Its called "Fundamentals of C++" by Lambert
Its called "Fundamentals of C++" by Lambert
Published in 2001? It might be a little old.
has that much in the programming world changed since then?
No, but many books that were published only a couple years after the standard was released don't use many of the features of the standard library.
I found a table of contents that didn't look too bad, though, so it's hard to say without seeing the actual book.
Well it cant be old cause it shows to use /n; rather than endl;
What does \n versus endl have to do with being old? Both options have been available for a long time.
I downloaded the student material from http://www.course.com/catalog/produc...538-69558-9#DL, and it looks worse than I thought, but I'm not sure if that code is related to the book.
Does the code use <iostream.h>? If so, it is very old. Does it is apvector? If so, you might not want to use that to learn. Does it use C style strings?
Maybe you could post a sample program from it?
Couldn't find any reference to that book at the ACCU's book review site.
"Owners of dogs will have noticed that, if you provide them with food and water and shelter and affection, they will think you are god. Whereas owners of cats are compelled to realize that, if you provide them with food and water and shelter and affection, they draw the conclusion that they are gods."
-Christopher Hitchens
Well that address is not the book though.heres address http://www.course.com/catalog/produc...TOKEN=45114524 I meant to say "Fundamentals of C++ Understanding Programming and Problem Solving". Heres a sample.......
// Program file: chbook.cpp
// This program updates a checkbook.
#include <iostream.h>
#include <iomanip.h>
int main ()
{
double starting_balance, ending_balance, trans_amount;
char trans_type;
etc..............
Bad. That uses the pre-standard header files. Some modern compilers don't even provide them anymore.
All the buzzt!
CornedBee
"There is not now, nor has there ever been, nor will there ever be, any programming language in which it is the least bit difficult to write bad code."
- Flon's Law
>> #include <iostream.h>
That's how you know the book is really out of date. That header is pre-standard and doesn't work at all on some modern compilers.
You'd learn something if you read it, but there are much better books out there that won't teach you old/bad habits that you'll have to break if you continue programming.
K well that book was borrowed from school.........btw I am wanting/thinking of going to college in computer science for computer engineering and software engineering and was wondering if I would need to learn C++?
>was wondering if I would need to learn C++?
uh let's say yes for that one!
I have a book called Practical C published in 1991, with minor corrections in 1992. It focuses on good programing style, I wonder how much has changed since then in terms of style
"When your work speaks for itself - don't interrupt!"
-Samantha Ingraham.
I don't care what anyone says,
C/C++ created the WORLD!!!
You do not need to learn C++ before going to college and getting one of those degrees. If you know which university you want to go to and if you know that it uses C++ in its classes, then it could help to start learning on your own. I would find out what books that college (or any local university you'd consider going to) uses.
If they teach Java, then learning C++ could be beneficial, but it might be better to try to learn Java on your own instead.
C, C++ and Java are all different languages. If you want to learn one, pick one and go for it, it can't hurt.
The style of programming is different in C and in C++, so if you're going to learn C++, don't read the book on C style.