Perl Cookbook for Python Programmers: http://pleac.sourceforge.net/pleac_python/index.html
P3K as starting point (slight cringe) as long as you know the caveats. I'm of the mind as Christopher with regard to how Python 3.0 has been released on Python.org: """I don't think that Python 3.0 is a bad thing. But that it's displayed so prominently on the Python web site, without any kind of warning that it's not going to work with 99% of the Python code out there, scares the hell out of me. People are going to download and install 3.0 by default, and nothing's going to work. They're going to complain, and many are going to simply walk away. - Christopher Lenz""" Python3 is beautiful, and I am totally with James Bennet http://www.b-list.org/weblog/2008/dec/05/python-3000/ That said I would suggest you learn the whole history of the Py3K project and its 19+ years of 20/20 hindsight on what works well and what doesn't so you can if you want to jump right into Python3 fully informed on why it is the way it is and why you need to wait for 3rd party libraries to catch up and release a Python 3 compatible version and why all the Internal libraries are no worry except for the fact some of them have disappeared in the cleanup or merged into a single library. Then you can make sense of all the 2.x books and posts and know where to start when trying to apply it to Python 3. Cheers, PN (Python 2.5.2, Stackless Python 2.5.2, Python 2.6 and Python 3.0 on my box) P.S. Look into iPython as your new favourtie shell and virtualenv to help you keep all your projects straight and you'll be very productive in no time =) 2008/12/7 Bertilo Wennergren <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > I'm planning to start learning Python now, using Python 3000. > I have no previous Python skills, but I now Perl pretty well. > I'm also well experienced with JavaScript. > > Any pointers and tips how I should go about getting into > Python? -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list