On Tue, Aug 07, 2007 at 03:04:55PM +0400, Khamid Nurdiev wrote:
> Hello all,
> so long i have been learning python with two books 1) Official tutorial by
> Guido Van Rossum and 2) Pythong Programming: An Introduction to Computer
> Science by John M. Zelle and like them a lot as the first one gives a lot of
> explanations but without any exercises, but the second one has a lot of
> exercises to do which I like. I would like to know if anyone can recommend a
> book like the second one with a lot of exercises to do and problems to
> solve, not just the explanations for concurrent and also further study.
>
You might look at "Python Cookbook", by Alex Martelli. Each
section (and there are many) gives a problem, a solution, and
a discussion. So, you could read a problem section, write your own
solution, then compare your solution with the solution in the book.
And, as a bonus, the discussion section will help to understand how
the solution works and why it's a good way to solve the problem.
There is also an on-line version, which is definitely worth looking
at, but does not have the problem-solution-discussion format:
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/
Dave
--
Dave Kuhlman
http://www.rexx.com/~dkuhlman
_______________________________________________
Tutor maillist - [email protected]
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor