To address the comment on the other answer: even if you broke the question down and asked about one specific aspect, that would still be too broad, and asking about tutorial recommendations.
Broad questions like that are offtopic because they're unlikely to help anyone in the future. The exact reason you're confused is unlikely to also be the exact reason someone else will be confused. If you were running into a specific problem that someone can search for later though (like a specific error message), that would be a different story.
A good example of this would be Code Review, which is meant for subjective, broad questions. How many times have you searched for a problem and been directed to Code Review for the answer? For me, never. The questions are far too personalized to be readily helpful to other people. Someone browsing may read something helpful in a review, but it's highly unlikely that they were directed there via a search regarding something specific.
Library recommendations are offtopic because they're highly subjective, and turn into a readily outdated list of suggestions that requires regular maintenance. There's no definite answer, so it's not a good fit for the site.
You need to get a start yourself, and ask a specific question regarding your attempt. If you have no idea where to start, you need to keep reading/trying until you get to the point where you can get a start.