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:Practical Programming: An Introduction to Computer Science Using Python
Practical Programming: An Introduction to Computer Science Using Python
Jul 2, 2009, 20 :34 UTC (1 Talkback[s]) (4832 reads)

(Other stories by James Pyles)

"This really is a book that starts at the beginning, even to the point of describing a prompt in a python shell on page 9. Sections in Chapter 2 include Expressions and What is a Type, so the reader isn't presumed to know Python or programming at all. Like any other textbook of worth, there are exercises at the end of each chapter. Also like many textbooks, the information is presented in a rather "dry" manner, so don't expect to be entertained. Please keep in mind that this is a textbook and the target audience is a beginning Computer Science class. Class instructors are the most likely subset of the audience to be commenting about the book at this point, since they are using the book to educate their students in the fundamentals of Computer Science (which leaves me out since I'm not an instructor, but I'll do the review anyway)."

Complete Story

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Intro to Python Introspection and Dynamic Programming(Jul 01, 2009)
A Beginner's Guide to Free Software Programming Languages(Jun 27, 2009)
PythonGTK Programming part 3: Screensaver, Objects, and User Input(Jun 11, 2009)
Graphical Python Programming part 2: Write Your Own Screensaver(May 28, 2009)
Graphical Python Programming With PyGTK(May 14, 2009)
Python's optparse for human beings(Apr 30, 2009)


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  Talkback(s) Name  and Date
Since at least one principle of Python,  ...   IMO a bad choice.   
Rainer Weikusat
Jul 3, 2009, 16:34:01
 
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