Source | Read online | Watch | Download | Code | Donate |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
On Github | Free on Gitbooks | The YouTube series | Gitbooks | On Github |
The tutorial is available for free download all formats via Gitbooks, a $5 donation would go a long way to supporting this project.
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An easy to understand introduction to the Python programming language by using examples. You will build a command line todo list manager after you understand the basics of the language. Please have a Python 3 interpreter with you because you'll need to run code as you read!
There are a large number of languages out there and new ones coming out every week, so this question is important, why learn Python over X. There is one simple answer for this, Python is an open source language having a very wide adoption and it has one of the simplest syntaxes of all languages, it literally feels like writing English. You can quickly write programs to solve problems in Python (it takes less number of lines and less time for writing a Python script).
Linux and Mac, congrats! You already have Python installed, use your package manager in Linux to install the python3
package, and brew for Mac.
Windows, you can download the .msi
or .exe
file from https://python.org, run the installer, click on Next Next until it finishes.
Android, install termux
(https://termux.com/help.html) & run apt-get install python3
to install python inside it.
This tutorial is the culmination of the Python trainings I have given in the past. As I took the trainings, I wanted to refer the participants to a tutorial which would be light weight yet effective and would explain by example rather than by theory. There are many guides for Python, but I didn't find the one I was looking for. As someone said, "If your dream book hasn't been written, write it!", hence I started to write this guide.
I don't profess to be a God at anything, but I do feel that good things happen when a group comes together for one goal. This is an open source guide and I invite you to contribute.
This guide is a part of the Multiversity initiative. The aim is to have high quality open source tutorials along with screencasts.
This guide focuses only on Python3, Python2 is on life support and we do not recommend using it, unless there is an exceptional scenario.
We have thirteen chapters:
- Each chapter has an associated YouTube screencast.
- Each chapter has concepts explained by an example (can be as stupid as 1+1=2)
- Code that is supposed to run on the Interpreter starts with
>>>
like>>> not True
.
>>> not True
False
In this case, >>> not True
is the statement and False
is the output.
- Code that doesn't start with
>>>
is supposed to be run in a file of the extension .py - If there is significant code for the chapter, you can find a file in the code repository, please look on the basis of chapters.
- Read the chapters end to end.
- Watch the YouTube screencast, there is a reason why they are free!
- Do NOT search the Internet for things like "how to do X in python", use the documentation.
We need your help to become a great guide! All contributions are welcome. Please raise an issue on Github!
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