This is a book about learning by doing and is aimed at programmers familiar with programming, but not C++. The key exercises are not simply listed at the end of the chapter, but are integrated into the main text. Readers work hands-on throughout the book. Each lesson poses numerous questions, asking readers to write answers directly in the book. The book includes answers to all questions, so readers can check their work. These exercises are not simple cookbook-style recipes (e.g., "Write a program to do xyz"). Instead, they are explorations¿structured labs that guide readers through a series of steps to highlight specific features of C++.
Ray Lischner has a bachelor's degree in computer science from Caltech and a master's in computer science from Oregon State University. He worked as a software developer for a dozen years, at big and small companies across the U.S., using PL/I, C, C++, Delphi, Smalltalk, and various assembly languages on both large and small systems. He has been self-employed as a consultant, trainer, and author for the last 10 years. Ray taught computer science at Oregon State University for several years and specialized in teaching introductory computer programming. He taught courses in C and C++ and software engineering.
A table of contents is not available for this title.
Show moreThis is a book about learning by doing and is aimed at programmers familiar with programming, but not C++. The key exercises are not simply listed at the end of the chapter, but are integrated into the main text. Readers work hands-on throughout the book. Each lesson poses numerous questions, asking readers to write answers directly in the book. The book includes answers to all questions, so readers can check their work. These exercises are not simple cookbook-style recipes (e.g., "Write a program to do xyz"). Instead, they are explorations¿structured labs that guide readers through a series of steps to highlight specific features of C++.
Ray Lischner has a bachelor's degree in computer science from Caltech and a master's in computer science from Oregon State University. He worked as a software developer for a dozen years, at big and small companies across the U.S., using PL/I, C, C++, Delphi, Smalltalk, and various assembly languages on both large and small systems. He has been self-employed as a consultant, trainer, and author for the last 10 years. Ray taught computer science at Oregon State University for several years and specialized in teaching introductory computer programming. He taught courses in C and C++ and software engineering.
A table of contents is not available for this title.
Show moreThe Basics.- Honing Your Tools.- Reading C++ Code.- Integer Expressions.- Strings.- Simple Input.- Error Messages.- For Loops.- Formatted Output.- Arrays and Vectors.- Increment and Decrement.- Conditions and Logic.- Compound Statements.- to File I/O.- The Map Data Structure.- Type Synonyms.- Characters.- Character Categories.- Case-Folding.- Writing Functions.- Function Arguments.- Using Algorithms.- Overloading Function Names.- Big and Little Numbers.- Very Big and Very Little Numbers.- Documentation.- Project 1 : Body-Mass Index.- Custom Types.- Custom Types.- Overloading Operators.- Custom I/O Operators.- Assignment and Initialization.- Writing Classes.- More About Member Functions.- Access Levels.- to Object-Oriented Programming.- Inheritance.- Virtual Functions.- Classes and types.- Declarations and Definitions.- Using Multiple Source Files.- Function objects.- Useful algorithms.- Iterators.- Exceptions.- More operators.- Project 2: Fixed-point numbers.- Generic Programing.- Function templates.- Class templates.- Template Specialization.- Partial Specialization.- Names and Namespaces.- Containers.- International Characters.- Locales and Facets.- Text I/O.- Project 3: Currency type.- Real Programing.- Pointers.- Dynamic Memory.- Exception-Safety.- Old-Fashioned arrays.- Smart Pointers.- Working with Bits.- Enumerations.- Multiple inheritance.- Traits and Policies.- Names and Templates.- Overloaded Functions.- Metaprogramming.- Project 4: Calculator.
Ray Lischner has a bachelor's degree in computer science from Caltech and a master's in computer science from Oregon State University. He worked as a software developer for a dozen years, at big and small companies across the U.S., using PL/I, C, C++, Delphi, Smalltalk, and various assembly languages on both large and small systems. He has been self-employed as a consultant, trainer, and author for the last 10 years. Ray taught computer science at Oregon State University for several years and specialized in teaching introductory computer programming. He taught courses in C and C++ and software engineering.
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