- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
I’m pretty new to Python and discovered the nicely presented PEP8 coding style guide linked in the post. Stumbling onto The Hitchhiker’s Guide to Python! has been a very helpful compliment to the official Python Documentaion
Hopefully this post will help others getting familiar with Python.
@jeremyparker Those are all valid. But not in a starter guide for someone looking to learn a language. If and when you get submerged into a legacy project you have all the time to find out what’s what. But teaching someone outdated syntax and features just because they *might* come accross them maybe is a terrible way to teach.
@jeremyparker Note that for people new to a language it’s much harder to distinguish between old and new than someone already familiar with the old. Don’t push old on people starting out.
This is starting to feel like arguing kids should learn Latin because it might help them understand medical terms better. Sure, that’s true, but a) it’s only useful for a small subset of learners and b) is it worth the effort to learn an entire language just for some minor details?
@jeremyparker As for myself: I use Python as a scientist on an almost daily basis. I’ve never learned anything about Python 2, have never touched it and never required it. Maybe if you work in a field with tons of legacy code it’s useful, but I and all my colleagues are working with Python 3.7 or newer (mostly 3.10 and newer) only. There is no single argument you could make that would convince me I or any of my colleagues should know *anything* about Python 2.