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Python Programming On Win32
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Description
Despite Python's increasing popularity on Windows, Python Programming on Win32 is the first book to demonstrate how to use it as a serious Windows development and administration tool. This book addresses all the basic technologies for common integration tasks on Windows, explaining both the Windows issues and the Python code you need to glue things together.
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Product Details
Title:
Python Programming On Win32
By:
Mark Hammond, Andy Robinson
Publisher:
O'Reilly Media
Formats:
  • Print
  • Ebook
  • Safari Books Online
Print Release:
January 2000
Ebook Release:
June 2009
Pages:
672
Print ISBN:
978-1-56592-621-9
| ISBN 10:
1-56592-621-8
Ebook ISBN:
978-0-596-55976-2
| ISBN 10:
0-596-55976-3
Customer Reviews
About the Authors
  1. Mark Hammond

    Mark Hammond is an independent Microsoft Windows consultant working out of Melbourne, Australia. He studied computer science at the South Australian Institute of Technology (now the University of South Australia), and then worked with several large financial institutions in Australia. He started his consulting operation in 1995. Mark has produced many of the Windows extensions for Python, including PythonWin, Active Scripting, and Active Debugging support, and coauthored the COM framework and extensions. He is also a leading authority on Active Scripting and related technologies and has spoken on this subject at Microsofts three most recent Professional Developers conferences. Apart from being a father to his teenage daughter, having an interest in live music, and providing way-too-many free Python extensions, Mark has no life!

    View Mark Hammond's full profile page.

  2. Andy Robinson

    Andy Robinson is a London-based consultant specializing in business analysis, object-oriented design, and Windows development. He studied physics and philosophy, then Japanese studies at Oxford. He spent a year in advertising in Tokyo, two more in investment banking, and a long spell as the finance director of a startup in the sports industry. Observing that in all these positions he always ended up having to rewrite software, he moved to full-time computer consulting four years ago. He is currently helping one of the world's largest fund managers to internationalize their systems to handle Asian languages, developing Python systems for financial analysis, and reporting. Back when Andy had spare time, his passions were track and field, and rock climbing. Right now his two sons, Tim and Harry, are taking up all of his time.

    View Andy Robinson's full profile page.

Colophon

Our look is the result of reader comments, our own experimentation, and feedback from distribution channels. Distinctive covers complement our distinctive approach to technical topics, breathing personality and life into potentially dry subjects. The animal on the cover of Python Programming on Win32 is a caiman (caiman crocodilus). One of 23 species of crocodiles, the caiman lives primarily in the wetlands, flood plains, and river areas of Mexico and South America. They prefer less-traveled, low waters. Their diet consists of insects, fish, and small mammals.

A female builds a nest in the ground or in covered vegetation, and lays around 20 to 25 eggs in the late summer. Several females may share a nest, to help their young survive. After 90 days' gestation, the young hatch. They reach full maturity at around four to seven years of age. A caiman grows to be about four to six feet long.

Caiman young are yellow in color, while adults have a more olive-green color. In the past, caimans have been in danger due to habitat destruction, hunting, and pet trade, but some conservation efforts have helped bring their numbers up in recent years. Mary Anne Weeks Mayo was the production editor for Python Programming on Win32. Colleen Gorman copyedited the book, and Jeff Holcomb and Jane Ellin provided quality control. Judy Hoer provided production assistance. Robert Romano and Rhon Porter created the illustrations using Adobe Photoshop 4 and Macromedia FreeHand 7. Brenda Miller wrote the index.

Edie Freedman designed the cover of this book, using a 19th-century engraving from the Dover Pictorial Archive. The cover layout was produced with Quark XPress 3.32 using the ITC Garamond font. Whenever possible, our books use RepKover, a durable and flexible lay-flat binding. If the page count exceeds RepKover's limit, perfect binding is used.

Kathleen Wilson produced the cover layout with Quark XPress 3.3 using Adobe's ITC Garamond font. The interior layouts were designed by Edie Freedman and Nancy Priest, with modifications by Alicia Cech, and implemented in FrameMaker 5.5 by Mike Sierra. The text and heading fonts are ITC Garamond Light and Garamond Book. The colophon was written by Nicole Arigo.

  • Book cover of Python Programming On Win32