On 06/02/2011 11:09 AM, Cal Leeming [Simplicity Media Ltd] wrote:

Pretty shameful that after almost 6 years of (fairly advanced) Python coding, I still finding myself not knowing some of the basic 101 stuff.. Slightly off topic but, does anyone else have that issue when coding? (i.e. doing really complex code, but forgetting/not knowing some of the real basic stuff).


Yeah, I run into that from time to time. What I do to remedy it is read books. Especially ones like the Python Essential Reference by David Beazley. Just scan through it in the bath or at breakfast or whatever, and you'll find a handy module you never knew existed, or a wonderful new feature in something you use all the time.

I'm anxiously anticipating Doug Hellmann's new book on the standard library, which should ship sometime this month.
    http://amzn.com/0321767349
From what I've read in his PyMoTW posts and seen in his PyCon presentation, this book will make my Python skills even better.

I suspect that most working developers are self-taught, in that they didn't learn the technology they work with from the ground up in a classroom -- they picked it up as they went along. That's what I blame for the gaps in our knowledge. I don't think these books are the best place to start with Python, but they're a great way to sharpen the axe.

Shawn

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