Originally Posted by
Adak
I wouldn't worry about not being able to do any of the exercises at the end of the first chapter. People learn by DOING, much more than they learn by just reading "about" something.
And you haven't been doing much programming, at all!
C is not an easy language to learn, and I believe you'd benefit a lot from taking a class in beginning C, no doubt.
This forum can help a great deal, however. Why not post a first chapter exercise that you don't know how to start on, and myself (and undoubtedly others), will give you our thoughts on how to program an answer to that question, in a simply and straightforward way.
As you practice your programming, you will learn a lot of the standard idiom's or code statementsLoo, by heart. The "lightbulb" will go on, after a bit. It will take a lot of work, and you'll need a lot of patience to work with the inevitable frustrations that will occur.
But try to smile through them all, because you will learn from your mistakes more than you'll learn from your successes in programming.
Do you have a particular job in mind that requires C programming skills within a year? Tell me about that. That can be a lot of stress, and you don't need that, I'll bet.
Onward and upwards: What's the first programming exercise in your book, that you couldn't answer?