Discussion:
MTG: Introductions to PyQt and DataClasses
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dn
2024-03-17 06:46:01 UTC
Permalink
The Auckland Branch of NZPUG meets this Wednesday, 20 March at 1830 NZDT
(0530 UTC, midnight-ish Tue/Wed in American time-zones), for a virtual
meeting.

Part 1: Learn the basics of PyQt with code examples.
Hannan Khan is currently consulting as a Data Scientist for the (US)
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. He holds a Bachelor's
degree in Neuroscience as well as a Masters in Computer Science. As a
keen member of the PySprings Users' Group (Colorado), his contribution
is part of a collaboration between our two PUGs.

Part 2: Why use Dataclasses?
- will be the question asked, and answered, by yours truly. After
surveying a number of groups, it seems most of us know that Dataclasses
are available, but we don't use them - mostly because we haven't
ascertained their place in our tool-box. By the end of this session you
will, and will have good reason to use (or not) Dataclasses!

Everyone is welcome from every location and any time-zone. The NZPUG
Code of Conduct applies. JetBrains have kindly donated a door-prize. Our
BigBlueButton web-conferencing instance is best accessed using Chromium,
Brave, Vivaldi, Safari, etc, (rather than Firefox - for now). A head-set
will facilitate asking questions but text-chat will be available.

Please RSVP at https://www.meetup.com/nzpug-auckland/events/299764049/
See you there!
=dn, Branch Leader
Jim Schwartz
2024-03-17 10:40:44 UTC
Permalink
Will it be recorded?

Sent from my iPhone
The Auckland Branch of NZPUG meets this Wednesday, 20 March at 1830 NZDT (0530 UTC, midnight-ish Tue/Wed in American time-zones), for a virtual meeting.
Part 1: Learn the basics of PyQt with code examples.
Hannan Khan is currently consulting as a Data Scientist for the (US) National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. He holds a Bachelor's degree in Neuroscience as well as a Masters in Computer Science. As a keen member of the PySprings Users' Group (Colorado), his contribution is part of a collaboration between our two PUGs.
Part 2: Why use Dataclasses?
- will be the question asked, and answered, by yours truly. After surveying a number of groups, it seems most of us know that Dataclasses are available, but we don't use them - mostly because we haven't ascertained their place in our tool-box. By the end of this session you will, and will have good reason to use (or not) Dataclasses!
Everyone is welcome from every location and any time-zone. The NZPUG Code of Conduct applies. JetBrains have kindly donated a door-prize. Our BigBlueButton web-conferencing instance is best accessed using Chromium, Brave, Vivaldi, Safari, etc, (rather than Firefox - for now). A head-set will facilitate asking questions but text-chat will be available.
Please RSVP at https://www.meetup.com/nzpug-auckland/events/299764049/
See you there!
=dn, Branch Leader
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Jim Schwartz
2024-03-17 10:40:44 UTC
Permalink
Will it be recorded?

Sent from my iPhone
The Auckland Branch of NZPUG meets this Wednesday, 20 March at 1830 NZDT (0530 UTC, midnight-ish Tue/Wed in American time-zones), for a virtual meeting.
Part 1: Learn the basics of PyQt with code examples.
Hannan Khan is currently consulting as a Data Scientist for the (US) National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. He holds a Bachelor's degree in Neuroscience as well as a Masters in Computer Science. As a keen member of the PySprings Users' Group (Colorado), his contribution is part of a collaboration between our two PUGs.
Part 2: Why use Dataclasses?
- will be the question asked, and answered, by yours truly. After surveying a number of groups, it seems most of us know that Dataclasses are available, but we don't use them - mostly because we haven't ascertained their place in our tool-box. By the end of this session you will, and will have good reason to use (or not) Dataclasses!
Everyone is welcome from every location and any time-zone. The NZPUG Code of Conduct applies. JetBrains have kindly donated a door-prize. Our BigBlueButton web-conferencing instance is best accessed using Chromium, Brave, Vivaldi, Safari, etc, (rather than Firefox - for now). A head-set will facilitate asking questions but text-chat will be available.
Please RSVP at https://www.meetup.com/nzpug-auckland/events/299764049/
See you there!
=dn, Branch Leader
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
dn
2024-03-17 20:34:36 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jim Schwartz
Will it be recorded?
Better than that (assumption) "coming soon" - please join-up or keep an
eye on PySprings' Meetup ANNs: https://www.meetup.com/pysprings/
Post by Jim Schwartz
The Auckland Branch of NZPUG meets this Wednesday, 20 March at 1830 NZDT (0530 UTC, midnight-ish Tue/Wed in American time-zones), for a virtual meeting.
Part 1: Learn the basics of PyQt with code examples.
Hannan Khan is currently consulting as a Data Scientist for the (US) National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. He holds a Bachelor's degree in Neuroscience as well as a Masters in Computer Science. As a keen member of the PySprings Users' Group (Colorado), his contribution is part of a collaboration between our two PUGs.
Part 2: Why use Dataclasses?
- will be the question asked, and answered, by yours truly. After surveying a number of groups, it seems most of us know that Dataclasses are available, but we don't use them - mostly because we haven't ascertained their place in our tool-box. By the end of this session you will, and will have good reason to use (or not) Dataclasses!
Everyone is welcome from every location and any time-zone. The NZPUG Code of Conduct applies. JetBrains have kindly donated a door-prize. Our BigBlueButton web-conferencing instance is best accessed using Chromium, Brave, Vivaldi, Safari, etc, (rather than Firefox - for now). A head-set will facilitate asking questions but text-chat will be available.
Please RSVP at https://www.meetup.com/nzpug-auckland/events/299764049/
See you there!
=dn, Branch Leader
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
--
Regards,
=dn
Jim Schwartz
2024-03-17 21:02:12 UTC
Permalink
Actually, I have a sleep disorder that requires me to keep a constant sleep schedule. Thats why I asked.

Sent from my iPhone
Post by Jim Schwartz
Will it be recorded?
Better than that (assumption) "coming soon" - please join-up or keep an eye on PySprings' Meetup ANNs: https://www.meetup.com/pysprings/
Post by Jim Schwartz
The Auckland Branch of NZPUG meets this Wednesday, 20 March at 1830 NZDT (0530 UTC, midnight-ish Tue/Wed in American time-zones), for a virtual meeting.
Part 1: Learn the basics of PyQt with code examples.
Hannan Khan is currently consulting as a Data Scientist for the (US) National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. He holds a Bachelor's degree in Neuroscience as well as a Masters in Computer Science. As a keen member of the PySprings Users' Group (Colorado), his contribution is part of a collaboration between our two PUGs.
Part 2: Why use Dataclasses?
- will be the question asked, and answered, by yours truly. After surveying a number of groups, it seems most of us know that Dataclasses are available, but we don't use them - mostly because we haven't ascertained their place in our tool-box. By the end of this session you will, and will have good reason to use (or not) Dataclasses!
Everyone is welcome from every location and any time-zone. The NZPUG Code of Conduct applies. JetBrains have kindly donated a door-prize. Our BigBlueButton web-conferencing instance is best accessed using Chromium, Brave, Vivaldi, Safari, etc, (rather than Firefox - for now). A head-set will facilitate asking questions but text-chat will be available.
Please RSVP at https://www.meetup.com/nzpug-auckland/events/299764049/
See you there!
=dn, Branch Leader
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
--
Regards,
=dn
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
dn
2024-03-17 21:18:08 UTC
Permalink
Post by Jim Schwartz
Actually, I have a sleep disorder that requires me to keep a constant sleep schedule. Thats why I asked.
At a weekend meeting, discussion swirled around topics such as the best
way to learn/work, how much work we should attempt in one sitting,
could/should I 'do more', and similar.

One of the valuable observations is that most of us would benefit by
improving our sleep-schedule and ensuring we do sleep for sufficient
time (probably longer than current habit).
--
Regards,
=dn
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