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Learning C++ from a Linux point of view?

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  • #11
    Originally posted by curaga View Post
    Read the CodingStyle and ManagementStyle docs from a kernel release.
    They actually make pretty good reading
    Hey, I never thought of that! Interesting, I will check it out, thanks!

    Originally posted by tmpdir View Post
    I see you live in Groningen, nice city I live there to.
    Yeah I really like it too, quite fond of the people and ambiance

    Originally posted by tmpdir View Post
    Pascal experience?, was this turbo pascal or delphi or just pascal?
    I did both Pascal and Turbo Pascal, but mostly the former, so no real OO experience in Pascal.

    Originally posted by tmpdir View Post
    In general: better not start with a reference manual or worse a visual oriented programming book, both have a high level of bullshit info and consume to much of your time. There is a reason no school ever uses either of these two types.
    I actually got "Programming, Principles and Practice Using C++" from Bjarne Stroustrup in the mail yesterday (finally!) and just gotten started in it (read the introductional chapters), will post back if I get to the hands-on section, but so far their practical no BS style looks appealing! I'm quite swamped with work lately, so it could take a while tough...

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    • #12
      glad I found this thread! I just got back on campus, and was considering starting to hack again. Took a just-plain-old C class a few years back, and I brought the book with me to try and get back in the habit. The plan was to thumb through that, then go to C++ and Qt (thinking about contributing to the desktop I've used for ages).

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      • #13
        Originally posted by StefanHamminga View Post
        I actually got "Programming, Principles and Practice Using C++" from Bjarne Stroustrup in the mail yesterday (finally!) and just gotten started in it (read the introductional chapters), will post back if I get to the hands-on section, but so far their practical no BS style looks appealing! I'm quite swamped with work lately, so it could take a while tough...

        Have fun with it...

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        • #14
          Does anyone have any words on The Design and Evolution of C++? I don't truthfully like C++, but it seems like an intriguing book nonetheless. I should rather like it were Dennis Ritchie to write a similar volume.

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