-
- <p>Based on these numbers, I estimate Pydantic is used for web development by about twice the number who use it through
- FastAPI — roughly 12%.</p>
- </article>
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