On 16 April 2015 at 09:51, Benjamin Root wrote:
> A little birdie has told me that someone else is writing a new
> comprehensive matplotlib book (I think it would replace Sandros' book).
> Last I heard from the birdie, he was most of the way done with the
> manuscript. Based on my experience with
A little birdie has told me that someone else is writing a new
comprehensive matplotlib book (I think it would replace Sandros' book).
Last I heard from the birdie, he was most of the way done with the
manuscript. Based on my experience with the edit/review process, I would
guess 2-3 more months to
That's cool. I just found the book provided the right level of detail for
me to start using QtDesigner with my projects. I can't speak for PyQt5 but
I don't see the concepts have changed much over the past 5 or so years.
Agreed though, if you're brand new to python and are only familiar with
pytho
"even they don't cover latest enhancements up to six month before print"
In my defense, I was making updates at the last possible moment to cover
changes in the latest release (1.4.3), and provided vague guidance on
things to come, going so far as to replace references to a v1.5 release
with v2.1.
No offense, but it really is outdated. Consider that it'll take two years to do
the writing and the lecture work the research material is form 2007 to 2008. We
now are in 2015. As you can tell from other books which have been published
between 2013 and a really helpy book from March, 24th 2015 (