Learning Python - resources and ideas
Brian van den Broek
bvande at po-box.mcgill.ca
Tue Feb 8 11:15:30 EST 2005
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Tue Feb 8 11:15:30 EST 2005
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AnOvercomer02 at webtv.net (Cody Houston) said unto the world upon 2005-02-08 05:06: > Hi. What is the best way to learn Python? None of the local schools > near me teach any courses on the topic. Thanks. > > -- > > Cody Houston > AnOvercomer02 at webtv.net Hi Cody, rec.photo.equipment.35mm? -- kind of an odd follow-up for a post to com.lang.python. First thing is to learn to ask better questions. It is a bit hard for anyone to know what to say without knowing your background and level of experience with computers and programming. <http://catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html> contains a lot of very good advice on this. As for actual learning resources, did you look at www.python.org at all? (Or search the archives of this group?) The python site has a few pages of links that speak directly to your question. But, some concrete suggestions: The most useful resources for me (I'm still learning, too) was the Tutor list <http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor>. A free book that starts very slow (it is aimed at high-school students) is <http://www.ibiblio.org/obp/thinkCSpy/> I started with that, until I had a bit of a sense of things (Python is my first language since some BASIC quite some time ago). The Learning Python helped a lot <http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/lpython2/>. Best, Brian vdB
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