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Python Programming Language: Complete Guide for Beginners, Intermediates and Advanced: 7 Days Crash Course

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This Python book is designed for those who:

 

-wants to be a Python expert in lesser time. -thinks mastering Python is either tough or boring. -doesn't want to experiment with his time or money   This book is purposefully equipped with:   • The kickstart guide and tools. • The codes and exercises for a stronger foundation. • The secret tips of Python coders. (not available elsewhere)   Now lets understand why programming looks so difficult to many people   • First of all these languages are taught in a way that make them harder to understand. • Now even if understood, they remain harder to remember. • Even worse, the application of concepts is underestimated.   Now, for those who are still indecisive about Python (or even this book). Remember that this book:   • Has a 7 days crash course where each day you will progress from a beginner level to an advanced user. • Each topic comes with practical (not theoretical) exercises, sample (originally written) codes and expert (pro tips) advices • Has all the updates of the year 2019 so you won’t be missing out on any essential information.   So, if you are willing to learn from the experts? or save yourself from frustration and out-of-date advices? or just want to reduce the long learning hours? Then simply click the BUY button and get started.

133 pages, Paperback

Published June 13, 2019

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About the author

David Hawkes

46 books21 followers
David Hawkes is a Professor of English Literature at Arizona State University and a distinguished scholar in literary criticism, economic thought, and early modern literature. He is the author of several influential books and has edited critical editions of classic literary works.
Hawkes studied at Oxford University, earning a B.A. in 1986, before continuing his postgraduate education at Columbia University, where he received his Ph.D. in 1992. At Oxford, he was a student of the literary critic Terry Eagleton and engaged in socialist-feminist scholarship with Oxford English Limited. At Columbia, he worked under Edward Said and contributed to alternative and underground journals in New York’s Lower East Side.
His academic career began at Lehigh University, where he taught from 1991 to 2007 before joining Arizona State University as a full professor. He has also held visiting positions at institutions in India, Turkey, and China. Hawkes has received prestigious fellowships, including a year-long National Endowment for the Humanities fellowship at the Folger Shakespeare Library and the William Ringler Fellowship at the Huntington Library.
A prolific writer, Hawkes' works explore themes of economic criticism, ideology, and the intersections of literature, magic, and finance in early modern thought. His books include Idols of the Marketplace (2001), The Culture of Usury in Renaissance England (2010), and Shakespeare and Economic Criticism (2015). He has also edited editions of Paradise Lost and The Pilgrim’s Progress. His recent works, The Reign of Anti-logos (2020) and Money and Magic in Early Modern Drama (2022), continue his exploration of the relationship between literature, philosophy, and economics.
Hawkes' scholarship is widely recognized for its critical engagement with ideology and material culture, offering fresh perspectives on the intersections of literature, politics, and economic systems.

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