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Course Setup and Overview
Welcome to Practical Python Programming!
Setup and Python Installation
You need nothing more than a basic Python 3.6 installation or newer. There is no dependency on any particular operating system, editor, IDE, or extra Python-related tooling. There are no third-party dependencies.
That said, most of this course involves learning how to write scripts and small programs that involve data read from files. Therefore, you need to make sure you're in an environment where you can easily work with files. This includes using an editor to create Python programs and being able to run those programs from the shell/terminal.
You might be inclined to work on this course using a more interactive environment such as Jupyter Notebooks. I DO NOT ADVISE THIS! Although notebooks are great for experimentation, many of the exercises in this course teach concepts related to program organization. This includes working with functions, modules, import statements, and refactoring of programs whose source code spans multiple files. In my experience, it is hard to replicate this kind of working environment in notebooks.
Forking/Cloning the Course Repository
To prepare your environment for the course, I recommend creating your own fork of the course GitHub repo at https://github.com/dabeaz-course/practical-python. Once you are done, you can clone it to your local machine:
bash % git clone https://github.com/yourname/practical-python
bash % cd practical-python
bash %
Do all of your work within the practical-python/ directory. If you
commit your solution code back to your fork of the repository, it will
keep all of your code together in one place and you'll have a nice
historical record of your work when you're done.
If you don't want to create a personal fork or don't have a GitHub account, you can still clone the course directory to your machine:
bash % git clone https://github.com/dabeaz-course/practical-python
bash % cd practical-python
bash %
With this option, you just won't be able to commit code changes except to the local copy on your machine.
File Layout
Do all of your coding work in the Work/ directory. Within that directory,
there is a Data/ directory. The Data/ directory contains a variety of
datafiles and other scripts used during the course. You will frequently have
to access files in Data/. Course exercises are written with the assumption
that you are creating programs in the Work/ directory.
Solutions
The Solutions/ directory contains full solution code to selected exercises.
Feel free to look at this if you need a hint.