Well, writing that book would be a major undertaking that I am not willing to take any soon ;)
However, all you are asking for is already in my lectures at ACCU: http://www.reportlab.org/~andy/accu2005/pyuk2005_simionato_wondersofpython.zip >From the README: """ <snip> Generally speaking these lectures are unpolished, too concise, with more code than words, and with cutting edge/experimental code. Read them at your risk and peril. Take in account the fact that they were prepared as a last minute replacement for Alex Martelli's tutorial, with a limited amount of time and a very advanced program to follow. My main concern in preparing these notes was to give the readers a few *ideas*, not polished solutions. If you are reading these notes, you will be more than capable to customize these ideas to your own situation and to fix the unavoidable little bugs, imperfections, annoyances. Whereas I recommend the first lecture about iterators and generators to everybody, take in account than the second and especially the third lecture may cause your head to explode. I do not take any responsability in that case. """ Michele Simionato -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list