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  1. The Astor Library was a free public library in the East Village, Manhattan, developed primarily through the collaboration of New York City merchant John Jacob Astor and New England educator and bibliographer Joseph Cogswell and designed by Alexander Saeltzer. It was primarily meant as a research library, and its books did not circulate.

  2. The Astor Library was created through the generosity of John Jacob Astor (1763-1848), a German immigrant who at his death was the wealthiest man in America. In his will he pledged $400,000 for the establishment of a reference library in New York.

  3. NYPL Archives Record Group 1 consists of the records of the Astor Library, a non-circulating reference library established in 1849 by the terms of the will of John Jacob Astor. In 1895 the Astor Library was consolidated with the Lenox Library and the Tilden Trust to form The New York Public Library.

  4. pypi.org › project › astorastor · PyPI

    Nov 1, 2017 · astor is designed to allow easy manipulation of Python source via the AST. There are some other similar libraries, but astor focuses on the following areas: Round-trip an AST back to Python [ 1]: Modified AST doesn’t need linenumbers, ctx, etc. or otherwise be directly compileable for the round-trip to work.

  5. NYPL Archives Record Group 1 consists of the records of the Astor Library, a non-circulating reference library established in 1849 by the terms of the will of John Jacob Astor. In 1895 the Astor Library was consolidated with the Lenox Library and the Tilden Trust to form The New York Public Library.

  6. astor is designed to allow easy manipulation of Python source via the AST. Getting Started ¶. Install with pip: $ pip install astor. or clone the latest version from GitHub. Features ¶. There are some other similar libraries, but astor focuses on the following areas: Round-trip back to Python via Armin Ronacher’s codegen.py module:

  7. The Astor Library, like the English Masterpieces series, is a recycled series: a publisher (in this case, Dodd Mead) marketing a series (the Astor Library) consisting of books from a defunct series (Dial Standard Library).