On Mon, Nov 10, 2014 at 10:21:07AM +0100, Tavmjong Bah wrote:
On Sun, 2014-11-09 at 23:23 -0500, Martin Owens wrote:
> On Sun, 2014-11-09 at 23:06 +0100, Johan Engelen wrote:
> > We had a bit of a discussion on IRC about this. For simplicity, I
> > think it'd be good if we keep this a developer education campaign,
> > i.e. C++ books. And then have another something for the non-coders. We
> > of course appreciate those efforts too, I just don't know how to
> > "rank" them and what to give.
>
> So is inkscape-web's python code C++ or non-code? ;-)
>
> I wouldn't want Maren to miss out in 2015 or 16 if we run this every
> year. These contributions aren't core inkscape, or event extensions. But
> they are code and they are for inkscape the project.
Maybe we should send our top Python coders a Python book.
How many Python coders do we have?
The right question might be, how many people do we have that would like
to learn Python. ;-)
I could imagine a highly active translator or C++ developer might want
to improve their Python and select the book, even though there Inkscape
contribs were not to Python. And I can imagine python developers might
have interest in boning up on C++.
So, maybe we want to have a pool of books to choose from of various
topics, then pick the top contributors in various areas, and let them
decide themselves what they want to learn.
I'm not sure what Python books to recommend putting on the list. It
seems there's so much good info for free on the web, I haven't ever
needed a python book. But there's a Python Cookbook that apparently
illustrates use of Python3 idioms. A Django/Python book might be of
interest among those wanting to work on the website.
Bryce