this post was submitted on 27 Aug 2023
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Python

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I am at a high-beginner/low-intermediate level in Python, and one thing that drives me nuts is how poorly I am able to read the Python official documentation and grok how to use the described code.

What's the secret? Are there any guides/videos/books that can help my understand how to approach reading it? Or, is it just one of those things that I need to just keep coming back to while coding, and eventually I will get the hang of it?

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[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago (2 children)

If you are looking for books, check out:

Intermediate:

  • Beyond the Basic Stuff with Python — Best Practices, Tools, and Techniques, OOP, Practice Projects
  • Pydon'ts — Write elegant Python code, make the best use of the core Python features
  • Python Distilled — this pragmatic guide provides a concise narrative related to fundamental programming topics such as data abstraction, control flow, program structure, functions, objects, and modules

Advanced:

  • Fluent Python — takes you through Python’s core language features and libraries, and shows you how to make your code shorter, faster, and more readable at the same time
  • Serious Python — deployment, scalability, testing, and more
  • Practices of the Python Pro — learn to design professional-level, clean, easily maintainable software at scale, includes examples for software development best practices
  • Intuitive Python — productive development for projects that last
[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

@learnbyexample @ChrisLicht

From Segovia, we strongly recommend that you buy the book "Intuituve Python". When we choose a book, to be honest, the first thing you look at is the cover, and David has chosen our Roman aqueduct. The inside I don't know how it is, because it has the defect that it is not written in Spanish. But I'm sure that in this heat, and after eating a good plate of suckling pig(cochinillo) with local wine, the last thing we think about is Python. Mañana ya... el interior

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