Programmers_guide_to_Python
Stimulus
Programmers_guide_to_Python | Stimulus | |
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11 | 111 | |
173 | 12,466 | |
- | 0.3% | |
4.7 | 6.4 | |
over 2 years ago | 5 days ago | |
TypeScript | ||
Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 4.0 | MIT License |
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Programmers_guide_to_Python
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Programmer's guide to Python website
Hello everyone, I have created a website for my ebook Programmer's guide to Python. On github it wasn't easy to read due to the size, so I thought a website could be more convenient. I've considered topics which are important and which should cover most grounds in Python programming and more. My goal was to create a concise and easy to follow guide to Python programming. I am looking forward to add more content like testing and some standard libraries that we use most often. Let me know your thoughts, suggestions or improvements regarding the website or contents, anything that needs to be added or something else. The current plain learning path will stay forever free and will have no ads, the interactive mode is currently slowly under works, and so I am not much sure about it yet. Hope you find it useful, you can access the website here.
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Just bought Angela Yu’s 100 day Python course!
You can also use my book to fine tune your learning. It's free and I keep updating it, so I hope it helps.
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Any of the current programming/coding bundles worth buying if the intend is to learn Python ( I have very minor previous programming experience)
Try my book once you're done with the basics.
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[Repost] Learn enough python with Programmer's guide to Python
Hello everyone, I have written a e-book named "Programmer's guide to Python", this is the second time I am making a post about it. It is designed to learn python fast by going through concepts with examples, with easy language and straightforward explanations. Only prerequisite is that you should have some basic exposure to programming. It covers most of the hot/necessary topics and more. It's a free book that you access right here on my github. I have recently worked alot and have updated alot inside out, fixing mistakes/errors, adding topics. I think the book is ready to ~90%, probably more, I'll drop the pdf version once ready. The thing is I don't have any reviewer to review it yet, so if anyone with enough experience who would like to collaborate, fix somethings, review or anything let me know, I'll add you to the contribution/reviewer list or maybe as a co-author if you put up enough work. Finally if you'll be reading it, I would like to know your thoughts/suggestions on improvements and maybe something you'd liked to be added in future. That's it, I hope this book helps you in learning python 🙌.
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Old guy programmer here, need to brush up on Python quickly!
You can try reading my book, let me know your thoughts.
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Programmer's guide to Python, learn almost everything in python.
Hello everyone, I hope you're doing fine, I recently wrote Programmer's guide to Python, its a book to learn python fast. If you have prior programming knowledge and are looking to learn python, this will help you kickstart your learning. If you have previously taken basic python courses and want to solidify your learning, this is for you too. It's short, fast and free. It is designed to cover all the important aspects of python, just good enough get you building stuff with Python. I hope it benefits you in learning python. Let me know your thoughts.
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Just finished a beginners python course, what next?
Well you can use my Programmer's guide to Python to solidify your learning. I recently wrote it, it's fast and short way to learn python. I also have ml recommendations which I have curated, they are all almost free and not affiliated. Take a look here, happy learning.
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Need Help finding a beginner friendly course for Python that provides an E-certificate
You can find some resources here they are all almost free and not affiliated. I recently wrote Programmer's guide to Python which is short and fast way to learn python, also free. Do take a look.
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I've learned a little bit of python. Now what?
You can use my Programmer's guide to Python to strengthen your python knowledge. Please take a look.
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Best resources for learning Python
Programmer's guide to Python
Stimulus
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Turbo Streaming Modals in Ruby on Rails
I also recommend checking out the docs for Stimulus and Turbo to familiarise yourself with all their features and the APIs used in this series.
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Google: Angular and Wiz Are Merging
Any tips on preparing to work with Wiz as an incoming intern. I heard its identical to Stimulus: https://stimulus.hotwired.dev/
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How to integrate Component Architecture into Symfony?
use Stimulus
- Stimulus: A modest JavaScript framework for the HTML you already have
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Build Drag and Drop with Rails Hotwire
With Stimulus, you've got a powerful tool to take your app's interactivity up a notch. For even more awesome features and Stimulus wizardry, check out the Stimulus Documentation.
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Supercharge your Stimulus controllers with Custom APIs
The next version of Stimulus makes it easier to access parts of the private API thanks to my pull request.
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Why are you still using jQuery?
I like Stimulus, it was a bit pushed by Symfony with their ux thing.
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Too Much JavaScript? Why the Frontend Needs to Build Better
I thought it'd be https://stimulus.hotwired.dev/ for a minute but I think that ecosystem is tied too closely with rails.
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Learn Stimulus in Ruby on Rails by Building a Toggle)
Hey HN!
For those new to Rails, Stimulus (https://stimulus.hotwired.dev/) is a way to sprinkle frontend javascript code into your Rails views.
I held off using Stimulus in my Rails apps for a long time because I didn't understand it — the data= attributes looked weird, and the connection between my Rails views and Stimulus javascript controllers was confusing.
So I decided to write the guide I wish I had when I was learning Stimulus.
Hope you enjoy it! I'm happy to answer any questions, feel free to ask any.
Thanks, Harrison
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Your first Stimulus controller — Learn Stimulus by building a toggle in your Rails app
Hey /r/rails, these past few weeks, I've been working on a beginner's guide to Stimulus and I'm excited to finally share it!
What are some alternatives?
Python Cheatsheet - All-inclusive Python cheatsheet
turbo-rails - Use Turbo in your Ruby on Rails app
python-cookbook - Code samples from the "Python Cookbook, 3rd Edition", published by O'Reilly & Associates, May, 2013.
htmx - </> htmx - high power tools for HTML
hotwire-rails - Use Hotwire in your Ruby on Rails app
django-unicorn - The magical reactive component framework for Django ✨
Alpine.js - A rugged, minimal framework for composing JavaScript behavior in your markup.
inertia - Inertia.js lets you quickly build modern single-page React, Vue and Svelte apps using classic server-side routing and controllers.
jquery-rails - A gem to automate using jQuery with Rails
react-rails - Integrate React.js with Rails views and controllers, the asset pipeline, or webpacker.
view_component - A framework for building reusable, testable & encapsulated view components in Ruby on Rails.
TinyMCE - The world's #1 JavaScript library for rich text editing. Available for React, Vue and Angular