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Python Courses Order
So I just finished the 'Introduction to Python' and 'Python Intermediate' course. And now while I started exploring, I noticed another named 'Python Developer'. Should I have learned that before learning any/both of the two that I just learned? The course seems to be introducing the basic of Python like print, which was already done in the 'Introduction to Python'. So, can anyone explain?
12 ответов
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There are overlaps plus some original content. Scroll down below your current section and you can say "Skip This". You'll take the test and move to next section. This gets you past the overlap. When you get to a section that's new for you, start doing those exercises.
None of the Python courses go into really advanced stuff. At some point you'll need to find courses elsewhere to get into deeper topics such as the various packages you can use like beautiful soup, openai, tensorflow, matplotlib, or jupyter pages.
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Jerry Hobby ,
currently 3 pure python courses are available:
> introduction to python
> python intermediate
> python developer
these courses you mentioned are not available:
> python for beginners
> python core
python is also partially explained in various other courses like `coding for data`.
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yes, it starts with the basics. don't forget: repetition is great for the knowledge. great coders/programmers have very strong basics too. so, it starts from the strong basics.... don't you think that?
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Afnan Irtesum Chowdhury kindly do not rely on only one resource to learn. Try to practice some real world projects from some website like towardsdatascience or medium or anything else which you prefer. In addition you can also watch some YouTube videos for learning some advanced courses and related projects. In conclusion you can even see documentation for further details about the modules which you will be using in the future.
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There are currently FOUR Python courses.
Python for Beginners - Spends more time on the very basics, such as What is a Variable
Introduction to Python - Also an entry level course, but perhaps not as basic.
Python Core - Still beginner level, but a better choice if you know programming concepts already or want to go deeper.
Python Intermediate - This gets into objects and deeper into data structures. But in my mind, is still pretty beginner level.
After completing all of these and if you still want to delve deeper into Python, you'll have to look outside of SoloLearn. But Python has some outstanding features for machine learning, charts and graphs, web scraping, image recognition, etc. All this is from the various advanced libraries / packages available.
You'll eventually want to know about Pandas, DJango, Flask, BeautifulSoup, OpenAI, TensorFlow, etc. Depending on the type of programs you want to write, there are a lot of directions you can go by learning about various popular Python packages that are available.
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STATISTICAL WHAT
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What
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How can a learn
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Hello Guys