pip it virtually the only one I've ever seen people recommend for a slew of both development library installs, as well as end-user utils.
Like one I installed on some systems today, one of my favorite python apps, bpytop. Goes through a ton of installation methods, from pip to snap to distro package managers, etc. But pip is mentioned a lot - things like anaconda, pipx, etc etc not mentioned.
Just another example besides docker-compose, but I virtually never see anything but pip and distro packaging mentioned for python app installs. Maybe occasionally snap or flatpak like bpytop. But usually pip.
For those who just can't seem to get away from CLI (like me) but really love the look of Grafana, this is not a replacement but it sure is pretty to look at. Bpytop comes with 14 pre-installed themes and is supper easy to install.
>as wondering if you guys know of anything better
Better is often subjective. But such tools are a dime a dozen. For example, https://github.com/aristocratos/bpytop.
>or if I should continue dev work on it since we need it?
You'll have to answer that question for yourself. What will the tool do better than all the other tools? But even if the answer is "nothing", no one is forcing you to stop developing your tool.
Someone developed a small monitoring program for linux (https://github.com/aristocratos/bpytop), it has weird (at first) requirements:
Also needs a UTF8 locale and a font that covers:
But he builds the UI with the last two and draws occupation graphs with Braille.
I thought it was in the same area than OP's post.
OS: Debian 10 (Buster)
WM: i3-gaps
Wallpaper: Dragon's Curve slightly modified
Theme: Mojave-dark [GTK2/3]
Icons: Yaru-Blue [GTK2/3]
Terminal: xfce4-terminal
Resource Monitor: Bpytop
Font (bar): Fira Code
Font (Terminal): Meslo Nerd Font