
Dead Simple Python: Idiomatic Python for the Impatient Programmer
Author(s): Jason C McDonald (Author)
- Publisher finelybook 出版社: No Starch Press
- Publication Date 出版日期: November 22, 2022
- Language 语言: English
- Print length 页数: 752 pages
- ISBN-10: 1718500920
- ISBN-13: 9781718500921
Book Description
After speeding through Python’s basic syntax and setting up a complete programming environment, you’ll learn to work with Python’s dynamic data typing, its support for both functional and object-oriented programming techniques, special features like generator expressions, and advanced topics like concurrency. You’ll also learn how to package, distribute, debug, and test your Python project.
Master how to:
- Make Python’s dynamic typing work for you to produce cleaner, more adaptive code.
- Harness advanced iteration techniques to structure and process your data.
- Design classes and functions that work without unwanted surprises or arbitrary constraints.
- Use multiple inheritance and introspection to write classes that work intuitively.
- Improve your code’s responsiveness and performance with asynchrony, concurrency, and parallelism.
- Structure your Python project for production-grade testing and distribution
The most pedantically pythonic primer ever printed, Dead Simple Python will take you from working with the absolute basics to coding applications worthy of publication.
Editorial Reviews
Review
—Ben Lutkevich, TechTarget
“Definitely a book that any Python programmer NEEDS to have on [their] bookshelf!”
—The Security Noob
“Makes a good starting point for those contemplating a serious Python effort and who need to start with the basics.”
—Lee Teschler, Microcontroller Tips
“The book that anyone who wants to become an expert Python programmer should read. . . . I don’t believe that anyone who works through the material in this book will fail to become a competent and confident Python coder. It is quite a fantastic book.”
“Reasonably paced and clear. . . . I expect that I’ll refer to the book the next time I start a small Python project.”
—Paul Ferrill, freelancer for a variety of magazines and websites
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