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You Will Learn Python 3! Zed Shaw has perfected the world’s best system for learning Python 3. Follow it and you will succeed—just like the millions of beginners Zed has taught to date! You bring the discipline, commitment, and persistence; the author supplies everything else. In Learn Python 3 the Hard Way, you’ll learn Python by working through 52 brilliantly crafted exercises. Read them. Type their code precisely. (No copying and pasting!) Fix your mistakes. Watch the programs run. As you do, you’ll learn how a computer works; what good programs look like; and how to read, write, and think about code. Zed then teaches you even more in 5+ hours of video where he shows you how to break, fix, and debug your code—live, as he’s doing the exercises. Install a complete Python environment Organize and write code Fix and break code Basic mathematics Variables Strings and text Interact with users Work with files Looping and logic Data structures using lists and dictionaries Program design Object-oriented programming Inheritance and composition Modules, classes, and objects Python packaging Automated testing Basic game development Basic web development It’ll be hard at first. But soon, you’ll just get it—and that will feel great! This course will reward you for every minute you put into it. Soon, you’ll know one of the world’s most powerful, popular programming languages. You’ll be a Python programmer. This Book Is Perfect For Total beginners with zero programming experience Junior developers who know one or two languages Returning professionals who haven’t written code in years Seasoned professionals looking for a fast, simple, crash course in Python 3 . Review: Darn good book to introduce Python 3 - While I have been a programmer of Fortran IV, Assembly Language, C, and some BASH script writing, I could not follow Python which is a "Structured" programing language. I tried a few online courses but I like books, so I ordered this book and I read it first, then I started over but this time started to write a few of the examples. The examples are pretty good and I started to understand the syntax and how to read Python. While this book is not all encompassing, it allowed me to make sense of commands I could look up on the internet. There was one area I thought was lacking, the explanation of 'classes'. It was a topic covered in the book but for myself, I couldn't comprehend was was being said. This is where having an in-person instruction would have helped me out. Overall this is a very good book and I feel it was worth the $30 bucks I spent on it. Review: This has to be your first Python book and it is THE book from which to start learning Python. - If you are learning Python 3, THIS IS THE BOOK TO GET FIRST. "Learn Python 3 the Hard Way" is THE book to get first if you are learning Python. It is organized into exercise chapters that take you through a hands-on experience in learning Python (one of the fastest growing programming languages at the moment). This is not a book that you will read. it is a book you will work through. Zed Shaw takes you through 52 exercises that will teach you everything from writing your first program (the classic "Hello, World!" program) up through lists, dictionaries, loops, and so on. By the time you finish the 52 exercises, you will have a solid foundation for learning more about Python. Of all of my books that I am asked to lend in my Python Meet-up group, this is the most popular by far.



| Best Sellers Rank | #284,976 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #131 in Computer Programming Languages #200 in Python Programming |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 1,038 Reviews |
M**N
Darn good book to introduce Python 3
While I have been a programmer of Fortran IV, Assembly Language, C, and some BASH script writing, I could not follow Python which is a "Structured" programing language. I tried a few online courses but I like books, so I ordered this book and I read it first, then I started over but this time started to write a few of the examples. The examples are pretty good and I started to understand the syntax and how to read Python. While this book is not all encompassing, it allowed me to make sense of commands I could look up on the internet. There was one area I thought was lacking, the explanation of 'classes'. It was a topic covered in the book but for myself, I couldn't comprehend was was being said. This is where having an in-person instruction would have helped me out. Overall this is a very good book and I feel it was worth the $30 bucks I spent on it.
M**M
This has to be your first Python book and it is THE book from which to start learning Python.
If you are learning Python 3, THIS IS THE BOOK TO GET FIRST. "Learn Python 3 the Hard Way" is THE book to get first if you are learning Python. It is organized into exercise chapters that take you through a hands-on experience in learning Python (one of the fastest growing programming languages at the moment). This is not a book that you will read. it is a book you will work through. Zed Shaw takes you through 52 exercises that will teach you everything from writing your first program (the classic "Hello, World!" program) up through lists, dictionaries, loops, and so on. By the time you finish the 52 exercises, you will have a solid foundation for learning more about Python. Of all of my books that I am asked to lend in my Python Meet-up group, this is the most popular by far.
A**.
At the beginning of the book I was amazed at how much fun I has having...
Before buying this book I heard about LPTHW and the "controversy" around... but obviously this is the internet and everyone is entitled say whatever they want so I didnt took them seriously. Before reading this book, I've read some C++ concepts in the past (couples of years before) but they were simple as: types, functions, statements.. so nothing complicated, but I went thru this book with a tiny bit of knowledge.. At the beginning of the book I was amazed at how much fun I has having and how much better I was starting to understand those concepts (that I was already familiar with). The way the book is structured its extremely good: making your hands dirty immediately it's really the right thing to do for a beginner. It may be obvious for some one but wasn't for me, the fact that you should type everything you see and make it work on your own, and then read and check what is happening. Then type again and again and eventually, even if you don't REALLY understand the DEEPER MEANING of everything, you are still a step further to getting closer. So everything was going fine and I was eager to go to the next lesson... Till chapter 43 when he introduces the Class/Object.. I honestly went back on it a couple of times but every time I felt that there was something different... somethings has changed from before... there was no more fun, no more understanding.. but just: DO IT AS I DO AND SHUT UP. There was little room for exploration as he presented a semi-empty script with empty classes that you should fill as he would... oh and yea he just introduced you to what a class is like.. so good luck with that. You pass from ITS A, HAS A type of explanation to complete an already started script of several different classes with subclasses and inherits.. wtf? I've felt like I jumped 2 chapters... It was challenging? absolutely but it wasn't fun... it wasn't discovering new things... it was desperation of trying to solve this exercises because you know that classes are an important topic... And from there, it just got worst... At chapter 47 you are introduced to an another fundamental topic: TESTS. So as usual you start typing and typing and installing modules, you will get excited of all of this new stuff you will learn about... but you will be WRONG... because as soon as you finish he says: GO ON INTERNET AND FIND OUT HOW TO USE AND INSTALL EVERYTHING YOU JUST DID..... W.T.F... it took me a day to find out in the nose manual that their syntax was the same as unittest but just spelled with the format snake_case... As a beginner, and as I have never seen what an test/assert_equal is, I WOULD HAVE APPRECIATED A BIT OF EXPLANATION before sending me online.. I had to go online and search for OTHER people tutorial about something that I was suppose to learn in this book... WTF AGAIN... And from here honestly I just lost interest... he doesn't show anymore the "what you should" see section so you are left on your own... If you don't understand: too bad... If you do understand but misunderstand also too bad... For me was harder trying to understand what HE will have me to do rather than the code itself... At the end of the book you will do automatic tests of his text game and deploy it online so he introduces some HTML concepts but honestly I just didn't care anymore and never finished.. and here brings me the major flaw about zed in my opinion. He states at the beginning that he doesn't want you to teach everything, but he wants you to be autonomous and be able to understand what to search bla bla... Ok! its a good mentality! But there is a problem.. programming concepts are so deep and so many (even for a subject alone).. that you NEED at least something information to start and only then LEAVE THE REST TO YOU if you want more info... Again: if I have to leave the beginner's book to search other tutorials for beginners to understand what has written in my beginner's book... I think that the book failed to do part of his job... I then IMMEDIATELY went to PYTHON CRASH COURSE and things just pop out like flowers in spring... and it was because of how zed open my view of how to take a programming book.. So I recommend this book even despite the BIG disappointment of the last chapters, because I truly think that this book teaches you the discipline that you will absolutely need to start every other book.. but be aware you will not become a expert programmer after just this book... buy this together with PYTHON CRASH COURSE and think of them as one lesson.. typing (LPTHW) and understanding (PCC)
P**Y
LP3THW - Better Than Any Tutorial I've Tried
I've tried multiple tutorials from multiple sources (Udemy, Lynda, Tuts+, Codecademy, YouTube, etc.), but none of them compare to the LP3THW method. You'll get your hands dirty right away by diving straight into the exercises from the very beginning. You're not bogged down with a ton of theory up front. Instead the theory is gradually revealed as you progress through each exercise. Unfortunately there is one down side, if you want the accompanying videos, you will still need to purchase directly from his website. The Kindle version doesn't provide access to any of the online videos. I know many reviewers wrote negative reviews because of this, but it's how Zed has things set up. When you purchase LP3THW directly from Zed's website, you will be able to get any and all updates related to that purchase, including any new videos. And for those who seem to think Zed has a bad attitude when it comes to teaching, they fail to understand that he clearly states in one of his lessons, it's his goal to ensure that his students can move forward into a PROGRAMMING environment without the need of his ongoing help. I mean, that is the whole point of learning to program, isn't it?
S**H
no shortcuts
Look, I’m not a software engineer by training or profession or inclination. I spent the last 2 decades listening to prospects, helping solve their problems, and building sales programs for tech startups. I’m a progressional seller. I’m a 42-year old white guy from New England with 3 dogs, a bunch of hobbies and a high maintenance relationship. I learned Python typing out my lpthw exercises in my spare time. If you’re asking me: check. It’s worth it.
K**E
Good style, incomplete in some ways
I don't like how often the book says "Look {this} up online." If this is going to be a teaching method in the book, they could at least point me toward a site that provides reliable, up to date information (Yes, I know this is difficult in print because websites change). I bought this book to teach me the material, not to tell me to look things up online. They could give a brief definition, so that at least when you look something up online you can verify that the online source agrees with the book, and is just providing more detail. The author also uses built in python methods without explaining what they are. I'm coming from c++, where generally if a function is called it is explicitly written somewhere, so I was searching back through the book looking to see if it was written somewhere I missed. I finally looked it up online. Since the author likes to use "Look this up online," as a teaching method, "Look up {this} built in python method" online would have been helpful. Other than what I consider unacceptable missing information, I like the style of the book and it is very easy to understand and follow. I hate python, and I wish I didn't have to learn it, but the book makes learning it pretty enjoyable.
D**E
Great guide.
This book throws you into writing Python with out a lot of flowery wording. Straightforward instructions and examples. No confusing information a must have book for learning python.
A**S
Excellent Book !
Learn "PYTHON 3 the HARD WAY" is a fantastic book for beginners and advanced programmers. This book is extremely well written and provides plenty of detailed exercises and projects. While it is recommended to perform in PowerShell , the exercises and projects can be done in suggested IDE's . If you want to learn Python 3 or enhance your current skill set, then I highly recommend this book.
N**N
C'est un bon outil
Bon outil d'apprentissage du Python qui permet le développement d'une manière commune de coder (équipe)
S**I
Excellant study material that comes with lectures at a reasonable price.
Throughout this textbook Zed Shaw takes a very methodical way of explaining python programming. This textbook is the first of the authors two books on python 3. This textbook contains 52 exercises of python scripts. There are accompanying lectures for each. To get the accompanying lectures, you first must register this book at https://www.informit.com/ as outlined in the preface of the text. This textbook takes a more hands on approach and forces you to type it out and debug the code. Learning through this book is the harder way but once you do it you understand it more by experience. if you have any questions or concerns about this text on your journey you can email the author and he can give you guidance at [email protected]. This textbook is the same as Learn Python The Hard Way but for the python 3 interpreter. I accidentally started studying Learn python The Hard way for the python 2 interpreter using the python 3 interpreter and I have been looking this text for reference when im stuck. I am very impressed by his first book so this text should only be an improvement. I would recommend this as the first book to anyone looking to learn python programming. Quick outlay of his textbooks: Learn Python The Hard Way - textbook for the older python 2 interpreter that comes with lectures on dvd Learn Python 3 the Hard Way - Same as "Learn Python The Hard way" but revised for python3 Learn More Python 3 the hard way - The sequel to "Learn Python 3 the Hard Way" that comes with accompanying lectures once you register it.
M**Z
Buen libro
Me gustó que tiene muchos ejercicios para practicar y cubre muchas cosas básicas, está muy bien para principiantes
A**R
Good Book for beginner
Good Book for beginner programmer
K**E
It makes learning Python so easy.
It makes learning python easy and interesting. I highly recommend.
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