Reddit 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.

Computers & Technology
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Databases & Big Data
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Deep Learning: A Practitioner's Approach
O Reilly Media
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3 Reddit comments about Deep Learning: A Practitioner's Approach:

u/SupportVectorMachine · 9 pointsr/deeplearning

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.

u/porygon93 · 1 pointr/deeplearning

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