You aren't broke. You are suffering from digital hoarding logic . Let’s look at that number: 2020. In the world of Python, 2020 is the Jurassic period. Pandas 1.0 had just dropped. Type hints were still a suggestion. F-strings were the new hotness.
You want to learn Python. The highest-rated, most accessible course on the planet (Jose Portilla’s bootcamp) costs roughly the same as two pizzas. Yet, instead of buying the pizzas, you spend four hours navigating pop-up ads, fake link shorteners, and Russian torrent trackers to "télécharger" a 3-year-old version of the course. You aren't broke
The most interesting thing about that bootcamp is that the instructor provides all the Jupyter Notebooks for free on GitHub. You don't need the video. You need the code. In the world of Python, 2020 is the Jurassic period
By trying to steal a course that is four years old, you are actively learning how to write legacy code . You are training to be the guy who maintains the banking mainframe, not the girl who builds the AI startup. The moment you type pip install on a 2020 environment, you will encounter dependency hell. You will post on Stack Overflow, "Why doesn't this work?" And the answer will be: Because you stole the past. Why French? Perhaps you are Francophone. Or perhaps, like most pirates, you have learned that adding a random European language to a search query bypasses the DMCA bots. F-strings were the new hotness
The bootcamp didn't make you a hero. The act of typing did.