Hi DL,

I started from here https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/index.html .. And then 
found out there should be more which is not covered here, so I was looking for 
a book. And then got the journeyman book and started reading it. I am now on 
chapter 11. Yet not bored and distracted. The author really wrote the book 
well, as the title suggests.

I used python tutor sometime when I was reading the scope. It helped there. 
Since then I have not used that, and wrote here when something book didn’t 
explain. But that was not the Book’s fault, it uses an example from binging of 
the chapter and end with the same example by improving it with the concept as 
it teaches. The questions I asked was not the related directly to the subject  
it was teaching, but to me it was required to move on, so I came here. :)

Also I didn’t buy the whole series. Being an Indian, $ is really expensive to 
us. :) The whole series will cost me INR 2768.55. 


Thanks,

Arup Rakshit
a...@zeit.io



> On 07-Apr-2019, at 2:02 AM, DL Neil <pythonl...@danceswithmice.info> wrote:
> 
> Arup,
> 
> Good choice! (thought I recognised the example-problem) The three books in 
> the "Python Craftsman" series/bundle: "Apprentice", "Journeyman", and 
> "Master" are a thoroughly recommendable resource. As the titles infer, they 
> start at a beginner level and become more complex over time. Even seasoned 
> pythonista can learn from them.
> 
> Did you start with "Apprentice" and work 'up'? How are you finding them? Are 
> they recommendable to others?
> 
> Did the Python Tutor help you 'see' what was happening and how values were 
> changing whilst the code executed?
> 
> 
> Web-Ref:
> https://leanpub.com/b/python-craftsman
> 
> Disclaimer:
> I have no relationship with either resource, other than as a happy user.
> 
> 
> On 7/04/19 3:38 AM, Arup Rakshit wrote:
>> Hello,
>> DL, the book I am reading is https://leanpub.com/python-journeyman .. It is 
>> an awesome book. The code is in page #351.
>> David and Chris, The analogy you used to answer my questions were super 
>> helpful. I could answer my own question by putting some effort by dry 
>> running the code ofcourse. In that case, I am 100% sure the analogies were 
>> used in this email would never come to me.
>> Thanks again to all of you.
>> Thanks,
>> Arup Rakshit
>> a...@zeit.io
>>> On 05-Apr-2019, at 1:24 AM, DL Neil <pythonl...@danceswithmice.info> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Arup,
>>> 
>>> On 5/04/19 7:33 AM, Arup Rakshit wrote:
>>>> I am reading a Python book, where the author used a simple word wrap 
>>>> program to explain another concept. But I am not understanding some parts 
>>>> of the program.
>>> ...
>>> 
>>> A technique for solving this sort of comprehension-problem is to simulate 
>>> the operations of the computer/CPU on-paper. Instruction-by-instruction, 
>>> write down the names of the objects instantiated and their (current) 
>>> values. As you loop through the code, those (current) values change, and 
>>> you will see exactly how they change - divining (and defining) the 'why', 
>>> as you go...
>>> 
>>> Of course, only old-***s (like me) have the skills to handle pen/pencil and 
>>> paper technology! So, may I recommend an excellent tool which will 
>>> (hopefully) achieve the same ends for you: http://pythontutor.com/
>>> 
>>> 
>>> PS don't be shy about mentioning your "book", its "author", and its title 
>>> (hey, go 'full-APA' adding ISBN, pageNR...). Such will be a credit to the 
>>> author(s) and a possible recommendation/inspiration to fellow Pythonista!
>>> 
>>> -- 
>>> Regards =dn
>>> -- 
>>> https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
> 
> -- 
> Regards =dn
> -- 
> https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

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