> what is currently Essential Reading on Python, I mean in print rather > Of course, "it depends". Dive into Python looks pretty good. Python
I've been beating on people with, err, recommending Dive Into Python, for two reasons - you can read it online to see if it suits you, *and* it's *very* different in style from most language teaching books, none of that 'useless hello world nonsense', it really does start out with hairy code - because you can *read* it and learn interesting points in a context which makes it clear that they're not just pedantic points, but that they apply to real problems. (I've found it useful for porting perl programmers, too :-) I also suggest (especially if you like working from Real Paper Books) the Python Standard Libraries book - not to read through, but to pick up, thumb through and random, and say "oh, that's a cool thing"... getting familiar with "batteries" that are in reach, along a different path from the usual (google :-) path... _______________________________________________ Pythonmac-SIG maillist - Pythonmac-SIG@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pythonmac-sig