(Jul-11-2017, 09:21 PM)sparkz_alot Wrote:(Jul-11-2017, 06:44 PM)NMW Wrote: Hi, I'm somewhat of a programming "newbie"
As a "newbie" you should really be using the most recent version of Python, currently 3.6.1 (due to be updated to 3.6.2 on 17 July 2017) unless you absolutely need to use version 2
I don't know, isn't there some kind of age old discussion as to which Python version (2 or 3) you should use if you want to learn Python? And "experts" have stated that if you're in the learning stages you should use Python 2 ?
and I quote :
Quote:“Python 3 is a nicer and more consistent language, BUT, there is very limited third-party module support for it. This is likely to be true for at least a couple of years more. So, all major frameworks still run on Python 2, and will continue to do so for a significant time. Therefore, if you learn Python today, you should learn Python 2, because that is the version you are going to end up actually using.”source:http://learntocodewith.me/programming/python/python-2-vs-python-3/
That's why I'm using Python 2, I guess...
Quote:Did you understand the part with print()
?
Yes I did, I could adapt my code or I could just use the interpreter. Both would work, I guess. I was afraid that my code was wrong, but now I know it's probably just some sort of "glitch"...
(Jul-11-2017, 09:30 PM)snippsat Wrote:Quote:Yes, an PyCharm has a couple of ways,when i use it sometimes(i use Atom).
Quote:PyCharm is good for beginner because you get all tool out of the box(use basic tool to run code in the beginning).
Thanks, I'll use PyCharm for my next Python tutorials... :-)