John Henry wrote: > jbchua wrote: > > Hello everybody. > > > > I am an Electrical Engineering major and have dabbled in several > > languages such as Python, C, and Java in my spare time because of my > > interest in programming. However, I have not done any practical > > programming because I have no idea where to get started. I taught > > myself these languages basically by e-tutorials and books. This makes > > me feel as if I don't really know how to implement these languages. > > Does anybody have any advice on where to start applying my limited > > knowledge practically in order to advance my learning? > > Which area of EE are you in? Or just starting on that as well? > > If you're just starting, chanllege yourself to build a R mesh and > calculate the Thevenin equivalent looking out from a particular node. > Then you can expand that to an RLC network. > > Besure to use Objects, think in terms of objects, and code in objects. > Don't hard code the data type. You'll be able to see how magical the > Duck Typing is in Python. > > Have fun.
I'm a freshman-- I have yet to take any actual EE classes. I am actually thinking of maybe changing my focus towards Computer Science or at least minoring in it. To be perfectly honest, I have no idea what you just asked me to do ;\ -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list