> - What book or doc would you recommend for a thorough > thrashing of object oriented programming (from a Python > perspective) for someone who is weak in OO? In other > words, how can someone learn to think in an OO sense, > rather than the old linear code sense? Hopefully, heavy > on problems and solutions!
If OOP is the problem, you could try this: Object Oriented Analysys Peter Coad, Edward Yourdon Prentice Hall Old by quite informative As an alternative, have a look at the following ones. Thinking in Python: http://www.mindview.net/Books/TIPython Dive into Python: http://diveintopython.org/ How to Think Like a Computer Scientist: http://www.ibiblio.org/obp/thinkCSpy/ > - In college, I came to admire the Schaum's Outline book > approach--again heavy on problems and solutions! What's > the closest Python equivalent? Maybe this: Python Cookbook Alex Martelli, David Ascher O'Reilly HTH ----------------------------------- Alessandro Bottoni -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list