

If you haven't written an Amazon review before, please explicitly tell me in your email you have an Amazon account and can post reviews. To demonstrate that you will be able to write a review, please send me a link to an Amazon, Goodreads, or Powells review you have written before. However, I can definitely send you an ebook to review.)

(UPDATE: There's been a large amount of interest, and I can't guarantee you'll get a print book. You'll receive a free ebook to read, and upon posting a review to Amazon, you will receive a complementary print review copy of the book. If you'd like to receive a free ebook copy of The Big Book of Small Python Projects, please fill out the form at. Project 66 - Simple Substitution Cipher.Project 64 - Seven-Segment Display Module.Project 60 - Rock Paper Scissors (Always-Win Version).Project 53 - Periodic Table of the Elements.Project 11 - Clickbait Headline Generator.Encryption programs that use ciphers like ROT13 and Vigenère to conceal textįor those who’ve mastered basic Python syntax and are ready to have fun making programs, the projects in this book will spark new ideas for what’s possible within just a few pages of code.Mazes that you design then escape from, and a 3D Maze Runner-like video game.Animation programs, like a fish tank, a rotating cube, and a bouncing DVD logo.Simulations of a spreading forest fire, a million dice rolls, and a Japanese abacus.Hangman, Blackjack and other games to play against a computer or your friends.

Watch a trailer video of the book's programming projects. Whether it’s a vintage screensaver, a snail-racing game, a clickbait headline generator, or animated strands of your DNA, these simple, text-based programs are small – limited to 256 lines of code or less – and designed to be self-contained in a single source-code file so you can easily post and share them online. Once you see how the code works, it’s time to experiment with your own changes and practice re-creating them yourself.Įach project is a standalone mini-chapter that includes a sample run of the program’s output, the source code, and suggestions for customization.

This curated collection of simple Python projects lets you dive right in and make digital art, games, animations, number-crunching tools and more – right away! Forget standard step-by-step tutorials instead, author Al Sweigart takes a learn-by-doing approach that provides you with over 80 programs to manually copy, run, and play with. Buy Direct From Publisher (Preferred, Free Ebook) Buy on Amazon
