dear snippsat,
many thanks for your reply and your support. This is very kind and i am lucky.
you allready have seen (in the other thread: https://python-forum.io/Thread-preparing...#pid107604 ) that i am currently setting up several machines (win 10 in office) and mx-linux at home with python and a development-environment consisting of all what needs to be on board. Many thanks for this scaffolding-approach in coding - and for the help: in the terms of a learing theory-approach you, snippsat (and also you larsz60+ and all the friends here) you really do great tings:.... since you
- give us mini-lessons visible here in this thread and also with a walk through this forum and sub forum gives us many many examples for these kind of things great place with many many of such mini-lessions, which are;
- starting points for us to make the next steps... and you...
- describe concepts in multiple ways...;(see above with the different approaches - such as lxml as well as BS4;
- Incorporate practical steps and also aids with code and theoretical concepts - like the links to the tutorials;
- give us novices the time to do some things with the first steps and yet...
- encourage (all the novices here) to go ahead with little steps; therefore you offer mini-lessions...
- to summarize: more or less - these are essential features of scaffolding that facilitate learning
- you organize these so called scaffolds in "simple" skill acquisition or they may be dynamic and generative";
- one of the first is the interaction between the learner and the expert. cf. the concepts of instructional scaffolding: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instructional_scaffolding (**)
dear Snippsat, you have seen that i am having a bit of challenge in laying out the first approach for the code in Python. Many thanks for your help - you gave me a great head start. I want to learn scripting from the very basics.
i have read some books that teach python such as the following.
- Eric Matthes: python crash course - which is great.
- David Asher and Mark Lutz: Learn Python;
- Magnus Hetland; Practical Python and others more.
- Dan Bader: Python Tricks - with interesting online examples on the net.
- ....
besides these books i have watched many youtube-courses: courses by Schaefer, Mosh, Richard White (oo-programming),Trevor Payne, CS Dojo, Socratica, Chris Reeves tutorials python web scraping and others more.
and yes: i guess that a hands-on approach is quite a good thing to the next step. its kind of scaffolding and it helps me as it is encouraging to see first results with a real-live project that makes sense: Any here you with the great forum come into play. this is a great experience to me. A great place for idea-sharing and knowledge exchange. From the perspective of a teacher this is a relly great thing and experience.
the next steps here: within the next few days i will finsh the setup of the new python installation and the setup of ide / editors /(vscode, pycharm) then i will work on the code examples and next steps of the parser/(scraper) you have gave great steps to overcome the hurdle.
dear snippsat - you do a great job here. you encourage so many people and give them a starting point to make the next steps..
this is overwhelming to see.
dear snippsat - and also dear buran, and larsz60+ and all those of you that work here - you do a overwhelmingly good job.
keep up the great work - the great project here - it rocks.!!!
greetings
apollo
- ps i am back in the next week...- i have to do some extra things for the office - in the meanwhile...
**see more here at the ressources of the open-source research community at massachusetts institute of technology: https://flosshub.org/biblio
with articles of: Andrea Hemetsberger; De Souza, Froehlich, Dourish; Michelle Morner et al; Eric van Hippel and others more. eg: Michele Morner and F. Lanzara: http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/dow...1&type=pdf and of course the concepts of "Communities of Practice" (Lave and Wenger)( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Community_of_practice )- general Learning Theories...etc. etx. and also very interesting the concepts of instructional scaffolding: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instructional_scaffolding
many thanks for your reply and your support. This is very kind and i am lucky.
you allready have seen (in the other thread: https://python-forum.io/Thread-preparing...#pid107604 ) that i am currently setting up several machines (win 10 in office) and mx-linux at home with python and a development-environment consisting of all what needs to be on board. Many thanks for this scaffolding-approach in coding - and for the help: in the terms of a learing theory-approach you, snippsat (and also you larsz60+ and all the friends here) you really do great tings:.... since you
- give us mini-lessons visible here in this thread and also with a walk through this forum and sub forum gives us many many examples for these kind of things great place with many many of such mini-lessions, which are;
- starting points for us to make the next steps... and you...
- describe concepts in multiple ways...;(see above with the different approaches - such as lxml as well as BS4;
- Incorporate practical steps and also aids with code and theoretical concepts - like the links to the tutorials;
- give us novices the time to do some things with the first steps and yet...
- encourage (all the novices here) to go ahead with little steps; therefore you offer mini-lessions...
- to summarize: more or less - these are essential features of scaffolding that facilitate learning
- you organize these so called scaffolds in "simple" skill acquisition or they may be dynamic and generative";
- one of the first is the interaction between the learner and the expert. cf. the concepts of instructional scaffolding: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instructional_scaffolding (**)
dear Snippsat, you have seen that i am having a bit of challenge in laying out the first approach for the code in Python. Many thanks for your help - you gave me a great head start. I want to learn scripting from the very basics.
i have read some books that teach python such as the following.
- Eric Matthes: python crash course - which is great.
- David Asher and Mark Lutz: Learn Python;
- Magnus Hetland; Practical Python and others more.
- Dan Bader: Python Tricks - with interesting online examples on the net.
- ....
besides these books i have watched many youtube-courses: courses by Schaefer, Mosh, Richard White (oo-programming),Trevor Payne, CS Dojo, Socratica, Chris Reeves tutorials python web scraping and others more.
and yes: i guess that a hands-on approach is quite a good thing to the next step. its kind of scaffolding and it helps me as it is encouraging to see first results with a real-live project that makes sense: Any here you with the great forum come into play. this is a great experience to me. A great place for idea-sharing and knowledge exchange. From the perspective of a teacher this is a relly great thing and experience.
the next steps here: within the next few days i will finsh the setup of the new python installation and the setup of ide / editors /(vscode, pycharm) then i will work on the code examples and next steps of the parser/(scraper) you have gave great steps to overcome the hurdle.
dear snippsat - you do a great job here. you encourage so many people and give them a starting point to make the next steps..
this is overwhelming to see.
dear snippsat - and also dear buran, and larsz60+ and all those of you that work here - you do a overwhelmingly good job.
keep up the great work - the great project here - it rocks.!!!
greetings
apollo
- ps i am back in the next week...- i have to do some extra things for the office - in the meanwhile...
**see more here at the ressources of the open-source research community at massachusetts institute of technology: https://flosshub.org/biblio
with articles of: Andrea Hemetsberger; De Souza, Froehlich, Dourish; Michelle Morner et al; Eric van Hippel and others more. eg: Michele Morner and F. Lanzara: http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/dow...1&type=pdf and of course the concepts of "Communities of Practice" (Lave and Wenger)( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Community_of_practice )- general Learning Theories...etc. etx. and also very interesting the concepts of instructional scaffolding: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instructional_scaffolding
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