Hi Gour, If you're talking about Summerfield's book, then yes, I think it works alright for learning PySide. However, it does use some older coding conventions, so you'll have to watch out for that. I haven't finished reading it, but I do know that he's using the old school way of connecting signals to slots.
As for Qt5, I don't know enough about it to know. What's in wxWidgets 3 that you absolutely need? I have yet to find anything that wx can't do (except for silly stuff like skinning). - Mike On Fri, May 10, 2013 at 8:50 AM, Gour <[email protected]> wrote: > Hello all, > > having doubt if wxWidgets-3.0 is going to be released ever, I've dediced > to do > my project with Python-3 & Qt. > > Considering I've the PyQt book I am interested if it is still good resource > for learning PySide and whether the migration to Qt5 won't be too > difficult in > the future? > > > Sincerely, > Gour > > -- > While contemplating the objects of the senses, a person > develops attachment for them, and from such attachment lust > develops, and from lust anger arises. > > http://www.atmarama.net | Hlapicina (Croatia) | GPG: 52B5C810 > > > _______________________________________________ > PySide mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/pyside > -- ----------------- Mike Driscoll Blog: http://blog.pythonlibrary.org
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