+ 8

Want to learn python

Can anyone help me learn python better?

9th Feb 2021, 3:26 PM
Smooth 26
17 Respuestas
+ 16
I see you are just a small way into the Python course. My advice would be to start over at the beginning of the lessons and work your way through them slowly. Take your time. Practice writing your own codes for every new concept. If anything doesn't make sense, see if you can find help in the lesson comments. Use Google a lot. It helps to see each new concept from several different viewpoints, so I suggest looking them up in a few tutorials, for example, https://www.programiz.com/python-programming https://www.learnpython.org https://docs.python.org/3.8/tutorial/ It's a slower process but it's worth it because the knowledge you get will stick. If you're still stuck, ask for help. The folks here love to help 😊 Good luck!
9th Feb 2021, 4:37 PM
David Ashton
David Ashton - avatar
+ 2
Follow the course provided by sololearn first
9th Feb 2021, 3:55 PM
Atul [Inactive]
+ 2
Do the tutorials on python here.
11th Feb 2021, 10:24 AM
Sonic
Sonic - avatar
+ 1
How do you mean by “better?” Looking for more detailed course: Python Programming For the Absolute Beginner by Michael Dawson, available at your local library. Looking for ways to make it stick better: practice! Not practice, *practice* (as in use in practical life). Try to find any real life problem or even really basic game that you feel like you can apply your python tools to, and do it. Remember, “In theory, practice and theory are the same. In practice, they aren’t.”
10th Feb 2021, 2:18 AM
Wilbur Jaywright
Wilbur Jaywright - avatar
+ 1
Smooth 26, I second much of the great advice posted in this thread. I also want to add it is important to find how you learn. Some people absorb information well by watching tutorials on YouTube, and some by reading. Myself I absorb new information very well by reading. With all the great resources out there find the right combo that works for you. For myself I do the following. 1. Use Sololearn to learn and practice concepts ( the small code chunks and info make it easy to learn and stay paced) 2. If a concept is confusing review the comments this community is Awesome in offering advice and varied ways at looking at the same concept / problem. 3. If I want to go deeper into the topic I read the python docs at python.org the link is above in David's comment. (Note this documentation is very technical so if it confuses you at first it cool It happens to everyone.) 4. As I mentioned I really enjoy reading so I find the Oriellys series of books to go the extra mile in explaining things. Good Luck !!!
10th Feb 2021, 5:15 AM
Angel Rafael
Angel Rafael - avatar
0
Yes we can help you in your doubt clarification
9th Feb 2021, 3:32 PM
Atul [Inactive]
0
thanks how should we start
9th Feb 2021, 3:36 PM
Smooth 26
0
Smooth 26 What start?
9th Feb 2021, 3:48 PM
A͢J
A͢J - avatar
0
Ask to yourself & decide yourself because you can think about your own choice
9th Feb 2021, 3:52 PM
Anurag Kumar
Anurag Kumar - avatar
0
thank you surely will take it slow and learn
10th Feb 2021, 1:36 AM
Smooth 26
0
thank you i appriciated
10th Feb 2021, 5:37 AM
Smooth 26
0
Only language I know is Python. What I did to really learn it was converting shell scripts into Python code.
10th Feb 2021, 7:40 PM
Brandon Pettit
Brandon Pettit - avatar
0
it seems like youre wanting to know not just python but python libraries. to try and go through all of them would be impractical, so lets narrow it down a bit. what are you wanting to do with python that you cant at current?
10th Feb 2021, 7:45 PM
Wilbur Jaywright
Wilbur Jaywright - avatar
0
Where? you ran away so fast i didnt see where you went. 😉
11th Feb 2021, 12:48 PM
Wilbur Jaywright
Wilbur Jaywright - avatar
0
im here
11th Feb 2021, 12:58 PM
Smooth 26
0
no, i meant sonic. he said “do the tutorials here,” but i couldnt see what he was talking abou
11th Feb 2021, 1:10 PM
Wilbur Jaywright
Wilbur Jaywright - avatar
0
Follow the course provided by sololearn first
11th Feb 2021, 2:30 PM
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