From cbc at unc.edu Thu Nov 1 10:05:10 2018 From: cbc at unc.edu (Calloway, Chris) Date: Thu, 1 Nov 2018 14:05:10 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] Only 3 Jupyter Day Tickets left Message-ID: <3EF83486-3538-432A-93C2-8A99A54C92FC@unc.edu> Only thee Jupyter Day tickets are left. If you want to go, now is the time to buy. Only $35 includes all-day catering. Several TriPython members are presenting. 21 talks! For beginners through advanced. Tickets: https://www.eventbrite.com/myevent?eid=48813059174 Main site: https://libcce.github.io/TriangleJupyter/ Information: https://libcce.github.io/TriangleJupyter/information/ Program: https://libcce.github.io/TriangleJupyter/2018/10/23/announcing-full-program.html Gitter: https://gitter.im/TriangleJupyter/Lobby Twitter: https://twitter.com/TriangleJupyter -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 -------------- next part -------------- Only thee Jupyter Day tickets are left. If you want to go, now is the time to buy. Only $35 includes all-day catering. Several TriPython members are presenting. 21 talks! For beginners through advanced. Tickets: [1]https://www.eventbrite.com/myevent?eid=48813059174 Main site: [2]https://libcce.github.io/TriangleJupyter/ Information: [3]https://libcce.github.io/TriangleJupyter/information/ Program: [4]https://libcce.github.io/TriangleJupyter/2018/10/23/announcing-full-program.html Gitter: [5]https://gitter.im/TriangleJupyter/Lobby Twitter: [6]https://twitter.com/TriangleJupyter -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 References Visible links 1. https://www.eventbrite.com/myevent?eid=48813059174 2. https://libcce.github.io/TriangleJupyter/ 3. https://libcce.github.io/TriangleJupyter/information/ 4. https://libcce.github.io/TriangleJupyter/2018/10/23/announcing-full-program.html 5. https://gitter.im/TriangleJupyter/Lobby 6. https://twitter.com/TriangleJupyter From jackie at python.org Thu Nov 1 16:19:31 2018 From: jackie at python.org (Jackie Augustine) Date: Thu, 1 Nov 2018 15:19:31 -0500 Subject: [TriPython] PyCon 2019 Call for Proposals Message-ID: Greetings Community Organizers! PyCon 2019?s Call for Proposals is open for Talks, Tutorials, Posters, Education Summit presentations, as well as for the hatchery program PyCon Charlas . The submission deadline for Tutorials is fast approaching! Submissions are due November 26, 2018 AoE . The deadline for Talk, Charlas, Poster, and Education Summit proposals is January 3, 2019 AoE . Please spread the word to your user group or meetup. Our goal is to provide a variety of talks, including beginner, intermediate, and advanced on all sorts of topics to interest a broad group of conference attendees. The best location to direct your attendees to is: https://us.pycon.org/2019/speaking/ Thank you for your help! Jackie Event Manager Python Software Foundation -------------- next part -------------- Greetings Community Organizers! PyCon 2019***s [1]Call for Proposals is open for Talks, Tutorials, Posters, Education Summit presentations, as well as for the hatchery program [2]PyCon Charlas. **** The submission deadline for Tutorials is fast approaching! Submissions are due November 26, 2018 [3]AoE. **The deadline for Talk, Charlas, Poster, and Education Summit proposals is January 3, 2019 [4]AoE. Please spread the word to your user group or meetup.** Our goal is to provide a variety of talks, including beginner, intermediate, and advanced on all sorts of topics to interest a broad group of conference attendees. The best location to direct your attendees to is: [5]https://us.pycon.org/2019/speaking/ Thank you for your help! Jackie Event Manager Python Software Foundation References Visible links 1. https://us.pycon.org/2019/speaking/ 2. https://us.pycon.org/2019/hatchery/charlas/ 3. https://www.timeanddate.com/time/zones/aoe 4. https://www.timeanddate.com/time/zones/aoe 5. https://us.pycon.org/2019/speaking/ From cbc at unc.edu Mon Nov 5 09:37:55 2018 From: cbc at unc.edu (Calloway, Chris) Date: Mon, 5 Nov 2018 14:37:55 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] Reminder: Raleigh Project Night Message-ID: <34B858B1-D3AE-44C1-901A-6A3CC51AE110@unc.edu> Project night for this week is a Red Hat Annex in Raleigh. http://tripython.org/Members/kahowell/nov-18-rpn/ When: Tuesday, November 6, 6-9pm Where: Red Hat Annex, 190 E Davie St, Raleigh What: Raleigh Project Night meets on first Tuesdays. Have a project you want to show off, share, seek help with, or just get some work done surrounded by like-minded Python lovers? Join us for our monthly project night and do just that! Don't have something to work on? Just need some help with Python? Show up and enjoy the energy, sprint on an open source project, find something interesting to contribute to or be inspired by! The setting is informal and there is no schedule, so don't worry if you show up past the start time. Whether you are a Python newbie needing help or have an open source project you want to share, come hang out and hack. Park in the City Center deck behind Red Hat (the Red Hat elevator in the deck goes into the main Red Hat space, not the Annex). Bring your laptop. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 -------------- next part -------------- Project night for this week is a Red Hat Annex in Raleigh. [1]http://tripython.org/Members/kahowell/nov-18-rpn/ When: Tuesday, November 6, 6-9pm Where: Red Hat Annex, 190 E Davie St, Raleigh What: Raleigh Project Night meets on first Tuesdays. Have a project you want to show off, share, seek help with, or just get some work done surrounded by like-minded Python lovers? Join us for our monthly project night and do just that! Don't have something to work on? Just need some help with Python? Show up and enjoy the energy, sprint on an open source project, find something interesting to contribute to or be inspired by! The setting is informal and there is no schedule, so don't worry if you show up past the start time. Whether you are a Python newbie needing help or have an open source project you want to share, come hang out and hack. Park in the City Center deck behind Red Hat (the Red Hat elevator in the deck goes into the main Red Hat space, not the Annex). Bring your laptop. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 References Visible links 1. http://tripython.org/Members/kahowell/nov-18-rpn/ From cbc at unc.edu Tue Nov 13 14:35:13 2018 From: cbc at unc.edu (Calloway, Chris) Date: Tue, 13 Nov 2018 19:35:13 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] Reminder: Chapel Hill Project Night Message-ID: Fun and games tomorrow night at RENCI. http://tripython.org/Members/cbc/nov-18-chpn When: Wednesday, November 14, 6-9pm Where: Renaissance Computing Institute (RENCI), Biltmore Conference Room, 5th Floor, Europa Center, 100 Europa Drive, Suite 590, Chapel Hill What: Chapel Hill Project Night meets on second Wednesdays. Have a project you want to show off, share, seek help with, or just get some work done surrounded by like-minded Python lovers? Join us for our monthly project night and do just that! Don't have something to work on? Just need some help with Python? Show up and enjoy the energy, sprint on an open source project, find something interesting to contribute to or be inspired by! The setting is informal and there is no schedule, so don't worry if you show up past the start time. Whether you are a Python newbie needing help or have an open source project you want to share, come hang out and hack. Plenty of free after-hours parking is available in the RENCI parking deck. Bring your laptop. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 -------------- next part -------------- Fun and games tomorrow night at RENCI. [1]http://tripython.org/Members/cbc/nov-18-chpn When: Wednesday, November 14, 6-9pm Where: Renaissance Computing Institute (RENCI), Biltmore Conference Room, 5th Floor, Europa Center, 100 Europa Drive, Suite 590, Chapel Hill What: Chapel Hill Project Night meets on second Wednesdays. Have a project you want to show off, share, seek help with, or just get some work done surrounded by like-minded Python lovers? Join us for our monthly project night and do just that! Don't have something to work on? Just need some help with Python? Show up and enjoy the energy, sprint on an open source project, find something interesting to contribute to or be inspired by! The setting is informal and there is no schedule, so don't worry if you show up past the start time. Whether you are a Python newbie needing help or have an open source project you want to share, come hang out and hack. Plenty of free after-hours parking is available in the RENCI parking deck. Bring your laptop. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 References Visible links 1. http://tripython.org/Members/cbc/nov-18-chpn From cbc at unc.edu Wed Nov 14 14:38:48 2018 From: cbc at unc.edu (Calloway, Chris) Date: Wed, 14 Nov 2018 19:38:48 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] TriPython Novmber 2018 Meeting: Tracking State and Events In CircuitPython Message-ID: <6CC7CFC9-FABE-4355-BBAC-73C76D07025F@unc.edu> The November meeting will be the fifth Thursday instead of the fourth Thursday (Thanksgiving). We will reboot Josh?s follow-on talk to Stacy?s talk about CircuitPython this past July. http://tripython.org/Members/sgambino/nov-18-mtg When: Thursday, November 29. 7-9pm Where: WebAssign, NCSU Centennial Campus, 1791 Varsity Drive, Suite 200, Raleigh What: Josh Johnson presents: "In building novel human/computer interaction devices using CircuitPython, a fork/port of MicroPython for the Adafruit M0 and M4 series development boards, I had a lot of state and state changes to work with. In this talk, I'll be exploring what state is, and how to use familiar Python constructs available to us in Micro/CircuitPython to model it, track it, and respond to changes. We'll cover a common task in electronics projects, button debouncing, but also explore a pattern we can extend to any sort of input, and use to cover general state tracking. It's essentially the fundamentals of what UI frameworks do in desktop environments. We get the opportunity to build what we need from scratch due to the limitations of our platform. The audience is people who basically know basic Python. :) No prior experience with microcontrollers or electronics required. We'll construct a simple demo circuit and control an RGB led. In the talk we'll walk through the basic construction and then dig into the code. Feel free to bring a laptop and a CircuitPlayground Express or other compatible board to mess around with the concepts during the talk!" Extemporaneous "lightning talks" of 5-10 minute duration are also welcome and don't need to be pre-announced. Plenty of free after hours parking is available in the upper level of the deck behind WebAssign (turn through the median just before the intersection of Varsity and Main Campus Drives). If the door is locked, call the number posted on the door. An after-meeting location for food and beverage will be decided at the meeting (usually BaDa Wings at Mission Valley). Come join us for a fun and informative evening. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 -------------- next part -------------- The November meeting will be the fifth Thursday instead of the fourth Thursday (Thanksgiving). We will reboot Josh's follow-on talk to Stacy's talk about CircuitPython this past July. [1]http://tripython.org/Members/sgambino/nov-18-mtg When: Thursday, November 29. 7-9pm Where: WebAssign, NCSU Centennial Campus, 1791 Varsity Drive, Suite 200, Raleigh What: Josh Johnson presents: "In building novel human/computer interaction devices using CircuitPython, a fork/port of MicroPython for the Adafruit M0 and M4 series development boards, I had a lot of state and state changes to work with. In this talk, I'll be exploring what state is, and how to use familiar Python constructs available to us in Micro/CircuitPython to model it, track it, and respond to changes. We'll cover a common task in electronics projects, button debouncing, but also explore a pattern we can extend to any sort of input, and use to cover general state tracking. It's essentially the fundamentals of what UI frameworks do in desktop environments. We get the opportunity to build what we need from scratch due to the limitations of our platform. The audience is people who basically know basic Python. :) No prior experience with microcontrollers or electronics required. We'll construct a simple demo circuit and control an RGB led. In the talk we'll walk through the basic construction and then dig into the code. Feel free to bring a laptop and a CircuitPlayground Express or other compatible board to mess around with the concepts during the talk!" Extemporaneous "lightning talks" of 5-10 minute duration are also welcome and don't need to be pre-announced. Plenty of free after hours parking is available in the upper level of the deck behind WebAssign (turn through the median just before the intersection of Varsity and Main Campus Drives). If the door is locked, call the number posted on the door. An after-meeting location for food and beverage will be decided at the meeting (usually BaDa Wings at Mission Valley). Come join us for a fun and informative evening. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 References Visible links 1. http://tripython.org/Members/sgambino/nov-18-mtg From rob.e.mccormick at gsk.com Thu Nov 15 12:01:58 2018 From: rob.e.mccormick at gsk.com (Rob McCormick) Date: Thu, 15 Nov 2018 17:01:58 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] Thanks, initial post Message-ID: Hi all - first test message to the list: Thanks to Chris for subscribing me. Great job on the archives, btw. Rob -- Rob McCormick rob.e.mccormick at gsk.com GSK monitors email communications sent to and from GSK in order to protect GSK, our employees, customers, suppliers and business partners, from cyber threats and loss of GSK Information. GSK monitoring is conducted with appropriate confidentiality controls and in accordance with local laws and after appropriate consultation. -------------- next part -------------- Hi all - first test message to the list: Thanks to Chris for subscribing me. Great job on the archives, btw. Rob -- Rob McCormick [1]rob.e.mccormick at gsk.com GSK monitors email communications sent to and from GSK in order to protect GSK, our employees, customers, suppliers and business partners, from cyber threats and loss of GSK Information. GSK monitoring is conducted with appropriate confidentiality controls and in accordance with local laws and after appropriate consultation. References Visible links 1. mailto:rob.e.mccormick at gsk.com From thomson at neuro.duke.edu Sun Nov 18 11:31:54 2018 From: thomson at neuro.duke.edu (Eric Thomson) Date: Sun, 18 Nov 2018 16:31:54 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] Durham Project Night tomorrow 6pm In-Reply-To: References: , Message-ID: Just a reminder that tomorrow is Project Night in Durham. If you are an absolute beginner just getting started, or have a project well underway you want to tinker with, all are welcome! It's a casual time to code from 6-9pm, so drop in any time. Thanks to Caktus for providing the meeting space and pizza. When: Monday, October 15, 6-9pm Where: Caktus Group Tech Space, 108 Morris St., Durham What: Join us for our monthly project night and do just that! Don't have something to work on? Just need some help with Python? Bring your laptop and enjoy the energy, sprint on an open source project, find something interesting to contribute to or be inspired! The setting is informal and there is no schedule, so don't worry if you show up past the start time. From bgailer at gmail.com Fri Nov 23 12:11:35 2018 From: bgailer at gmail.com (bob gailer) Date: Fri, 23 Nov 2018 12:11:35 -0500 Subject: [TriPython] Help wanted learning async Message-ID: <20708433-93ee-427e-2e0a-b19863d74e4b@gmail.com> Are you comfortable with the python 3.6 use of async? Would you be willing to help me learn it or point me to a useful resource? I have Googled and read Python docs til red in the face and found nothing that just explains step-by-step how it works. async in all its flavors, await, __await__(), futures, etc*99 I do not care about how it was done differently in earlier versions. I don't care about implementing servers or web scrapers. I just want the nuts-and-bolts. -- Bob Gailer From vangheem at gmail.com Fri Nov 23 21:50:52 2018 From: vangheem at gmail.com (Nathan Van Gheem) Date: Fri, 23 Nov 2018 21:50:52 -0500 Subject: [TriPython] Help wanted learning async In-Reply-To: <20708433-93ee-427e-2e0a-b19863d74e4b@gmail.com> References: <20708433-93ee-427e-2e0a-b19863d74e4b@gmail.com> Message-ID: I wrote an asycnio primer a while ago that might help: https://guillotina.readthedocs.io/en/latest/training/asyncio.html Otherwise, maybe try posting specific questions about it. On Fri, Nov 23, 2018 at 12:14 PM bob gailer wrote: > Are you comfortable with the python 3.6 use of async? Would you be > willing to help me learn it or point me to a useful resource? > > I have Googled and read Python docs til red in the face and found > nothing that just explains step-by-step how it works. > > async in all its flavors, await, __await__(), futures, etc*99 > > I do not care about how it was done differently in earlier versions. I > don't care about implementing servers or web scrapers. I just want the > nuts-and-bolts. > > -- > Bob Gailer > > _______________________________________________ > TriZPUG mailing list > TriZPUG at python.org > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/trizpug > http://tripython.org is the Triangle Python Users Group > -------------- next part -------------- I wrote an asycnio primer a while ago that might help:**[1]https://guillotina.readthedocs.io/en/latest/training/asyncio.html Otherwise, maybe try posting specific questions about it. On Fri, Nov 23, 2018 at 12:14 PM bob gailer <[2]bgailer at gmail.com> wrote: Are you comfortable with the python 3.6 use of async? Would you be willing to help me learn it or point me to a useful resource? I have Googled and read Python docs til red in the face and found nothing that just explains step-by-step how it works. async in all its flavors, await, __await__(), futures, etc*99 I do not care about how it was done differently in earlier versions. I don't care about implementing servers or web scrapers. I just want the nuts-and-bolts. -- Bob Gailer _______________________________________________ TriZPUG mailing list [3]TriZPUG at python.org [4]https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/trizpug [5]http://tripython.org is the Triangle Python Users Group References Visible links 1. https://guillotina.readthedocs.io/en/latest/training/asyncio.html 2. mailto:bgailer at gmail.com 3. mailto:TriZPUG at python.org 4. https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/trizpug 5. http://tripython.org/ From cbc at unc.edu Mon Nov 26 16:40:19 2018 From: cbc at unc.edu (Calloway, Chris) Date: Mon, 26 Nov 2018 21:40:19 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] December Speaker Message-ID: <22DC16E5-A963-4876-8B3F-ED6372E0DA57@unc.edu> Looking for a speaker for the Thursday December 13 meeting at Caktus. Sound off with your talk title, brief description, and brief bio for meeting announcements. Reminder about the meeting at WebAssign on this Thursday coming soon. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 -------------- next part -------------- Looking for a speaker for the Thursday December 13 meeting at Caktus. Sound off with your talk title, brief description, and brief bio for meeting announcements. Reminder about the meeting at WebAssign on this Thursday coming soon. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 From cbc at unc.edu Tue Nov 27 15:34:29 2018 From: cbc at unc.edu (Calloway, Chris) Date: Tue, 27 Nov 2018 20:34:29 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] Reminder: TriPython November 2018 Meeting: Tracking State And Detecting Events In CircuitPython: Debouncing The World With Software Message-ID: http://tripython.org/Members/sgambino/nov-18-mtg When: Thursday, November 29, 7-9pm Where: WebAssign, NCSU Centennial Campus, 1791 Varsity Drive, Suite 200, Raleigh What: Josh Johnson presents: "In building novel human/computer interaction devices using CircuitPython, a fork/port of MicroPython for the Adafruit M0 and M4 series development boards, I had a lot of state and state changes to work with. In this talk, I'll be exploring what state is, and how to use familiar Python constructs available to us in Micro/CircuitPython to model it, track it, and respond to changes. We'll cover a common task in electronics projects, button debouncing, but also explore a pattern we can extend to any sort of input, and use to cover general state tracking. It's essentially the fundamentals of what UI frameworks do in desktop environments. We get the opportunity to build what we need from scratch due to the limitations of our platform. The audience is people who basically know basic Python. :) No prior experience with microcontrollers or electronics required. We'll construct a simple demo circuit and control an RGB led. In the talk we'll walk through the basic construction and then dig into the code. Feel free to bring a laptop and a CircuitPlayground Express or other compatible board to mess around with the concepts during the talk!" Extemporaneous "lightning talks" of 5-10 minute duration are also welcome and don't need to be pre-announced. Plenty of free after hours parking is available in the upper level of the deck behind WebAssign (turn through the median just before the intersection of Varsity and Main Campus Drives). If the door is locked, call the number posted on the door. An after-meeting location for food and beverage will be decided at the meeting (usually BaDa Wings at Mission Valley). Come join us for a fun and informative evening. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 -------------- next part -------------- [1]http://tripython.org/Members/sgambino/nov-18-mtg When: Thursday, November 29, 7-9pm Where: WebAssign, NCSU Centennial Campus, 1791 Varsity Drive, Suite 200, Raleigh What: Josh Johnson presents: "In building novel human/computer interaction devices using CircuitPython, a fork/port of MicroPython for the Adafruit M0 and M4 series development boards, I had a lot of state and state changes to work with. In this talk, I'll be exploring what state is, and how to use familiar Python constructs available to us in Micro/CircuitPython to model it, track it, and respond to changes. We'll cover a common task in electronics projects, button debouncing, but also explore a pattern we can extend to any sort of input, and use to cover general state tracking. It's essentially the fundamentals of what UI frameworks do in desktop environments. We get the opportunity to build what we need from scratch due to the limitations of our platform. The audience is people who basically know basic Python. :) No prior experience with microcontrollers or electronics required. We'll construct a simple demo circuit and control an RGB led. In the talk we'll walk through the basic construction and then dig into the code. Feel free to bring a laptop and a CircuitPlayground Express or other compatible board to mess around with the concepts during the talk!" Extemporaneous "lightning talks" of 5-10 minute duration are also welcome and don't need to be pre-announced. Plenty of free after hours parking is available in the upper level of the deck behind WebAssign (turn through the median just before the intersection of Varsity and Main Campus Drives). If the door is locked, call the number posted on the door. An after-meeting location for food and beverage will be decided at the meeting (usually BaDa Wings at Mission Valley). Come join us for a fun and informative evening. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 References Visible links 1. http://tripython.org/Members/sgambino/nov-18-mtg From lionface.lemonface at gmail.com Fri Nov 30 01:31:36 2018 From: lionface.lemonface at gmail.com (Josh Johnson) Date: Fri, 30 Nov 2018 01:31:36 -0500 Subject: [TriPython] Slides From Last Night's CircuitPython Presentation. Message-ID: Hi All! Thanks everyone for coming out! I went ahead and uploaded a PDF of the slides[1]. The only caveat to that file is that the links to the code example viewer[2] in the PDF do not work (they are correct in the PowerPoint, but the anchors don't survive PDF export). It's a major bummer because some of the links are slightly out of order, and the links don't match with the titles. I'll reconcile/fix the issue at some point and send out an update. The source code examples and viewer code are on github[3], feel free to fork and send pull requests if you find issues or have any additions to make. If you have any questions, please ask! If you have any other feedback, feel free to reach out off-list. I want to edit things down a bit and would love to hear your thoughts on what you would cut, and if there's anything I should add. Thanks!! JJ [1] https://jjmojojjmojo.github.io/circuitpython_code_samples/Tripython%20Presentation%2011-15-2018.pdf [2] https://jjmojojjmojo.github.io/circuitpython_code_samples/ [3] https://github.com/jjmojojjmojo/circuitpython_code_samples From stevegambino at gmail.com Fri Nov 30 08:17:15 2018 From: stevegambino at gmail.com (Steve Gambino) Date: Fri, 30 Nov 2018 08:17:15 -0500 Subject: [TriPython] Slides From Last Night's CircuitPython Presentation. In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Josh, Thank you for the slides and for an excellent presentation! Your thoroughness always inspires me. Good work! Steve On Fri, Nov 30, 2018 at 1:32 AM Josh Johnson wrote: > Hi All! Thanks everyone for coming out! > > I went ahead and uploaded a PDF of the slides[1]. > > The only caveat to that file is that the links to the code example > viewer[2] in the PDF do not work (they are correct in the PowerPoint, > but the anchors don't survive PDF export). It's a major bummer because > some of the links are slightly out of order, and the links don't match > with the titles. I'll reconcile/fix the issue at some point and send > out an update. > > The source code examples and viewer code are on github[3], feel free > to fork and send pull requests if you find issues or have any > additions to make. > > If you have any questions, please ask! > > If you have any other feedback, feel free to reach out off-list. I > want to edit things down a bit and would love to hear your thoughts on > what you would cut, and if there's anything I should add. > > Thanks!! > JJ > > [1] > https://jjmojojjmojo.github.io/circuitpython_code_samples/Tripython%20Presentation%2011-15-2018.pdf > [2] https://jjmojojjmojo.github.io/circuitpython_code_samples/ > [3] https://github.com/jjmojojjmojo/circuitpython_code_samples > _______________________________________________ > TriZPUG mailing list > TriZPUG at python.org > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/trizpug > http://tripython.org is the Triangle Python Users Group > -------------- next part -------------- Josh, Thank you for the slides and for an excellent presentation! Your thoroughness always inspires me. Good work! Steve On Fri, Nov 30, 2018 at 1:32 AM Josh Johnson <[1]lionface.lemonface at gmail.com> wrote: Hi All! Thanks everyone for coming out! I went ahead and uploaded a PDF of the slides[1]. The only caveat to that file is that the links to the code example viewer[2] in the PDF do not work (they are correct in the PowerPoint, but the anchors don't survive PDF export). It's a major bummer because some of the links are slightly out of order, and the links don't match with the titles. I'll reconcile/fix the issue at some point and send out an update. The source code examples and viewer code are on github[3], feel free to fork and send pull requests if you find issues or have any additions to make. If you have any questions, please ask! If you have any other feedback, feel free to reach out off-list. I want to edit things down a bit and would love to hear your thoughts on what you would cut, and if there's anything I should add. Thanks!! JJ [1] [2]https://jjmojojjmojo.github.io/circuitpython_code_samples/Tripython%20Presentation%2011-15-2018.pdf [2] [3]https://jjmojojjmojo.github.io/circuitpython_code_samples/ [3] [4]https://github.com/jjmojojjmojo/circuitpython_code_samples _______________________________________________ TriZPUG mailing list [5]TriZPUG at python.org [6]https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/trizpug [7]http://tripython.org is the Triangle Python Users Group References Visible links 1. mailto:lionface.lemonface at gmail.com 2. https://jjmojojjmojo.github.io/circuitpython_code_samples/Tripython%20Presentation%2011-15-2018.pdf 3. https://jjmojojjmojo.github.io/circuitpython_code_samples/ 4. https://github.com/jjmojojjmojo/circuitpython_code_samples 5. mailto:TriZPUG at python.org 6. https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/trizpug 7. http://tripython.org/