![]() ![]() In my line of study (civil engineering), sometimes I have to treat amounts of data where it makes the most sense to use Python (smaller = Excel, bigger = something else?). ![]() This book just gives you ideas, which can then lead you to having your own ideas for projects you're interested in. You don't have to memorize the code and reproduce it exactly, but just try to make the same kind of program. My advice is to re-type the code yourself, play around with the program, and then try to recreate the program from scratch. It's mostly stuff like small games and simulations. ![]() py file (easy to copy/paste everything at once), but are still complete, runnable programs. The projects in this book are small (under 250 lines), fit in one. Open source projects can be big, not well documented, and have a complicated set up process to even get it to run. A lot of folks give the advice of "read the source code to open source projects" which is kind of lousy advice for beginners. Specific to this question though, I'd recommend The Big Book of Small Python Projects. Yes, all of my books are free under a Creative Commons license at Hi, I'm the author of Automate the Boring Stuff with Python. ![]()
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