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- An in-depth look at variables, memory, namespaces and scopes
 - A deep dive into Python's memory management and optimizations
 - In-depth understanding and advanced usage of Python's numerical data types (Booleans, Integers, Floats, Decimals, Fractions, Complex Numbers)
 - Advanced Boolean expressions and operators
 - Advanced usage of callables including functions, lambdas and closures
 - Functional programming techniques such as map, reduce, filter, and partials
 - Create advanced decorators, including parametrized decorators, class decorators, and decorator classes
 - Advanced decorator applications such as memoization and single dispatch generic functions
 - Use and understand Python's complex Module and Package system
 - Idiomatic Python and best practices
 - Understand Python's compile-time and run-time and how this affects your code
 - Avoid common pitfalls
 
- Basic introductory knowledge of Python programming (variables, conditional statements, loops, functions, lists, tuples, dictionaries, classes).
 - You will need Python 3.6 or above, and a development environment of your choice (command line, PyCharm, Jupyter, etc.)
 
Hello!
This is Part 1 of a series of courses intended to dive into the inner mechanics and more complicated aspects of Python 3.
This is not a beginner course - if you've been coding Python for a week or a couple of months, you probably should keep writing Python for a bit more before tackling this series.
On the other hand, if you're now starting to ask yourself questions like:
- I wonder how this works?
 - is there another way of doing this?
 - what's a closure? is that the same as a lambda?
 - I know how to use a decorator someone else wrote, but how does it work? Can I write my own?
 - why isn't this boolean expression returning a boolean value?
 - what does an import actually do, and why am I getting side effects?
 - and similar types of question...
 
Please make sure you review the pre-requisites for this course (below) - although I give a brief refresh of basic concepts at the beginning of the course, those are concepts you should already be very comfortable with as you being this course.
In this course series, I will give you a much more fundamental and deeper understanding of the Python language and the standard library.
Python is called a "batteries-included" language for good reason - there is a ton of functionality in base Python that remains to be explored and studied.
So this course is not about explaining my favorite 3rd party libraries - it's about Python, as a language, and the standard library.
In particular this course is based on the canonical CPython. You will also need Jupyter Notebooks to view the downloadable fully-annotated Python notebooks.
It's about helping you explore Python and answer questions you are asking yourself as you develop more and more with the language.
In Python 3: Deep Dive (Part 1) we will take a much closer look at:
- Variables - in particular that they are just symbols pointing to objects in memory
 - Namespaces and scope
 - Python's numeric types
 - Python boolean type - there's more to a simple or statement than you might think!
 - Run-time vs compile-time and how that affects function defaults, decorators, importing modules, etc
 - Functions in general (including lambdas)
 - Functional programming techniques (such as map, reduce, filter, zip, etc)
 - Closures
 - Decorators
 - Imports, modules and packages
 - Tuples as data structures
 - Named tuples
 
Course Prerequisites
This is an intermediate to advanced Python course.
To have the full benefit of this course you should be comfortable with the basic Python language including:
- variables and simple types such as str , bool , int and float types
 - for and while loops
 - if...else... statements
 - using simple lists , tuples , dictionaries and sets
 - defining functions (using the def statement)
 - writing simple classes using the class keyword and the __init__ method, writing instance methods, creating basic properties using @property decorators
 - importing modules from the standard library (e.g. import math)
 
- have Python 3.6 (or higher) installed on your system
 - be able to write and run Python programs using either:
- the command line, or
 - a favorite IDE (such as PyCharm),
 
 - have Jupyter Notebooks installed (which I use throughout this course so as to provide you fully annotated Python code samples)
 
- Anyone with a basic understanding of Python that wants to take it to the next level and get a really deep understanding of the Python language and its data structures.
 - Anyone preparing for an in-depth Python technical interview.
 
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