hi /g/uys
I've been working with Python for 2 or 3 years, mostly for academic stuff, like generating papers reports from laboratories, plotting graphs, writting data structures to test my algorithms. Now I want to go further with this language
I really like programming books. I know that the internet is itself a big programming resource, but still I like when it's all wrapped up in a nice way. So I am looking for a Python book.
I've seen many of them, there are many books which just cover the language, but still there is a whole bunch of books that are for specific areas like networking, data processing etc. I am looking for a in-depth Python book, which would cover the language, its features, maybe some core libs like matplotlib or numpy/scipy (optionally, thats not my aim now). As I mentioned before, I am not a beginner in Python or generally in programming.
So, do you have any suggestions, /g/?
P.S I would look for a book that is not 200 pages long, I'd rather have something deep to cover all the basis
I would recommend some video series on udemy. They have stuff on almost anything you could want and its delivered in video format if thats your style of learning.
>>61290746
Use the wiki faggot
https://wiki.installgentoo.com/index.php?title=Programming_resources
>>61290977
Read the wiki faggot, almost every python book listed is intro level.
If you want a general python book, the O'reilly Python Cookbook is like 600 pages of sort of canonical solutions for simple tasks covering most of the language's features.
Since you do research, you may be interested in Real World Instrumentation with Python, it covers some basic circuit theory stuff, but also goes into wrapping C code to automate measurements and control.