Reddit reviews Deep Learning: A Practitioner's Approach
We found 3 Reddit comments about Deep Learning: A Practitioner's Approach. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.
O Reilly Media
We found 3 Reddit comments about Deep Learning: A Practitioner's Approach. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.
Not OP, but among those he listed, I think Chollet's book is the best combination of practical, code-based content and genuinely valuable insights from a practitioner. Its examples are all in the Keras framework, which Chollet developed as a high-level API to sit on top of a number of possible DL libraries. But with TensorFlow 2.0, the Keras API is now fundamental to how you would write code in this pretty dominant framework. It's also a very well-written book.
Ordinarily, I resist books that are too focused on one framework over another. I'd never personally want a DL book in Java, for instance. But I think Chollet's book is good enough to recommend regardless of the platform you intend to use, although it will certainly be more immediately useful if you are working with tf.Keras.
Take a look at https://www.amazon.com/Deep-Learning-Practitioners-Josh-Patterson/dp/1491914254
Not a course, but I suggest you to take a look at this book.
https://www.amazon.com/Deep-Learning-Practitioners-Josh-Patterson/dp/1491914254