Why did I write this book?
How do you learn to code in this new world that involves both classical and quantum hardware?
One way to do it is to learn classical computing by itself. This is the traditional way of doing it, using a language such as C, C++, JavaScript, Java, Go, or Python. Along the way, you would learn how to use extra functionality in libraries of code along with the programming tools or from a third-party provider. Examples of these are the C++ Standard Library; the Java Platform, Enterprise Edition; the Python Standard Library; or the thousands of Python packages listed in the Python Package Index. [PYPI]
Once you have the philosophy, syntax, structure, and idioms of the classical programming language understood, you then learn quantum computing on top of that. For example, you could use the Qiskit open source quantum computing software development kit (SDK) along with Python. [QIS] These mesh together and operate exceptionally well. Thousands of people are already Qiskit coders. If you know Python, this is a great approach.
But what if you are learning to code or have only a small amount of experience? What if I could offer you the chance to learn classical and quantum computing in a unified manner? Would it be useful if I could help you understand the concepts of both so that you don’t see them as different disciplines? That’s what I do in this book.