Also, are Python and Ruby similar languages? Which would be better to learn?
John Salerno wrote: > Thanks for the great replies everyone! "Learning Python" was my first > choice, but it was also the reason I asked about older books, since it's > from 2003. But it seems that isn't an issue, and I think that would be a > nice place to start. > > Just one more quick question: I'm basically learning programming for > fun, and I'm concentrating on C# right now. Python seems interesting, > but I was wondering if I should even bother. Would it supplement C# in > any way, or can C# do everything Python can? > > Thanks, > John > > John Salerno wrote: > >> hi all. are there any recommendations for an intro book to python that >> is up-to-date for the latest version? >> >> would reading a book from a year or two ago cause me to miss much? >> >> thanks! -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list