I thought it might be worth having a conversation outside the Python room so that if there's anything you want to continue talking about, we could do so without antagonising regulars whose patience is wearing a little thin ;-)
I understand that it's frustrating when you don't think you're doing anything wrong and are getting what appear to be hostile reactions, but you have to understand that there are people in the room who care a great deal about it, and see vampirism as damaging to it.
While politeness of phrasing is obviously important, a lot of programmers find it impolite to ask a series of what seem to them to be very basic questions, especially if they don't see evidence that you've tried to work it out for yourself.
... where "evidence" is more than simply asserting that this is the case, but more like "I tried this, read this that I found, but I don't understand this section" etc.
Well, there's a couple of things. One big no-no, as you might have gathered, is saying things like "but I have a deadline". We're all programmers, we all have deadlines, and we expect people to respect that our time is valuable, albeit freely offered.
It's worth bearing in mind that if you sense hostility, there must be a reason for that. The room is, in general, very friendly to newcomers regardless of their levels of expertise, so if people are getting snappy with you, it's worth looking back through the converstion and working out how you could have picked up on what you were (inadvertently) doing to piss people off.
Please take some time to go over some tutorials, try to debug your own problems, and come back once you are more familiar with what you are trying to do