Coding is an art....that helps you craft beautiful things in digital world.
As beginner it's pretty natural to confuse about which learning curve can
benefit you most in future.

If I were you I would go with simple approach. I would choose best of the
best software available and start building its source by looking at it. Bit
by bit piece by piece it would help you to understand a pre-built
application.

Lets assume as you've posted in Django group so you might be interested in
web development. Pick a best project and start writing your own guide for
yourself. The best one I came across is django-oscar. Start building it's
replica and document each step in the process for yourself. You can consult
the django's own docs as well as django-oscar's documentation for
understanding what the function/class is about.

I bet that in a single month you will be able to build a semi-dynamic site
yourself. In maximum 3 to 4 months you can really do wonders.

Hope it helps.

Regards,
M

On Tue, Feb 28, 2017 at 1:39 AM, Aaron Myatt via Tutor <tutor@python.org>
wrote:

> Just my humble contribution: I rather appreciated this fellows intermediate
> python tutorial series:
> https://youtu.be/YSe9Tu_iNQQ?list=PLQVvvaa0QuDfju7ADVp5W1GF9jVhjbX-_
>
> Though I would argue some other topics, like context managers, would also
> be worth including in his list.
>
> On 28 Feb 2017 9:15 a.m., "Alan Gauld via Tutor" <tutor@python.org> wrote:
>
> > On 27/02/17 14:57, leam hall wrote:
> >
> > >> I'm not aware of such a list, and I'm not sure it's of much value.
> > >> Better to just learn what you need and use it. ...
> >
> > > When I was coming up as a Linux guy I took the old SAGE guidelines and
> > > studied each "level" in turn. It was useful for making me a
> well-rounded
> > > admin and helped me put off some higher end stuff I wasn't really ready
> > > for.
> >
> > Its an individual choice, so if it works for you don't let
> > me stop you :-) But I still don't know of any such list.
> >
> > > documentation. It's sort of the "if we hired a junior or senior coder,
> > what
> > > basics would we want them to know?"
> >
> > That's the thing. I've never, in 40 years in IT, seen
> > anyone advertise for a junior programmer. Just doesn't seem to
> > happen. It's a bit like having a headache and asking for a
> > weak pain killer...
> >
> > There are places offered for programming apprenticeships,
> > but they assume you are starting from scratch.
> >
> > --
> > Alan G
> > Author of the Learn to Program web site
> > http://www.alan-g.me.uk/
> > http://www.amazon.com/author/alan_gauld
> > Follow my photo-blog on Flickr at:
> > http://www.flickr.com/photos/alangauldphotos
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________
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> >
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