On Thursday 13 September 2007 14:59, Michael R. Copeland wrote: > I've decided that Python is a language/environment I'd like to learn > (I've been a professional programmer for 45+ years), but I really don't > know where and how to start! I have a number of books - and am buying > some more - but because of the bewildering number of after-market > packages, environments, and add-ons, I am really quite perplexed about > starting. 8<{{ > Yes, I could fire up the interactive mode and play with some > statements...but I consider that sort of thing for programming neophytes > or experimenting with specific issues. First, I want to develop a > simple Windows application, and because of the plethora of "stuff" the > Python world offers, I don't know where to begin. > For example, what basic, easy-to-use interface might I start with to > build a simple text file parsing and analysis program? That is, I'd > like to start with a simple Windows shell that prompts for a file name, > processes it, and then displays some result. > I am certainly impressed with the apparent experience and openness of > the regular players here, but the discussions here (and in > c.l.p.announce) truly presume knowledge and experience with Python I > don't yet have. Yes, for even a very experienced programmer, entering > the Python world is very daunting - but I want to get started. > Please advise. TIA
A good book, a link to the module index, a good text editor and a command prompt will get you started. Sounds like you have some books. Those should help a lot. A good text editor is a matter of taste. I prefer gvim. However, gvim has a steep learning curve to become productive. There is eric4, which is an IDE. I has a debugger. That may be the place to start. Good luck, Tom -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list