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Do I need to stop on exercises that I didn’t enter?
I am currently reading the book "Programming with Python 3" by Mark Summerfield. There are a number of exercises in it that I don’t understand, should I stop on them or is it better to continue reading?
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It's better to skip it, not to break the rhythm so to speak. And after a couple of chapters, for example, come back. It will be easier.
Depending on what goal you are pursuing.
If your goal is to read a book, then don't. But if the goal is to learn, then of course you need to delve into and understand.
I haven’t read this book, but if it’s tight, then read Mark Lutz “Learning Python” (just take a fresher edition, there have already been 5 reprints, if my data is not outdated). Perhaps even a third-grader will understand it.
What do you think? After all, the answer is already in the question.
I also study, I also read it, there are also such moments)). It seems you will rest, you will understand and you will understand. In a couple of days you re-read and you don’t understand some of the exercises ... Zaatoo, I have already encountered situations several times when you need to do something, xs, just like you remember that Summerfield had it - and this is where the understanding of this exercise comes. Kaef)))
If you cannot solve the exercise, reread the passage in the book to which it refers and after reading try to solve the exercise. If, after long attempts to solve the problem, it still didn’t work out, I recommend finding material on the Internet on the relevant topic (articles, videos): after studying, most likely you will be able to solve the exercise.
After reading a chapter in a book on C ++, not everything fit in my head, but after watching a video lesson on the relevant topic, I re-read the same chapter and everything fit in my head much easier.
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