Go Programming Book
Because I would probably pay me a cht'it go programming book on the subject in the week and now I know there's one more (and given the brief), I'll probably look at this item carefully. I looked like a go programming book for me (back) to python and this time seriously and that table of contents contains exactly what I was looking for . . bravo. I just read the summary of the go programming book and I confess that if the first pages made me scared (like the complete list of __builtins__ or feel that you have translated the manual) result is that happiness and indeed can not be justified without the intro. But as you say, it was difficult to discuss certain topics without going there. In addition, builtins are each adorned with examples of original: basically I went through the module, and presented each builtin in an example in a prompt. Or as former Dijon. Tarek eh? You have to remember me most, PEM, but I spent with you at the bottom of University Boulevard, to retrieve CD. Y 'was very long. But for the next go programming book I am determined to use a more free, with content available online and exclusively to the publisher for printing. Ah yes, if you provide proof of purchase, c can have the pdf? because to lug the go programming book to work to make borrowing by everyone is not my thing . . I've been looking to put myself in Python for quite some time and find the doc (Official Site) rather poorly designed, I now know what to be offered next month for my birthday:). When I read the TOC I suspect that much of your go programming book is a fairly comprehensive introduction to Python syntax with the usual presentation of biblitothèques that can serve as a reference to the programmer. I can only advise readers Anglophile deepen your work by following other techniques in the book "Dive Into Python" as parsing XML, HTML, introspection, SOAP, functional programming, and this property "The Pyhtonic Way of Programming. When I read the TOC I suspect that much of your go programming book is a fairly comprehensive introduction to Python syntax with the usual presentation of biblitothèques that can serve as a reference to the programmer. The goal is to have a comprehensive and coherent, and therefore it seemed hard to zap the syntax for the people who buy the go programming book with the wish to learn Python. . . · Android Year Vision Enterprise Edition, in French, will teach you everything you need to know to manage projects Android Company, 10 € for 96 pages. • Finally, Android, A Complete Course From Basics to Enterprise Edition, in French, brings together these two books to offer a comprehensive view of programming Android, 15 € for 279 pages. Plus a thirty tutorials available from the purchase of an eBook to help you understand each of these concepts (see more at the site a complete list). And of course, three tutorials are offered to all those who visit the site: An application handling WebServices, a tab displays several and finally, last, provides you with a project mavenisé "ready to use. A tutorial, Eclipse packaged, to establish a business in a clean way with tabs (in fact no activities, one per tab, with the activity master). A tutorial, packaged Eclipse project, which allows Mavenisé all your projects with less effort (the POM to copy-paste into your project and your project is Mavenisé). You have to go see in the example (in the banner menu) to retrieve the 3 free tutorials and read the two articles. And then there is no need to register. These are not the examples I like to see a go programming book but when I "finished my command, I get to a login page where it asked me" login or create a new account "and n ' have no account, I have the right to "Recording Off" and can continue. Afterwards, we can not possibly buy the eBook (as it is indeed an eBook if I'm not mistaken) on the site, but in this case, why put a basket. Or so I'm picking up full. . . .