Digital Scholarship

Introduction to Python: Part 3

November 26, 2025, 10:00 am to 12:00 pm

Virtual event
Date: Wednesday, November 26, 2025
Time: 10:00am - 12:00pm
Presenter: Kendra Oudyk
Location: 548 and 552 - Presentation Room & Online
Location: Koerner Library

This set of five workshops is an introduction to Python programming, with a focus on skills that are relevant to students and researchers who are working with data, particularly tabular data.

The five workshops cover the following:

  • Part 1: To understand the basics of Python syntax, variables, and data types.
  • Part 2: To learn how to work with tabular data in Python, including reading, manipulating, and visualizing data.
  • Part 3: To learn how to automate tasks in Python, including working with multiple files.
  • Part 4: To learn to use logic and modularity to make Python code flexible and reusable.
  • Part 5: To develop good habits for programming for research in Python, including handling errors, debugging, and writing reliable code.

Participants must sign up for each workshop individually. It is not necessary to sign up for the first workshop in order to do the second (and so on), but note that each workshop will build on the topics covered in previous workshops in this series.

Prerequisites:

There are no prerequisites needed for this series; no prior programming experience is required.

Setup Instructions:

In these workshops, we will write Python code in a text editor called Visual Studio Code (VS Code).

Please follow the following steps/links to complete the setup for this workshop series before you attend:

  1. Install a Python Interpreter
  2. Install Visual Studio Code
  3. Install the Python extension for VS Code. If you want more info on installing extensions for VS Code, see this page on their “Extension Marketplace”
  4. Install this Python Debugger extension for VS Code

NOTE: You may use your own preferred text editor or Jupyter Notebooks to write code in these workshops, but keep in mind that some aspects may be unpredictably different from the way things appear on the instructor's screen. For example, the instructor will frequently use the Python Debugger in VS Code, and other text editors may have entirely different mechanisms for debugging, and you may have to figure that out on your own. If you want to follow what the instructor is doing exactly, you should install VS Code and the extensions listed above.

Location details:

Location:
*IN-PERSON and ONLINE* (synchronous)

If you have questions, concerns, or accessibility needs, please email digital.scholarship@ubc.ca.

To keep up-to-date with all our workshops, consults, and events, subscribe to the UBC Library Research Commons monthly newsletter.

This event is in-person and online (synchronous). Registrants receive the online link 3 hours before the event. Registration closes at that time.
Campus/Source

https://libcal.library.ubc.ca/event/3957565


  • Digital Scholarship
  • Research Commons

First Nations land acknowledegement

We acknowledge that UBC's two main campuses are located on the traditional, ancestral and unceded territories of the xwmə0– kwəyˇəm (Musqueam) and Syilx (Okanagan) peoples, and that UBC’s activities take place on Indigenous lands throughout British Columbia and beyond.


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