Project Haystack’s webinar, “Haystack 5 and Xeto for Python Developers,” led by Rick Jennings (SkyFoundry) and Scott Muench (J2 Innovations), delivered a fast, focused walkthrough of Haystack 5’s major new capabilities—especially how to use them hands-on in Python.
Haystack 5 introduces powerful improvements for equipment modeling and data querying across multiple languages, and this session dove deep into the Python side. In the recording, you’ll see exactly how to:
Use Xeto, Haystack’s new type system, to build robust, type-safe data models
Apply Xeto specs directly within your Python applications
Incorporate open-source Python libraries and Haxall tools into real workflows
If you’re integrating building data, developing smart-building apps, or aiming to improve data quality and consistency, this session gives you actionable tools, patterns, and code you can put to work right away.
Debbie Bretches Yesterday
Project Haystack’s webinar, “Haystack 5 and Xeto for Python Developers,” led by Rick Jennings (SkyFoundry) and Scott Muench (J2 Innovations), delivered a fast, focused walkthrough of Haystack 5’s major new capabilities—especially how to use them hands-on in Python.
Haystack 5 introduces powerful improvements for equipment modeling and data querying across multiple languages, and this session dove deep into the Python side. In the recording, you’ll see exactly how to:
If you’re integrating building data, developing smart-building apps, or aiming to improve data quality and consistency, this session gives you actionable tools, patterns, and code you can put to work right away.
Watch the webinar here: https://bit.ly/3MuozWR
Give it a look, fire up your editor, and start experimenting.