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Finally feel I've graduated from complete beginner and finished my first small project thanks to this sub. Here's the learning path you all recommended, and a small open source project I have to show for it so far.
As for time spent on this project, you can see from the commit log that it was about one month. But the vast majority of that was spent reading about how to document, type check and test code properly. Most of the functionality was added in the first commit, the rest was learning.
materials
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Experience of non-programmers who made it into devops
But I could see the writing on the wall, and I started by learning Python. I tried a BUNCH of video courses and books. And while all of them taught me some interesting things, they all assumed I understood things that programmers all take for granted, such as why I use [brackets] somewhere and {braces} elsewhere. Or the subtle differences between 'single' and "double" quotes. Then I found edube.org's free courses from the Python Institute. They explained everything, as if I had no idea what programming even was. A few months of pretty serious study with those courses, and I was able to pass the PCEP and PCAP certifications. After that, RealPython's courses helped nail home some of the concepts I was struggling with.
- Python socket module
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Your go to resource
https://realpython.com/ is a solid tutorial site for me.
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Is python difficult for someone who wants to learn about programming?
Finally I've been impressed and somewhat envious of the resources this website provides, it would have made my life a lot easier about 25 years ago - https://realpython.com/
- where to start to learn python
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Where to learn python
realpython.com
- Name a better learning resource than Schafer Corey, I'll wait
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I'm 13, trying to learn Python.
The best beginner resources are Mozilla Tutorial and RealPython. The Mozilla resources are completely free. RealPython has a lot of free stuff. You can get really deep into the topical stuff with it. A really great beginner book is Automate the Boring Stuff. It is completely free.
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IT Automation and Programming Engineering
All your Python needs are meet at this site: Real Python: https://realpython.com/
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I just started learning python, is there anything I should focus on when trying to learn it for DevOps?
https://realpython.com/ is also another great resources with very detailed tutorials.
What are some alternatives?
PornHub-downloader-python - Download stuff from PH the easy way.
codewars.com - Issue tracker for Codewars
sdk - The Dart SDK, including the VM, dart2js, core libraries, and more.
learnxinyminutes-docs - Code documentation written as code! How novel and totally my idea!
missing-semester - The Missing Semester of Your CS Education 📚
developer-roadmap - Roadmap to becoming a developer in 2022
Poetry - Python dependency management and packaging made easy.
computer-science - :mortar_board: Path to a free self-taught education in Computer Science!
PythonDataScienceHandbook - Python Data Science Handbook: full text in Jupyter Notebooks
flexboxfroggy - A game for learning CSS flexbox 🐸
awesome-python - A curated list of awesome Python frameworks, libraries, software and resources
thonny - Python IDE for beginners