Tuples are technically just immutable lists, but by convention we tend to use tuples and lists for quite different purposes.| www.pythonmorsels.com
Python's strings have methods for checking whether a string starts or ends with specific text and for removing prefixes and suffixes.| www.pythonmorsels.com
In Python we care about the behavior of an object more than the type of an object. We say, "if it looks like a duck and walks like a duck, it's a duck." This idea is called duck typing.| www.pythonmorsels.com
An explanation of all of Python's 100+ dunder methods and 50+ dunder attributes, including a summary of each one.| www.pythonmorsels.com
The range function can be used for counting upward, countdown downward, or performing an operation a number of times.| www.pythonmorsels.com
Sequences are iterables that have a length. Sequences are ordered collections (they maintain the order of their contents). The most common sequences built-in to Python are string, tuple, and list.| www.pythonmorsels.com
Python's strings have dozens of methods, but some are much more useful than others. Let's discuss the dozen-ish must-know string methods and why the other methods aren't so essential.| www.pythonmorsels.com
Any reversible iterable can be reversed using the built-in reversed function whereas Python's slicing syntax only works on sequences.| www.pythonmorsels.com
Python's built-in functions list includes 71 functions now! Which built-in functions are worth knowing about? And which functions should you learn later?| www.pythonmorsels.com
Python's variables are not buckets that contain objects; they're pointers. Assignment statements don't copy: they point a variable to a value (and multiple variables can "point" to the same value).| www.pythonmorsels.com