On Monday, October 3, 2016 at 3:38:24 AM UTC+5:30, Crane Ugly wrote: > I am not new in scripting in general. > And about a year I create scripts in python, but my approach was always based > on my habits from UNIX shell, where data types are not obvious. > Going deeper with python I see necessity to know better data types, > differences between them and most importantly when one data type if better > then the other, with life examples. > Unfortunately, books I've see so far describe data types in very formal way > and without taking into account day-to-day practical aspects. > For example in my practice data rarely hardcoded in the program code and come > from files, streams or generated in the program. How to put them together for > better processing? > I need some good examples of books or web articles, that can describe > language from data processing perspective, not just academical explanations > of when language is. > > Leonid
Yes this is a real need and very badly satisfied at the moment - Language texts are language centered — mostly what you'll get out here - Data Structure texts tend to emphasize storage structures — eg ‘linked-lists’ — rather than data structures eg sets, bags, lists and their complementary semantics - And the academic texts are too academic/theoretical Something I had written [Sorry! very much in the 3rd category!!] nearly two decades ago: http://cs.unipune.ac.in/admin/obx/hod/course.pdf particularly the Intro to programming, discrete structures and data structures syllabi -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list