On 04/21/2013 12:24 PM, Jim Mooney wrote:
On the other hand, from the perspective of "When will the *majority* of
publicly-available libraries and packages support Python 3, then the answer
is "Right now". The Python 3 Wall of Shame turned mostly green some time
ago,
and is now known as the Python 3 Wall of Superpowers:

https://python3wos.appspot.com/

Based on the number of downloads, almost three quarters of the Top 50
Python
packages support Python 3:

http://py3ksupport.appspot.com/


Thanks. Very useful links to save that would have taken time for me to find
on my own.

As for "syllabus," probably a dream for a dynamic language ;')  I was
thinking of the time my brother, a Lit grad, gave me a syllabus of
literature to read - still working on it forty years later.



http://pymotw.com/2/
This could be one way to learn about new (to you) Python modules in a systematic way.

On the other hand, if you're looking for a syllabus of studying languages (plural), consider
   1) a dynamic language
   2) a compile one
   3) an assembler
   4) other    (lisp, Forth, ML, Prolog, ...)

Each category is enough different that you have to learn all new habits. But knowing each one is valuable when using the other three types.




--
DaveA
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