Learn Python the Hard Way: A Very Simple Introduction to the Terrifyingly Beautiful World of Computers and Code

Learn Python the Hard Way: A Very Simple Introduction to the Terrifyingly Beautiful World of Computers and Code

by Zed Shaw
Learn Python the Hard Way: A Very Simple Introduction to the Terrifyingly Beautiful World of Computers and Code

Learn Python the Hard Way: A Very Simple Introduction to the Terrifyingly Beautiful World of Computers and Code

by Zed Shaw

eBook

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Overview

You Will Learn Python!

 

Zed Shaw has perfected the world's best system for learning Python. Follow it and you will succeed-just like the hundreds of thousands of beginners Zed has taught to date! You bring the discipline, commitment, and persistence; the author supplies everything else.

 

In Learn Python the Hard Way, Third Edition, you'll learn Python by working through 52 brilliantly crafted exercises. Read them. Type their code precisely. (No copying and pasting!) Fix your mistakes. Watch the programs run. As you do, you'll learn how software works; what good programs look like; how to read, write, and think about code; and how to find and fix your mistakes using tricks professional programmers use. Most importantly, you'll learn the following, which you need to start writing excellent Python software of your own:

  • Installing a complete Python environment
  • Organizing and writing code
  • Basic mathematics
  • Variables
  • Strings and text
  • Interacting with users
  • Working with files
  • Looping and logic
  • Data structures using lists and dictionaries
  • Program design
  • Object-oriented programming
  • Inheritance and composition
  • Modules, classes, and objects
  • Python packaging
  • Debugging
  • Automated testing
  • Basic game development
  • Basic web development

It'll be hard at first. But soon, you'll just get it-and that will feel great!

 

This tutorial will reward you for every minute you put into it. Soon, you'll know one of the world's most powerful, popular programming languages. You'll be a Python programmer.

 

Watch Zed, too! The accompanying DVD contains 5+ hours of passionate, powerful teaching: a complete Python video course!


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780133124347
Publisher: Pearson Education
Publication date: 09/27/2013
Series: Zed Shaw's Hard Way Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 320
File size: 19 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Zed A. Shaw is the author of the popular online books Learn Python the Hard Way, Learn Ruby the Hard Way, and Learn C the Hard Way. He is also the creator of several open source software projects like Mongrel, Lamson, Mongrel2, and has been programming and writing for nearly 20 years.

 

Table of Contents

Preface 1
Acknowledgments 1
The Hard Way Is Easier 1
Do Not Copy-Paste 2
A Note on Practice and Persistence 3
A Warning for the Smarties 3

 

Exercise 0: The Setup 6
Mac OSX 6
Windows 7
Linux 9
Warnings for Beginners 10

 

Exercise 1: A Good First Program 12
What You Should See 14
Study Drills 15
Common Student Questions 16

 

Exercise 2: Comments and Pound Characters 18
What You Should See 18
Study Drills 18
Common Student Questions 19

 

Exercise 3: Numbers and Math 20
What You Should See 21
Study Drills 21
Common Student Questions 22

 

Exercise 4: Variables and Names 24
What You Should See 25
Study Drills 25
Common Student Questions 25

 

Exercise 5: More Variables and Printing 28
What You Should See 28
Study Drills 29
Common Student Questions 29

 

Exercise 6: Strings and Text 30
What You Should See 31
Study Drills 31
Common Student Questions 31

 

Exercise 7: More Printing. 32
What You Should See 32
Study Drills 32
Common Student Questions 33

 

Exercise 8: Printing, Printing 34
What You Should See 34
Study Drills 34
Common Student Questions 34

 

Exercise 9: Printing, Printing, Printing 36
What You Should See 36
Study Drills 36
Common Student Questions 37

 

Exercise 10: What Was That? 38
What You Should See 39
Escape Sequences 39
Study Drills 40
Common Student Questions 40

 

Exercise 11: Asking Questions 42
What You Should See 42
Study Drills 43
Common Student Questions 43

 

Exercise 12: Prompting People 44
What You Should See 44
Study Drills 44
Common Student Questions 45

 

Exercise 13: Parameters, Unpacking, Variables 46
Hold Up! Features Have Another Name 46
What You Should See 47
Study Drills 48
Common Student Questions 48

 

Exercise 14: Prompting and Passing 50
What You Should See 50
Study Drills 51
Common Student Questions 51

 

Exercise 15: Reading Files 54
What You Should See 55
Study Drills 55
Common Student Questions 56

 

Exercise 16: Reading and Writing Files 58
What You Should See 59
Study Drills 59
Common Student Questions 60

 

Exercise 17: More Files 62
What You Should See 63
Study Drills 63
Common Student Questions 63

 

Exercise 18: Names, Variables, Code, Functions 66
What You Should See 67
Study Drills 68
Common Student Questions 68

 

Exercise 19: Functions and Variables 70
What You Should See 71
Study Drills 71
Common Student Questions 71

 

Exercise 20: Functions and Files 74
What You Should See 75
Study Drills 75
Common Student Questions 75

 

Exercise 21: Functions Can Return Something 78
What You Should See 79
Study Drills 79
Common Student Questions 80

 

Exercise 22: What Do You Know So Far? 81
What You Are Learning 81

 

Exercise 23: Read Some Code 82

 

Exercise 24: More Practice 84
What You Should See 85
Study Drills 85
Common Student Questions 85

 

Exercise 25: Even More Practice 86
What You Should See 87
Study Drills 88
Common Student Questions 89

 

Exercise 26: Congratulations, Take a Test! 90
Common Student Questions 90

 

Exercise 27: Memorizing Logic 92
The Truth Terms 92
The Truth Tables 93
Common Student Questions 94

 

Exercise 28: Boolean Practice 96
What You Should See 98
Study Drills 98
Common Student Questions 98

 

Exercise 29: What If 100
What You Should See 100
Study Drills 101
Common Student Questions 101

 

Exercise 30: Else and If 102
What You Should See 103
Study Drills 103
Common Student Questions 103

 

Exercise 31: Making Decisions 104
What You Should See 105
Study Drills 105
Common Student Questions 105

 

Exercise 32: Loops and Lists 106
What You Should See 107
Study Drills 108
Common Student Questions 108

 

Exercise 33: While-Loops 110
What You Should See 111
Study Drills 111
Common Student Questions 112

 

Exercise 34: Accessing Elements of Lists 114
Study Drills 115

 

Exercise 35: Branches and Functions 116
What You Should See 117
Study Drills 118
Common Student Questions 118

 

Exercise 36: Designing and Debugging 120
Rules for If-Statements 120
Rules for Loops 120
Tips for Debugging 121
Homework 121

 

Exercise 37: Symbol Review 122
Keywords 122
Data Types 123
String Escape Sequences 124
String Formats 124
Operators 125
Reading Code 126
Study Drills 127
Common Student Questions 127

 

Exercise 38: Doing Things to Lists 128
What You Should See 129
Study Drills 130
Common Student Questions 130

 

Exercise 39: Dictionaries, Oh Lovely Dictionaries 132
What You Should See 134
Study Drills 135
Common Student Questions 135

 

Exercise 40: Modules, Classes, and Objects 138
Modules Are Like Dictionaries 138
What You Should See 142
Study Drills 142
Common Student Questions 143

 

Exercise 41: Learning to Speak Object Oriented 144
Word Drills 144
Phrase Drills 144
Combined Drills 145
A Reading Test 145
Practice English to Code 147
Reading More Code 148
Common Student Questions 148

 

Exercise 42: Is-A, Has-A, Objects, and Classes 150
How This Looks in Code 151
About class Name(object) 153
Study Drills 153
Common Student Questions 154

 

Exercise 43: Basic Object-Oriented Analysis and Design 156
The Analysis of a Simple Game Engine 157
Top Down vs. Bottom Up 161
The Code for "Gothons from Planet Percal #25" 162
What You Should See 167
Study Drills 168
Common Student Questions 168

 

Exercise 44: Inheritance vs. Composition 170
What Is Inheritance? 170
The Reason for super() 175
Composition 176
When to Use Inheritance or Composition 177
Study Drills 177
Common Student Questions 178

 

Exercise 45: You Make a Game 180
Evaluating Your Game 180
Function Style 181
Class Style 181
Code Style 182
Good Comments 182
Evaluate Your Game 183

 

Exercise 46: A Project Skeleton 184
Installing Python Packages 184
Creating the Skeleton Project Directory 185
Testing Your Setup 187
Using the Skeleton 188
Required Quiz 188
Common Student Questions 189

 

Exercise 47: Automated Testing 190
Writing a Test Case 190
Testing Guidelines 192
What You Should See 192
Study Drills 193
Common Student Questions 193

 

Exercise 48: Advanced User Input 194
Our Game Lexicon 194
What You Should Test 196
Design Hints 198
Study Drills 198
Common Student Questions 198

 

Exercise 49: Making Sentences 200
Match and Peek 200
The Sentence Grammar 201
A Word on Exceptions 203
What You Should Test 204
Study Drills 204
Common Student Questions 204

 

Exercise 50: Your First Website 206
Installing lpthw.web 206
Make a Simple "Hello World" Project 207
What's Going On? 208
Fixing Errors 209
Create Basic Templates 209
Study Drills 211
Common Student Questions 211

 

Exercise 51: Getting Input from a Browser 214
How the Web Works 214
How Forms Work 216
Creating HTML Forms 218
Creating a Layout Template 220
Writing Automated Tests for Forms 221
Study Drills 223
Common Student Questions 224

 

Exercise 52: The Start of Your Web Game 226
Refactoring the Exercise 43 Game 226
Sessions and Tracking Users 231
Creating an Engine 232
Your Final Exam 235
Common Student Questions 236

Next Steps 237
How to Learn Any Programming Language 238

Advice from an Old Programmer 241

 

Appendix: Command Line Crash Course 243
Introduction: Shut Up and Shell 243
Exercise 1: The Setup 245
Exercise 2: Paths, Folders, Directories (pwd) 248
Exercise 3: If You Get Lost 250
Exercise 4: Make a Directory (mkdir) 250
Exercise 5: Change Directory (cd) 252
Exercise 6: List Directory (ls) 256
Exercise 7: Remove Directory (rmdir) 260
Exercise 8: Move Around (pushd, popd) 262
Exercise 9: Make Empty Files (Touch, New-Item) 265
Exercise 10: Copy a File (cp) 266
Exercise 11: Move a File (mv) 269
Exercise 12: View a File (less, MORE) 271
Exercise 13: Stream a File (cat) 272
Exercise 14: Remove a File (rm) 273
Exercise 15: Exit Your Terminal (exit) 275
Command Line Next Steps 276

 

Index 279

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