Hello friends,
I have basic knowledge of c and I want to advance my knowledge by doing low-level
programming.I am very interesting in playing with PC hardware.
Please provide related tutorials or book 's URLs.
best regards,
CChakra
Hello friends,
I have basic knowledge of c and I want to advance my knowledge by doing low-level
programming.I am very interesting in playing with PC hardware.
Please provide related tutorials or book 's URLs.
best regards,
CChakra
Hans Peter Messmer, The Indispensible PC Hardware Book (aka "The Bible").
It is not about C, but it describes the PC generic PC hardware. It does, however, make use of DOS and 16-bit code [or at least, it does in the version I have got - it is probably nearer 10 years old by now].
--
Mats
Compilers can produce warnings - make the compiler programmers happy: Use them!
Please don't PM me for help - and no, I don't do help over instant messengers.
thanks for reply master.
Sir, the book is highly advanced ,completely out of my head.
Sir I am from non-math background but I love c/c++ which specialization would be best for me
device programming
or
windows programming
or
unix network programming.
my skills : core java,jsp,servlet,html,xml,pl/sql.
please guide me sir
best regards,
CChakra
What kind of software would you like to create?
If you want to play with datacommunication, there's a lot of information here:
http://www.beyondlogic.org/
Andrew Tanenbaum wrote some nice books on low level programming issues like computer networks and operating systems.
http://www.cs.vu.nl/~ast/
This site on embedded systems programming contains a lot of news, articles and tutorials.
http://www.embedded.com/
Have fun!
Looking at your current skills, I think you would find C programming itself quite low level. So perhaps you could study the C language a bit more and later decide on which direction you would like to take.
When I started learning C, I've read The C Programming Language. Besides teaching the language, it has some nice examples on memory usage and unix operating system interfacing. Perhaps there are currently better books on learning C.... I don't know about that.