On Sep 28, 12:38 pm, "sean tierney" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I just read it (though I bought it half a year ago...don't judge :). > > Author recommends Python 2.3 and above...and as far as I know the > examples are good. And if anything IS outdated -- you'll be able to > do some quick research to get you to where you need to be...and he > does mention code several areas of change/addition/modification. (ie > urllib and urllib2). He uses a couple of 3rd party projects too. > > I really liked the book. I think Goerzen did a good job. He > addresses the code in the context of the problem the code is meant to > solve, which I found helpful. That said, it's not a substitute for > actually reading the code. > > ...if you haven't read the most recent edition of Programming Python > by Mark Lutz (O'Reilly), I'd recommend that first. Programming Python > covers (some) networking and everything else. More bang for the $$. > > Sean
Sean, thanks for your review and recommendation of the book Programming Python. atm, i'm looking for a book that has detailed coverage on networking. so "Foundations of ..." seems to be a good choice for me. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list