About this deal
For readers who have a continued need for giant print books, our new Print On Demand service offers those readers a more personalised free book delivery service from RNIB.
If you have a smartphone or a tablet and are familiar with the settings, you will be able to use your device as a magnifier to read any print source. If you need help to find out how, our Technology for Life team can give you support. The RNIB Online Shop also has a wide range of regular handheld magnifiers and electronic video magnifiers. If you have difficulty reading TV guides, or if you have a friend or relative who struggles with standard print, why not try our Big Print listings? Your local library may also offer large print titles. These may not be as large in font as you require but may be suitable when using a magnifier.There is the Python Rich library, which also provides an own pprint variant ( from rich.pretty import pprint), which is close to what I want. Specifically, for some dict, I got this output with the original pprint: {'melgan': {'class': 'subnetwork', Terms and conditions for RNIB Summer 2023 Raffle Speed Draw to win a Regency Hampers luxury picnic hamper Well not that different. I tried playing with pprint.pprint options like indent, width, compact, but none seem to format the way I want. Is it possible to achieve similar formatting with pprint as I mentioned above? Or maybe there is some better tool for that?
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Now originally dict looks like this (without using pprint): {'test': {'0.2.0': {'deploy': {'some.host.com': {'outputs': [], 'inputs': []}}, There are also other devices that you can use such as a PC, Mac, Kobo eReader, and apps for smartphones and tablets. Many apps will also have text-to-speech alongside the large print size function.
I'm trying to pretty print dictionary which could get quite big and I want to make it as readable as possible. Though it still does not look like how I would manually write it (with new lines and indentation when needed). with: pprint.pprint(my_dict), it looks like: {'stage': {'0.1.0': {'deploy': {'stage.com': {'inputs': [], 'outputs': []}}, Specifically, I wanted it to do normal indentation (by 2 or 4 spaces), and not indent in the way pprint does it. RNIB Certificate in Contracted (Grade 2) Unified English Braille - Exam-only option for blind and partially people