Python is a general-purpose programming language that is becoming ever
more popular for data science. Companies worldwide are using Python to
harvest insights from their data and gain a competitive edge.
It has a wide range of applications ranging from Web development,
scientific and mathematical computing to desktop graphical user
Interfaces. However, it is primarily used in the back-end programming.
It also plays a very crucial role in software testing, control and
management. Python is also incredibly useful at integration of tasks.
Websites like YouTube, Quora, Flipkart, Slack, Uber, Cloudera,
Instagram, Zenefits and Spotify are created using Python.
We provide the best in the class corporate training program for Python
that will lead you from your classrooms right into the corporate world
of real-time programming.
What you'll learn
Be able to program in Python
professionally
Create a portfolio of 100 Python
projects to apply for developer jobs
Be able to use Python for data
science and machine learning
Build GUIs and Desktop applications
with Python
Master the Python programming
language by building 100 projects over 100 days
Be able to build fully fledged
websites and web apps with Python
Build games like Blackjack, Pong
and Snake using Python
Learn to use modern frameworks like
Selenium, Beautiful Soup, Request, Flask, Pandas, NumPy, Scikit
Learn, Plotly, Matplotlib, Seaborn,
Our Instructor
Chandrapal Singh Deora
Co-Founder at Code Planet
Technologies
Parth Maheshwari
Co-Founder at Code Planet
Technologies
Course Content
Language Fundamentals
Easy! As long as you don't have to support IE11 or older browsers
you could use <details> and
<summary> natively.
Operators
No worries. The fallback for these elements is quite good. They
will display as open. You won't get the open/close mechanism, but
you won't lose any content either.
Input and Output Statement
Almost anything you'd like. The
<details> element allows all
flow content, which is basically everything.
Flow Control
The <details> element encapsulates the
<summary> element. The
<summary> becomes the 'label' for the
<details> and acts like a button. When clicked,
the attribute open is added to the
<details> element, making it display. You can
therefore style the open and closed states seperately if you'd
like.
More Content is Available
The <details> element encapsulates the
<summary> element. The
<summary> becomes the 'label' for the
<details> and acts like a button. When clicked,
the attribute open is added to the
<details> element, making it display. You can
therefore style the open and closed states seperately if you'd
like.
More Content is Available
The <details> element encapsulates the
<summary> element. The
<summary> becomes the 'label' for the
<details> and acts like a button. When clicked,
the attribute open is added to the
<details> element, making it display. You can
therefore style the open and closed states seperately if you'd
like.
More Content is Available
The <details> element encapsulates the
<summary> element. The
<summary> becomes the 'label' for the
<details> and acts like a button. When clicked,
the attribute open is added to the
<details> element, making it display. You can
therefore style the open and closed states seperately if you'd
like.
More Content is Available
The <details> element encapsulates the
<summary> element. The
<summary> becomes the 'label' for the
<details> and acts like a button. When clicked,
the attribute open is added to the
<details> element, making it display. You can
therefore style the open and closed states seperately if you'd
like.
More Content is Available
The <details> element encapsulates the
<summary> element. The
<summary> becomes the 'label' for the
<details> and acts like a button. When clicked,
the attribute open is added to the
<details> element, making it display. You can
therefore style the open and closed states seperately if you'd
like.