At 10:22 AM 8/5/2007, vasudevram wrote: > > On Aug 4, 7:23 am, "dhr" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > newbie question: > > > > > Is there a 'K&R" type of Python book? The book that you'd better have on > > > your shelf if you are going into Python? > > > >Python in a Nutshell, the Python Cookbook and Programming Python are >all very good, IMO. Programming Python comes with a CD of all the >source code in the book (at least the 2nd edition did, as well as >Python language - this can save you some time keying in the examples. >Of course, many of the O'Reilly books (and all 3 of these are from >O'Reilly) have links to downloadable source code from them. Just >Google for the name of the book, then in the results, hit the >appropriate link to the O'Reilly site for the book, and look down the >page for the link to the examples' source. > >Or (for Programming Python): > >http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/python2/ >http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/python3/
No CD with 3rd edition, but here are the examples: <http://examples.oreilly.com/python3/> Dick Moores ====================================== Bagdad Weather <http://weather.yahoo.com/forecast/IZXX0008_f.html> -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list