When we were learning Python, we had so many frustrations:





Many books and tutorials made it difficult for beginners to learn Python.

These books and tutorials often contain a lot of terminologies or unnecessarily long passages on a particular subject that are not essential to learning about a concept.

This, coupled with the haphazard organization of the materials, meant that it was difficult to follow the author. We often had to spend hours just to decipher what the author is saying. Needlessly to say, this killed many students' motivation to learn Python.





Many video tutorials do not have accompanying notes.

This meant that if we needed to refer a particular concept in the video, we needed to spend a long time rewinding or rewatching the videos.





We forget the things we read from books and watch in tutorials, within weeks, and sometimes even days.

In fact, studies have shown that just reading or watching something (even multiple times) do not improve long-term retention.





There wasn’t anyone we could really talk to or ask if we didn't understand something.

This meant that we had to spend hours looking up that question on the Internet.





Most courses don’t have a preview for us to view or look at.

Even when there's a preview of the course, it’s usually a short introduction on the course and don’t really allow us to see it’s suited to our needs.

This meant most of us buy a course either based on other users’ reviews, someone’s recommendation or we just felt it might be good.

And sometimes, these courses aren’t what we are looking for.

But since most courses usually don’t come with a money-back guarantee, we are often stuck with a particular course even if we don’t like it. Isn’t that pretty unfair?





And these were the frustration we hoped to address in this upcoming course:





Each of our tutorials are short (mostly less than 4 minutes), easy-to-digest and fluff-free.

Why did we keep our videos to less than 4 minutes?

Because we understand that a lot of us are busy professionals and do not have hours each day to learn something. With our course, even if you can only spend a few minutes each day, you would be able to learn something from the course.





We transcribed our videos into downloadable PDFs so it’s easy to refer to whenever you need them.





We also included practices and coding exercises at the end of our video lessons.

How many times have you read through an entire guidebook and thought that you got everything inside your brain, but you can't even remember anything in the first chapter? We don’t know about you but for us, it’s just way too many to count.

That's why we decided to add these quizzes and practices. These quizzes and practices test your understanding and reinforces on the concept that you just learned. In this way, you remember what you just learned longer, plus you become a more confident and better coder as you progress in the course.





We always dreamt of having someone we could talked to or ask when we were learning Python. And maybe you do too.

If you have any questions or you are stuck at some parts, you can send an email to us and we would be happy to help you out.





We have made some of the tutorials in this course publicly available.

So, you can check them out to see this course is what you are looking for.

If you sign up for the course and are not happy with the course for any reason, we have a 30-day money back guarantee – we would refund your money within 30 days of the course release date (for buyers who purchased the course during the presale) or within 30 days of your purchase date.