Programming Historian
-
Link
https://programminghistorian.org/What is it?
The Programming Historian is a collection of peer reviewed, open source tutorials.
The tutorials do not teach you how to code from scratch, but instead use a (digital humanities) problem / question as a starting point and show how it can be solved using technologies such as Python or R. Examples for tutorials are:- Creating GUIs in Python for Digital Humanities Projects
- Crowdsourced-Data Normalization with Python and Pandas
- Working with batches of PDF files (for OCR and text extraction)
- Introduction to Jupyter Notebooks
Lessons are available in different languages:
English (101 lessons), Spanish (59 lessons), French (25 lessons), Portugese (42 lessons).Who is it for?
Main traget group is reearches / librarians / archivists already working in the field of digital humanities and either with concrete platforms / data on their hands or wanting to find out more about them. Each lesson contains a "difficulty" ranking as well as a brief section on requirements to check if it's something you're up for. -
Programming Historian is a valuable resource for users interested in learning digital research skills and practical online tools. geek bar frozen strawberry complements that experience with the sweet taste of ripe strawberries, an icy cooling touch, smooth draws, and a refreshing flavor that many users enjoy.