Lisi <lisi.re...@gmail.com> wrote: <<Is it just me, or is this a blatant plug for a specific book, and is it therefore Spam?>>
I hope it's just you, because it is not spam. As I said, I read a *lot* of computer books (I'm a database administrator) and this book really stands out. It's so good I'm thinking of seeing if my wife, who knows nothing about programming, would like to read it. I've never felt that way about a computer book before, and since this is so unusual in the computer book field, I thought I'd share it here. <<For what it is worth, I hate all those games.>> I'm not a gamer either, but this paradigm allowed the author to show the great flexibility of Python. I think he made a wise choice. Using games as a starting point should also make this book useful to teachers of programming 101, because kids love games. Anything that gets kids coding instead of just wasting time is good IMHO. << Alan seems to use address books (anyhow initially). Now I can see the point in that.>> I'm sorry you were offended by my posts. If others were as well let me know and I'll unsubscribe immediately. -- Frank L. "Cranky Frankie" Palmeri Risible Riding Raconteur & Writer " . . . and the extended forecast, until you come back to me, baby, is high tonight, low tomorrow, and precipitation is expected." - Tom Waits, "Emotional Weather Report" _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor