Book Image

The Python Workshop - Second Edition

By : Corey Wade, Mario Corchero Jiménez, Andrew Bird, Dr. Lau Cher Han, Graham Lee
4.7 (3)
Book Image

The Python Workshop - Second Edition

4.7 (3)
By: Corey Wade, Mario Corchero Jiménez, Andrew Bird, Dr. Lau Cher Han, Graham Lee

Overview of this book

Python is among the most popular programming languages in the world. It’s ideal for beginners because it’s easy to read and write, and for developers, because it’s widely available with a strong support community, extensive documentation, and phenomenal libraries – both built-in and user-contributed. This project-based course has been designed by a team of expert authors to get you up and running with Python. You’ll work though engaging projects that’ll enable you to leverage your newfound Python skills efficiently in technical jobs, personal projects, and job interviews. The book will help you gain an edge in data science, web development, and software development, preparing you to tackle real-world challenges in Python and pursue advanced topics on your own. Throughout the chapters, each component has been explicitly designed to engage and stimulate different parts of the brain so that you can retain and apply what you learn in the practical context with maximum impact. By completing the course from start to finish, you’ll walk away feeling capable of tackling any real-world Python development problem.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
13
Chapter 13: The Evolution of Python – Discovering New Python Features

Dependency management

In the IT world, most complex programs depend on libraries beyond the Python standard library. You may use numpy or pandas to deal with multidimensional data or matplotlib to visualize data in graphs (this will be covered in Chapter 10, Data Analytics with pandas and NumPy), or any number of other libraries available to Python developers.

Just like your own software, the libraries developed by other teams frequently change as bugs are fixed, features are added, and old code is removed or refactored, which is the process of restructuring existing code. That means it’s important that your team uses the same version of a library so that it works in the same way for all of them.

Additionally, you want your customers or the servers where you deploy your software to use the same versions of the same libraries as well, so that everything works the same way on their computers, too.

There are multiple tools for solving this problem. These include pip, easy_install...