I'm looking for something of the quality of our friend Jon Skeet's C# in depth book, but about Python.

Please leave any recommendations you have for Python books that do not cover basic programming constructs.

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@L.Sott: I don't know what's unclear here. Yes, it's true, he is exactly asking that. – Frank Mar 8 '09 at 19:52
see question: stackoverflow.com/questions/175001/… – Ray Vega Mar 9 '09 at 21:04
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closed as not constructive by Jeremy Banks, templatetypedef, Kev Sep 17 '11 at 22:25

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13 Answers

up vote 10 down vote accepted

I tried to reflect this by breaking the language down into

I. Language Basics. http://homepage.mac.com/s_lott/books/python/html/index.html#language-basics

II. Data Structures. http://homepage.mac.com/s_lott/books/python/html/index.html#data-structures

III. Objects. http://homepage.mac.com/s_lott/books/python/html/index.html#data-processing-objects

IV. Componentry. http://homepage.mac.com/s_lott/books/python/html/index.html#components-modules-and-packages

Maybe by skipping section Language Basics you can avoid the "simple language syntax/semantics" stuff. Not sure, of course, since everyone arrives with such different backgrounds. One person's "simple" is another person's baffling nuance.

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+1 - I'm in the process of learning Python, and I greatly appreciate these links. A typically terrific contribution. – duffymo Mar 8 '09 at 23:57
+1 @S.Lott great work and great collection. – Brian R. Bondy Mar 24 '09 at 16:01
All links broken as of now. :-( – MiseryIndex Dec 4 '09 at 22:54
Fixed. Thanks for the alert. – S.Lott Dec 5 '09 at 1:34
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I can recommend "Dive into Python" from Mark Pilgrim. The book is free online.

Dive into Python

http://diveintopython.net/

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I thought that this book is for the beginners. – riza Mar 8 '09 at 20:43
Yes, it is for beginners – Tyler Long Sep 14 '11 at 12:10
Since Mark Pilgrim did a disappearing act from the internet together with all the content he created, you now can find the book here: diveintopython.net – user18044 Oct 25 '11 at 0:42
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If you want to learn about Python Best Practices maybe

Expert Python Programming

is worth having a look at.

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"Foundations of Agile Python development" is a great addition to Expert Python Programming, read both of them. Throw in The Pragmatic Programmer and you got yourself an awesome set of books. – Tom Aug 31 '10 at 8:34
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I have found some very useful examples in O'Reilly's Programming Collective Intelligence (even though I am not working on anything considered "Web 2.0" which is mentioned in the book's subtitle).

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I learned a lot from the Python Cookbook.

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+1 -- the Python Cookbook is just a list of short code "recipes" but you can learn a lot by reading it. Only disadvantage is that it's a bit out-of-date now. – John Fouhy Mar 8 '09 at 22:25
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I recommend this book.

Python Scripting for Computational Science Series: Texts in Computational Science and Engineering , Vol. 3 Langtangen, Hans Petter 3rd ed. 2008. Corr. 2nd printing, 2009, XXVI, 758 p. 62 illus., Hardcover ISBN: 978-3-540-73915-9

http://www.springer.com/math/cse/book/978-3-540-73915-9

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See this extensive list of Python Book Reviews Reviews of Books about Python

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I like Bruce Eckel's Thinking in Python, which is available as a free download.

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S. Lott's links are outdated. I don't have enough rep right now to leave a comment, so putting in the right link in an answer.

http://homepage.mac.com/s%5Flott/books/python/html/index.html

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Perhaps not exactly what you're after, but a good resource for learning Python is MIT's Introduction to Computer Science and Programming online course. It uses Python to teach basic computer science subjects, and includes over 25 hours of video lectures.

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I am surprised Core Python Programming by Wesley Chun is not mentioned here. It is hard to describe because it does cover the basics, but it goes so far in depth on those basics, that you really learn all the subtleties that make python such a beautiful awesome language. If I were to recommend any one to buy only one single book, it would be this for sure.

It does cover a significant amount of advanced topics, a lot of standard library features. Shouldn't be missing in any Python developer's shelf.

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I really liked this one Python Scripting for Computational Science

http://www.amazon.com/Python-Scripting-Computational-Science-Engineering/dp/3540739157

It assumes that you already know how to program in Python, and explains lots of interesting things about parsing and storing data files, numerical computing with Numpy, high performance code with Weaver and native function calls, plotting charts, interactive simulations, etc.

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Dive into Python 3Pro Python

enter image description here

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