8 Forum Posts by "octoberthirty1st"
I've started to work on a simple pixel puzzle game. I won't release many details about the game itself but it is 2d and a point and click. I just want a programmer to work with that can pretty much code my sprites and animations into a game. It should be relatively easy assuming you know what you're doing. If you're interested post a reply or PM me. Thanks.
Overall, yeah this guy sucks as a teacher.
You should make programming tutorials. You seem to explain things well.
This is all great info, if only I could understand what half of it meant.
Over the past 20 or so days I have been working on this programming project for class. As I have only been learning Python for 6 months this is what I have so far. I know it could have been done better and there are a lot of improvements to be made but I couldn't because of time constraints. This was my first real program and I would like your guys opinions on it. Thanks.
I'm pretty sure you don't have to download it to view it but here is the link.
http://www.mediafire.com/view/nq1964ht6mw3j1r/programtest.py
At 6/15/13 05:51 PM, seel wrote: Dear octoberthirty1st, please be a tiny bit more specific in your inquiry. What sort of games are you planning on developing exactly and for what platform(s)? I'm just going to assume that you have little experience with game programming since you're asking a question like this in the first place. I suggest that you pick one and get crackin'.
It's hard to pick a bad language when you're just starting out. Performance will be of no concern for a while anyway, and by the time it becomes relevant you should be educated enough to make your own decisions.
I was planning on making pixel games, mainly 2d, or 3d if it comes to that. They would be for the PC. Also I am familiar with Python.
What is the difference and which is better for coding games?
At 6/9/13 01:35 AM, Diki wrote: In my opinion the best book you can read is Learn Python the Hard Way; it's available for free, and is the absolute best Python resource that I've ever found. For what it's worth that is the book that taught me Python.
Thanks a lot.
So, right now I am learning Python at school as a subject and I've been learning for about 4 months now. My question is where can I go to learn more about Python in my own time so I can get better therefore do better in class. I was hoping someone on this board would know a place or two. Thanks.

