In case you’re on Archlinux, the thonny 4.1.4-1 package in chaotic-aur unofficial repo works for me.
In case you’re on Archlinux, the thonny 4.1.4-1 package in chaotic-aur unofficial repo works for me.
For the ebook, install pandoc, then run this:
pandoc -f rst -t epub2 -o pkgsample.epub --metadata title=“nedbat/pkgsample: A simple example of how to structure a Python project” --metadata author=“Ned Batchelder” https://github.com/nedbat/pkgsample/raw/main/README.rst
Can you follow Dave Touretzky’s book? The 1990 PDF version is free.
My middle school algebra teacher sparked my interest in coding.
Due to moving around a lot, I never learned any mathematics, not even basic arithmetic before middle school. In the seventh grade, I was put in a class where the teacher just handed out worksheets with arithmetic problems, and then usually left the classroom until the end of the hour. On the rare occasions when she stayed, I asked her to teach me arithmetic, but she didn’t believe I couldn’t do it, so she never taught me and I failed the class.
But in the eighth or ninth grade, they allowed me to sign up for the Algebra for dummies class, which taught in two semesters what the normal class taught in one. My new teacher taught me arithmetic the first day, and I was his star pupil from that point.
He invited me and some other students to stay after school to learn FORTRAN. We did not have a computer at the middle school–it was at the university. We didn’t even have a card punching machine. So we had cards that looked like punch cards, but instead of punching holes in them, we coded the Hollerith code in them by filling bubbles with a number 2 pencil. Then we sent the cards on a mail truck to the university and got back a printout a week later.
No toca los PopOS!