14,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in 1-2 Wochen
payback
7 °P sammeln
  • Broschiertes Buch

This entertaining puzzle book, for software developers and programming hobbyists, enlightens readers about many of the amazing and surprising behaviors of regular expressions. The author presents a series of questions, each inviting readers to think at length--and indeed to try out code on their own--before turning the page for the author's discussion and solution. The code shown in this book gives attention to regular expressions themselves, but is run using the Python programming language in particular. Everything discussed can easily be adapted to other programming languages. The short book…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This entertaining puzzle book, for software developers and programming hobbyists, enlightens readers about many of the amazing and surprising behaviors of regular expressions. The author presents a series of questions, each inviting readers to think at length--and indeed to try out code on their own--before turning the page for the author's discussion and solution. The code shown in this book gives attention to regular expressions themselves, but is run using the Python programming language in particular. Everything discussed can easily be adapted to other programming languages. The short book is accompanied by quirky and obliquely relevant illustrations that add character and whimsy to the text.
Autorenporträt
David Mertz, Ph.D. is the founder of KDM Training, a partnership dedicated to educating developers and data scientists in machine learning and scientific computing. He created a data science training program for Anaconda Inc. and was a senior trainer for them. With the advent of deep neural networks, he has turned to training our robot overlords as well.He previously worked for 8 years with D. E. Shaw Research and was also a Director of the Python Software Foundation for 6 years. David remains co-chair of its Trademarks Committee and Scientific Python Working Group. His columns, Charming Python and XML Matters, were once the most widely read articles in the Python world.