what's a good getting started with python guide for a professional programmer coming from js/go?
I already basically understand the python code I look at (if it's written well), but I don't understand some of the concepts.
I was able to learn Go in less than 100 pages. Can I learn basic python without having to dedicate lots of time to reading the reference manual?
Also, python 2 or 3?
>>58574496
Bump for interest. I wish to learn Python from scratch. Would learn C# if it was divorced from the Windows bullshit.
also interested
>>58574506
c# is fucking god-tier. Just download VS Code and get to work on Linux using .NET core, and stop whining about Windows
>>58574550
Which Linoox should I use. I don't want to spend a week configuring this shit just to program.
>>58574590
just use Windows like people that aren't spergs. or Ubuntu if you just want to get it done
>>58574496
>shilling your ugly ass vim theme
fuck of fplease
>>58574550
This is the most cuckolded thing I've read in my life.
Don't do this guys.
>>58574731
>posting python in a thread about python
>shilling a custom vim theme
I think the term you're looking for is "showing off".
What image would be more appropriate though?
>>58574496
If you have any programming experience you should be fine by simply skimming the reference docs for a couple hours, maybe implement some simple stuff for your day-to-day. I like starting with a few crypto primitives like aes/sha1/modexp, pick whatever fit your domain of expertise. If you're going from go/js to python I assume it's for some niche domain python has nice libs for, so that would probably be either reverse engineering or signal analysis. So something like a debugger or FFT implementation should be a nice project to get you started.