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* Python for beginners [] | |
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Can we make RSS-editable feeds available from the Python wiki and derive most of the site's content from them? | Can we make RSS-editable feeds available from the Python wiki and derive most of the site's content from them? What does 'RSS-editable' mean? |
At PyCon 2009, Steve Holden suggested building a site for people who wish to learn Python.
We already have BeginnersGuide, but it's buried in the wiki and is pretty dense text.
Possible names
Vote here:
- Python 101 [+1 sdeibel -1 mfoord] (there is already a python101.com plus 101 means nothing to people outside the USA)
- Starting Python [+1 mfoord]
- Python from zero []
- Python from scratch []
- Python for beginners []
We should probably avoid 'Learning Python', since that's an O'Reilly book title. Likewise there is a book called 'Beginning Python'.
Should it target Python 2, 3 or both? Python 3 would be better, but would mean that initially it couldn't cover common third party libraries that haven't yet been ported to Python 3.
Content
The site would primarily link to resources, so its page architecture would mostly be pretty shallow.
What's Python? -- like BeginnersGuide/Overview.
- Starting Points -- documentation, tutorials, downloads
- Tools -- links to IDEs, distributions, (hosting services?)
- Libraries -- PyPI; commonly-used libraries
- Books -- list of introductory books
- Videos -- link to relevant introductory tutorials
- The Community -- user groups, conferences
How about commissioning prominent authors to produce an article each on a range of subjects?
Maintenance
The pydotorg volunteers are stretched thinly enough that we should try to make this low-maintenance.
Can we make RSS-editable feeds available from the Python wiki and derive most of the site's content from them? What does 'RSS-editable' mean?