"Tim Randolph" <timothyrandolph at yahoo.com> writes: > Now that there are so many Python books out or in the pipeline it is more > pleasant than discouraging to do some gap analysis. Here are some books > that I am looking forward to looking forward to: >From my list: * "Scientific Programming in Python", which would cover Numeric in detail, and also cover SWIG, hand-written interfaces to Fortran/C libraries, and reading various scientific data formats. * "Text Processing in Python", covering regular expressions, parsing, and XML processing. (Maybe in my copious free time, someday...) * "Web Programming with Python". (Ditto...) * Books on the Qt and GTk+ Python interfaces would also be good; without such books, it seems unlikely that anything will displace Tkinter as the standard Python GUI. (With such books, Tkinter is still in the lead because of its portability, but they'd even things out a bit.) I hope to not see many more introductory Python books, because there are enough of those; application- or domain-specific Python books are more interesting. Also, see Greg Wilson's list: http://software-carpentry.codesourcery.com/extern/python-book-ideas.html --amk
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