Wait a sec...
I think I get this...
In essence, the implication of immutability for Python is that there is only
one "parrot", one "spam,"in fact one anything. (This seems like it must hold
for data primitives - does it hold for complex objects as well? It seems it
must...) In addition there is o
teve Holden wrote:
>
> Dan Esch wrote:
> > Wait a sec...
> >
> > I think I get this...
> >
> > In essence, the implication of immutability for Python is that there is
> > only one "parrot", one "spam,"in fact one anything. (This seems
Absolutely.
Trivially and at a high level,
teaching python to kids who are learning programming as introductory
material
teaching python to motivated college graduate students
teaching python to adult non-professional programmers with a need to learn
python (like for instance, frustrated account
Okay, I'm currently stuck with VBA / Excel in work and the following
paradigm:
VB (6? .NET? not sure) ==> VBA ==> Excel 2003 and Access
Where I'd like to be is this
Python ==> X ==> Open Office / (MySQL or other) for some sufficiently
useful value of X.
Does it exist? Is it just a set of mod
Have been browsing through this list and reading documentation and tutorials
for python self-study. I have, apparently, teh stupid. Google is my
friend. Off I go. Thanks.
On 1/8/09, Benjamin Kaplan wrote:
>
>
>
> On Thu, Jan 8, 2009 at 10:07 AM, Dan Esch wrote:
>
>>
I decided to learn Python.
I decided to learn Python because I hate visual basic for applications and I
can feel my brain shrink everytime I invoke that freaking macro editor.
It's bad enough that Mwfdg [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> had to
eliminate the
original simple keystroke macro to