![](https://programming.dev/pictrs/image/c8e60fd3-7981-43ca-8b7f-ff504e91dd5a.png)
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Sounds like your project is building arrays in different dimensions and multiplying them.
Maybe give polars and pandas a try.
Definitely check out SciPy
Data Science
Sounds like your project is building arrays in different dimensions and multiplying them.
Maybe give polars and pandas a try.
Definitely check out SciPy
People keep telling me that scrapy is the best for scraping but I haven’t had time to try it yet.
Entirely depends on the project you want to build
My local library gives me access to O’Reilly Online, so free textbook access for just about any topic.
90’s? I assumed it was from the 80s or earlier
Maybe someone could modify peertube to be more microblog-like
Mp3 is a proprietary format on copyright. Some idiot ceo can came and change the rules, let’s add an ads mandatory for each decoder.
This is not true. Copyright is not relevant to an encoding standard. The standard has been unchanged for 26 years and all legal claims of patent rights related to implimentations of the standard have expired before May 2017.
@swooosh@lemmy.world you should probably know about this as well.
I’m very confused about what your requirements are based on reading your post and some of your responses to comments, but I’m going to suggest that you look into Quarto
Think Python is a top quality book for learning. The latest version of Think Python by Allen B. Downey is available for free online in the form of interactive Jupyter notebooks hosted on Google Colab meaning you don’t need to set up, install, or configure anything up front to start learning to program using python. I think it’s 100% the best way for complete beginners to start.
While you’re working through Think Python, you can get real time feedback and answers here in !python@programming.dev (https://programming.dev/c/python) or:
They are all quite active and helpful to new learners.
When you are ready to install and run Python locally on your hardware you can refer to the Official Python Documentation. There is a section dedicated to installing and using Python
I don’t know what that means
Should be Scrimba.com
Languages that caught my attention were Julia, Clojure and Go.
What about these languages caught your attention?
What are some good resources for someone like me who likes to learn by doing things?
Check out https://inventwithpython.com/
You can use this as an opportunity to have a conversation about what it is about those movies that she likes. This could open up to a larger conversation where you can connect and grow your relationship as mother and child. Or she might just say something vague and simple and you can ignore the movies while they sit in a separate library.
In that case, why aren’t you using any other editor that can do the same? Why not just use VSCode?
"All punctuation will be considered but avoided where possible because street names and addresses, when stored in databases, must meet the standards set out in BS7666.
“This restricts the use of punctuation marks and special characters (e.g. apostrophes, hyphens and ampersands) to avoid potential problems when searching the databases as these characters have specific meanings in computer systems.”
This seems like a dumb line of reasoning. The problem has never been the signs or punctuation in a database. It’s that the people in charge don’t even know what BS7666 even says.
It’s strange to me people refer to the awk
command rather than the AWK language.
Yes. I was just giving accurate information, not making any sort of argument.
It didn’t make any sense to me when it was originally announced, it still doesn’t. I don’t understand the project’s goals or how it’s supposed to reach those goals. The mission statement is incomprehensible to me.