On Wed, Jan 30, 2013 at 1:55 PM, Daniel W. Rouse Jr. <dwrousejr@nethere.comnospam> wrote: > I am currently using "Learning Python" by Mark Lutz and David Ascher, > published by O'Reilly (ISBN 1-56592-464-9)--but I find the explanations > insufficient and the number of examples to be sparse. I do understand some > ANSI C programming in addition to Python (and the book often wanders off > into a comparison of C and Python in its numerous footnotes), but I need a > better real-world example of how tuples and dictionaries are being used in > actual Python code.
Have you checked out the online documentation at http://docs.python.org/ ? That might have what you're looking for. By the way, you may want to consider learning and using Python 3.3 instead of the older branch 2.7; new features are only being added to the 3.x branch now, with 2.7 getting bugfixes and such for a couple of years, but ultimately it's not going anywhere. Obviously if you're supporting existing code, you'll need to learn the language that it was written in, but if this is all new code, go with the recent version. ChrisA -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list