Some basic questions about Tkinter (and Python)
Cameron Laird
claird at starbase.neosoft.com
Fri Feb 9 12:21:28 EST 2001
In article <Pine.GSO.4.21.0102081734460.16415-100000 at babbage>,
Martyn Quick <mrq at for.mat.bham.ac.uk> wrote:
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>You're not the first person to recommend me this book on this
>newsgroup. Unfortunately, we don't seem to have it in the library at the
>university where I work, as otherwise it would be in my hands by now. I
>know you say buy the book, but I can't afford that - perhaps you earn more
>than I do?
As your countryman David Ricardo so vividly
expressed it, it's the *comparative* advan-
tage, not absolute income, which best explains
our behavior.
Does your University not offer inter-library
loan services?
When I write, "buy", that abbreviates an
entire constellation of assumptions and reali-
zations. Most bluntly, if it's worth the
expense to the kingdom to keep you titled as
a Research Fellow in Mathematics, then it's
worth it to someone to ensure a book which
will benefit you so much reaches your hands
safely.
If no one else steps forward, Dr. Quick, I
will; write me privately and I'll arrange for
a copy to reach you.
>
>I have a friend who is a computer programmer (and definitely earns more
>than I do ;-) who recommended that I give python a try. He is going to
>lend me his copy of a book on python on Saturday - Hammond & Robinson,
>"Python Programming on Win32". I don't know whether this has sufficient
>info on Tkinter to help, but it's about the only non-online source that I
>can get hold of.
This book has many virtues. Its coverage of
Tkinter occupies ten pages, and is slightly
outdated. It uses those ten pages to good
advantage, though.
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--
Cameron Laird <claird at NeoSoft.com>
Business: http://www.Phaseit.net
Personal: http://starbase.neosoft.com/~claird/home.html
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