About us

Pythonicir wasn’t started as another online course business — it was born out of very real frustration shared by several people who wrote Python code every day.

About seven years ago, one of the founders (a developer working in data and backend projects) was spending dozens of hours each week searching for clear, logical explanations of topics that only looked simple on paper: how to properly switch from lists to generators without memory issues, why decorators break stack traces, how to write async code that doesn’t turn into callback hell. Most resources were either overloaded with theory and no practice, or the opposite — “copy-paste this and it works” without any explanation of why. At some point it became unbearable: code was being written, but real understanding wasn’t coming. That moment sparked the idea — why not collect everything that actually works on real projects into one structured, no-fluff sequence with runnable examples and clear reasoning?

That’s how Pythonicir began. It started as a personal notebook of code snippets and explanations, then grew into a private channel for a few fellow developers, then into a small closed beta for 40 people who gave detailed feedback. Over two years it evolved into a full set of materials — from the free introductory pack to the comprehensive Flux Edition covering asyncio, pytest, poetry, Clean Architecture, and large-scale project structure.

Our core mission is to give people tools so they can read documentation independently, understand other people’s code, write their own without panic, and keep learning long after finishing any course. We don’t promise you’ll become a senior developer in three months. We simply try to make every module leave you with the feeling “oh, now I actually understand how this works”.

Team Today Pythonicir is run by a small, tight-knit group of people who write Python professionally every day:

  • 12+ years of combined real-world Python experience (backend, data engineering, automation, CLI tools, async services)
  • Contributions to commercial projects in fintech, health-tech, e-commerce, and several open-source libraries
  • Over 1800 people have gone through at least one module of our materials as of February 2026
  • Regular content updates: the latest major Flux Edition refresh happened in January 2025, adding modules on typing 3.11+, FastAPI patterns, pytest fixtures, and poetry workflows

We deliberately keep the team small so every piece of content is created and reviewed by people who actively use these topics at work. That’s why there are almost no “theoretical only” sections — only what is actually used in 2025–2026.

Why digital products? We chose the self-paced digital format because it offers maximum flexibility: learn lessons at 6 a.m. or 2 a.m., revisit a module six months later, experiment at your own speed. Once purchased, materials stay with you forever, updates arrive automatically, and platform access isn’t tied to a subscription end date. 

In short — Pythonicir isn’t about quick wins. It’s about deep understanding. We want that in a year after finishing any course you can open documentation for any library and think: “Okay, I get how this is built.” That’s exactly why we started.