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which are the good books for learning C++ grading from basic to advanced?
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nntp.aioe.org wrote:
> which are the good books for learning C++ grading from basic to > advanced? Have you tried googling for this particular piece of knowledge? Also, look in the newsgroup archives; I assure you this is not the first time the "good books for learning C++" question was asked here. V -- Please remove capital 'A's when replying by e-mail I do not respond to top-posted replies, please don't ask |
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On Apr 7, 11:31am, "nntp.aioe.org" <psr.1...@gmail.com> wrote:
> which are the good books for learning C++ grading from basic to advanced? There are some here that I think are good: http://www.webebenezer.net/links.html. Also if someone wants to send me a book in exchange for advertising on webebenezer.net let me know. In particular, I'd like to read "Accelerated C++" and "Imperfect C++." Brian Wood Ebenezer Enterprises |
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Victor Bazarov wrote:
> nntp.aioe.org wrote: > > which are the good books for learning C++ grading from basic to > > advanced? > > Have you tried googling for this particular piece of knowledge? I don't that that would be a terribly useful exercise. One is liable to get a variety of poor advice, like Schildt. On the other hand, the FAQs might be a good starting point: <http://www.parashift.com/c++-faq-lite/how-to-learn-cpp.html> Brian |
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On Apr 7, 9:10 pm, "Default User" <defaultuse...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> Victor Bazarov wrote: > > nntp.aioe.org wrote: > > > which are the good books for learning C++ grading from basic to > > > advanced? > > Have you tried googling for this particular piece of knowledge? > I don't that that would be a terribly useful exercise. One is > liable to get a variety of poor advice, like Schildt. Agreed. Until you have enough knowledge of a subject to distinguish the good from the bad, Googling is likely to do more harm than good. > On the other hand, the FAQs might be a good starting point: > <http://www.parashift.com/c++-faq-lite/how-to-learn-cpp.html> I'd strongly suggest checking the reviews at the ACCU (http://accu.org/index.php/book_reviews) as well. While there's obviously some subjective content in any review, you can pretty well go with anything rated highly recommended, or even recommended, there, and you should almost certainly avoid anything rated not recommended. -- James Kanze (GABI Software) email:james.kanze@gmail.com Conseils en informatique orientée objet/ Beratung in objektorientierter Datenverarbeitung 9 place Sémard, 78210 St.-Cyr-l'École, France, +33 (0)1 30 23 00 34 |
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