Printed Documentation

2009-01-07 Thread floob
I have been searching for a way to print the official Python
documentation into some kind of book (for my own uses).  I don't
really care if it's printed on newspaper and bound with elmer's
glue ... any way I can get relatively recent _official documentation_
in print form will do.

I'm on the go a lot, and can't read for long periods of time on LCD
screens anyhow (so having a laptop is not my solution).  Until eBook
readers grow up a bit, I'm stuck trying to print the documentation
that I REALLY need to read and absorb.

Lulu.com is an option, but it would cost something around $100 US
before shipping to get everything printed.  Also, I would have to
split up some larger documents into Volumes, which I'd rather not have
to do.

Has anyone tried this before?  Is the documentation already available
in print?

Thanks,

drfloob
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Re: Printed Documentation

2009-01-07 Thread floob
On Jan 7, 1:39 pm, excord80  wrote:
> On Jan 7, 4:00 pm, floob  wrote:
>
>
>
> > I have been searching for a way to print the official Python
> > documentation into some kind of book (for my own uses).  I don't
> > really care if it's printed on newspaper and bound with elmer's
> > glue ... any way I can get relatively recent _official documentation_
> > in print form will do.
>
> > I'm on the go a lot, and can't read for long periods of time on LCD
> > screens anyhow (so having a laptop is not my solution).  Until eBook
> > readers grow up a bit, I'm stuck trying to print the documentation
> > that I REALLY need to read and absorb.
>
> > Lulu.com is an option, but it would cost something around $100 US
> > before shipping to get everything printed.  Also, I would have to
> > split up some larger documents into Volumes, which I'd rather not have
> > to do.
>
> > Has anyone tried this before?  Is the documentation already available
> > in print?
>
> > Thanks,
>
> > drfloob
>
> http://docs.python.org/download.html
>
> I'd try taking the pdf to my local print shop and ask how much they'd
> charge.
>
> Local print shops have options for various bindings too.

I tried 7 print shops in my area.  Five refused to print single-run
books (minimum quantity of 100).  Of the 2 that WOULD print a single
set of books, the cheapest was $250.00 (spiral bound, no covers, 8.5"
x 11", cheapest paper available).  That quote included roughly: the
tutorial, library, reference, distutils, extending, and c-api pdfs.

For that price, I could buy an eBook reader with plans to throw it
away when I was done!


Off on a bit of a tangent:
if the Python Software Foundation could strike a deal with a
charitable printing company, users could probably get a slight
discount on buying printed documentation, and I'd bet Python's
organization could get a small percentage of each sale.  I believe
ubuntu is doing something like this with Lulu.com.  It'd be nice to
support Python while doing something I was going to do on my own,
anyhow.
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