[PythonistaCafe] What makes PythonistaCafe different

Hey there,

Mastering Python is *not* just about getting the books and courses to study—to be successful you also need a way to stay motivated and to grow your abilities in the long run.

Many Pythonistas I know are struggling with this.

It's simply a lot less fun to build your Python skills completely alone.

If you're a self-taught developer with a non-technical day job it's hard to grow your skills all by yourself.

And with no coders in your personal peer group, there's nobody to encourage or support you in your endeavor of becoming a better developer.

Maybe you're already working as a developer, but no one else at your company shares your love for Python.

It's frustrating when you can't share your learning progress with anyone or ask for advice when you feel stuck.

From personal experience I know that existing online communities and social media don't do a great job at providing that support network either:

Stack Overflow is for asking focused, one-off questions. It's hard to make a human connection with fellow commenters on the platform. Everything is about the facts, not the people. For example, moderators will freely edit other people's questions, answers, and comments. It feels more like a wiki than a forum.

Twitter is like a virtual water cooler and great for "hanging out" but it's limited to messages that can only be a few sentences long at a time. Not great for discussing anything substantial. If you're not constantly online you'll miss out on most of the conversations. Slack chat groups suffer from the same flaws.

Hacker News is for discussing and commenting on tech news. It doesn't foster long-term relationships between commenters. It's also one of the most aggressive communities in tech right now with little moderation and a borderline toxic culture.

Reddit takes a broader stance and encourages more "human" discussions than Stack Overflow's one-off Q&A format. But it's a huge public forum with millions of users and has all of the associated problems: toxic behavior, overbearing negativity, people lashing out at each other, jealousy, ... In short, all the best parts of the human behavior spectrum.

Eventually I realized that what holds so many developers back is their limited access to the global Python coding community. That's why I founded PythonistaCafe, a peer-to-peer learning community for Python developers.

At the center of PythonistaCafe are the core values of our community that we ask all members to adhere to.

Our core values and application process for new members create a certain type of culture in the community.

It's one of collaboration and helpfulness. It's one where you can form genuine relationships with other members, learn from one another and give back to other members who are newer. It also fosters collaboration.

An open community tends to be more guarded and cutthroat because people need to keep each other at "arms length."

You can read the PythonistaCafe Core Values at the link below:

-> https://www.pythonistacafe.com/core-values

— Dan Bader

Older messages

[Sublime + Python Setup] Sublime Text is just a blank canvas…

Wednesday, March 30, 2022

Hey there, When I became serious about optimizing Sublime Text with plugins, it was hard for me to separate the wheat from the chaff. Without a real guideline or roadmap I resorted to installing *any*

[Python Dependency Pitfalls] The Iceberg

Wednesday, March 30, 2022

Hey there, The other day I read this quote from a Python developer that made me stop and think: "As a noob with a little programming knowledge already, I've found setting up and installing

[Sublime + Python Setup] Grumpy old greybeard with a whitespace problem

Wednesday, March 30, 2022

One fateful day, the Agile Gods that be decided to “add some firepower” to my little team… And so, developer Paul joined (name changed to protect the guilty). Before I dive into this story, let me ask

[Python Dependency Pitfalls] "Re-inventing the wheel" disease

Wednesday, March 30, 2022

Hey there, PyPI, the Python packaging repository, now contains more than 100000 third-party packages in total. That's an *overwhelming* number of packages to choose from... And this feeling of

[Sublime + Python Setup] Don’t build “nag screen muscle memory”

Tuesday, March 29, 2022

Hey there, Once I worked with a developer who refused to buy a registered copy of Sublime for months on end, even though he *loved* Sublime. He used it as his main code editor every day and was very

You Might Also Like

📈 Why Is My Ping So High While Gaming? — How to Keep Your Android From Overheating

Saturday, May 4, 2024

Also: Using ChatGPT to Craft a Resume, and More! How-To Geek Logo May 4, 2024 📩 Get expert reviews, the hottest deals, how-to's, breaking news, and more delivered directly to your inbox by

JSK Daily for May 4, 2024

Saturday, May 4, 2024

JSK Daily for May 4, 2024 View this email in your browser A community curated daily e-mail of JavaScript news The Power of React's Virtual DOM: A Comprehensive Explanation Modern JavaScript

Daily Coding Problem: Problem #1431 [Medium]

Saturday, May 4, 2024

Daily Coding Problem Good morning! Here's your coding interview problem for today. This problem was asked by MongoDB. Given a list of elements, find the majority element, which appears more than

Ranked | The World's Top Media Franchises by All-Time Revenue 📊

Saturday, May 4, 2024

From Pokémon to Star Wars, some media franchises are globally recognizable. How do media franchises compare in terms of all-time revenue? View Online | Subscribe Presented by Voronoi: The App Where

Noonification: Read Code Like a Hacker With the SAST

Saturday, May 4, 2024

Top Tech Content sent at Noon! Get Algolia: AI Search that understands How are you, @newsletterest1? 🪐 What's happening in tech today, May 4, 2024? The HackerNoon Newsletter brings the HackerNoon

Weekend Reading — May the fourth

Saturday, May 4, 2024

This week we setup our new Minecraft server, play Spacewar, avoid burnout, wonder about Facebook AI spam, lose our passkeys, and claim stairs on the way back home. 😎 Labnotes (by Assaf Arkin) Weekend

Google lays off workers

Saturday, May 4, 2024

Plus: Tesla cans its Supercharger team and UnitedHealthcare reveals security lapses View this email online in your browser By Kyle Wiggers Saturday, May 4, 2024 Image Credits: Tomohiro Ohsumi / Getty

When It Rains, It Pours ☔

Saturday, May 4, 2024

Why the umbrella's design can't be beat. Here's a version for your browser. Hunting for the end of the long tail • May 04, 2024 Hey there, Ernie here with a refreshed piece about umbrellas

🐍 New Python tutorials on Real Python

Saturday, May 4, 2024

Hey there, There's always something going on over at realpython.com as far as Python tutorials go. Here's what you may have missed this past week: Python's unittest: Writing Unit Tests for

Microsoft Outlook Flaw Exploited by Russia's APT28 to Hack Czech, German Entities

Saturday, May 4, 2024

THN Daily Updates Newsletter cover Webinar -- Data Security is Different at the Petabyte Scale Discover the secrets to securing fast-moving, massive data sets with insights from industry titans