And I did see yours which was great. But the reason I ask this, is because there are SO many different approaches you could take to a single problem, how do you know which is correct or why one is better than the other? You can dig yourself in to holes with more complex problems, and not understand why.
Second thing, I'd like the answer to be somewhere, in a tutorial. If I really didn't get the solution, it helps to have the solution walked through and next time, I may be able to solve it (hopefully, anyway). I'm so new at this, that sometimes, I'm completely stumped and a few hints would go a long way, then having the answer presented, with an explanation, even further. Becky On Wed, Dec 9, 2009 at 4:19 PM, Alan Gauld <alan.ga...@btinternet.com>wrote: > > "Becky Mcquilling" <ladymcse2...@gmail.com> wrote > > > Is there a good Tutorial that you guys recommend, where you actually get a >> useful exercise to try and do and then you can be walked through different >> solutions? >> > > What an interesting question. > I'm not aware of any tutorials that do this (although mine does in a few > cases > - eg the address book and myultiplication table examples - its not a > general > approach). I'll be interested to see if anyone else knows of anything. > > > Administrator type functions and have to debug stuff and starting to do >> this >> on Python, so something not quite so incredibly dense would work better, I >> just don't know where to start. >> > > There are plenty of beginners tutorials including mine. > I just don't know of any that use multiple solutions to a single problem > as a teaching tool. > > > -- > Alan Gauld > > Author of the Learn to Program web site > http://www.alan-g.me.uk/ > > _______________________________________________ > Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org > To unsubscribe or change subscription options: > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor >
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