Sure ... is this : https://www.codecademy.com/learn/python a good place to learn Python ?
Are you wanting to contract with some programmers to create this application for you? ---- Eventually I will have to find programming co-founders and employees to create and iterate the product as user feedback streams in. But I will write the initial prototype myself because I plan to be the main programmer / founder , but yes ... eventually I will need 1 or even 2 co-founders and when the platform gains enough users, we will have to hire programmers and sales/ business people. But this will be a tech-heavy company and all the main founders and employees should be excellent programmers. But for the moment, I plan to write the initial prototype myself ... On Friday, November 20, 2015 at 12:00:34 AM UTC+8, Michael Torrie wrote: > On 11/19/2015 04:59 AM, Cai Gengyang wrote: > > > > From YCombinator's new RFS, This is the problem I want to solve as it > > is a severe problem I face myself and something I need. I want to > > write this app in Python as I heard that Python is a great language > > that many programmers use ... How / where do I start ? The problem is > > detailed below : > > I'm afraid you're going to be discouraged. > > Well the first step is you have to learn programming. And you don't > start with such a large problem, I assure you. You start by learning > the language by following the tutorials, writing small programs to > become familiar with programming and the language itself. Then you > become familiar with related things like algorithms and data structures, > and how to use them with and from Python (or any language). Eventually > you add to that graphical user interface development. > > After that then you might be in a position to start thinking about how > to design and build a program that does what you were talking about. > > There honestly are no shortcuts. Python is a great language, and is > easy to learn, but it's not like you can start cranking out full-blown > applications magically. In the hands of experienced programmers, yes > Python is incredibly fast and flexible for cranking out working apps. > > You might try checking out a Python application development framework > that can produce apps that will run on Android and iOS (and Windows and > Linux) called Kivy. I would think mobile should be your target platform > for such an app. > > > <snip> > > > This seems to us like something software should help solve. We'd like > > to see teams tackling each of the component issues around saving and > > investing, along with ones tackling the entire package. > > Are you wanting to contract with some programmers to create this > application for you? -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list