Python Concepts/Resources

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Beginning programming[edit | edit source]

Python for experienced coders[edit | edit source]

Advanced Python[edit | edit source]

Other tutorial collections[edit | edit source]

Other handy resources[edit | edit source]

Finding Python Modules[edit | edit source]

  • PyPI - The Python Package Index, also known as PyPI, is a repository containing Python related software, which contains a lot extra libraries and modules. It currently hosts over 58,000 Python packages of software!

Graphics and GUIs - 2D[edit | edit source]

  • http://www.pygame.org - PyGame is a library developed for creating video games in Python, but it's evolved past that and is now an excellent way to interface graphics with mouse and keyboard input. If all you need is a couple keypresses, or want to make anything vaguely game-like (moving graphics), this is for you. Excellent tutorials.
  • http://pythoncard.sourceforge.net - PythonCard is a gui editor for creating wxPython guis. Think of it as the Resource Editor in Visual C++ when you are making an MFC gui. Relatively young, not very well documented, but very easy to use with lots of sample code that you can figure most things out from. Recommended for making Windows applications, but runs on OSX and Linux too.

Graphics - 3D[edit | edit source]

  • vpython.org - VPython makes real-time 3D scenes in Python. Unbelievably easy to use; it took me all of 5 minutes to go from installation to having various 3-d shapes bounding around on my screen.
  • www.blender.org - 3D modeling, animation, rending, post-production, interactive creation (read: games, or virtual 3d interfaces), and playback. Incredibly powerful (full-length professional-quality movies have been made in it). All python - you can write your own scripts in it. Totally free.
  • pyode.sourceforge.net - Python bindings for the Open Dynamics Engine, a decent-quality physics simulation engine. Works well when coupled with vpython.

Content Management[edit | edit source]

Hardware interface[edit | edit source]

Making executables[edit | edit source]

  • http://www.py2exe.org - make your python program into a windows executable that can be run on any windows machine

Microsoft Windows[edit | edit source]

Python and COM
Library that allows you to communicate with COM for things like Outlook.
Python for Windows Extensions
A library that allows you to call win32 functions via Python.
Python Programming On Win32
A book for programming on Windows 32-bit platforms.
Unofficial Windows Binaries for Python Extension Packages
A large repository of per-built binaries extensions specifically for Windows. This comes in handy when you can't built them yourself or you want a Linux only extension on Windows. Credits to Christoph Gohlke at the University of California for creating and maintaining such a repository.

Linux[edit | edit source]

Mac[edit | edit source]

Implementations[edit | edit source]

CPython
The main implementation of Python written in C. This is the original interpreter.
Cython
A Python to C translator. It works by invoking Python library calls via C. Cython is often used to created fast Python extensions.
IronPython
A Python implementation written in C# targeting the .NET framework.
PyPy
A fast CPython compatible interpreter that translates Python to native code when interpreting. PyPy itself is written in Python.
Jython
A Python implementation in Java. In fact, you can create class and jar files, since the Python script is translated into Java bytecode. This allows access to any java library and API. You can even create java applets written in Python!

Type classification: this resource is a collection of other resources.