NerdPlanet's e-learning Blog
Nerdplanet's Blog is an elearning community site which is created to help people who have a passion about computers and in a confused state in choosing the right direction to follow for obtaining the right knowledge. Here we focus mainly on providing Tutorials on Operating systems (Windows /Linux), Networking (Routers/Firewall Configuration) and programming, which would help people to understand the basics clearly and to help them further to learn advanced concepts. We also guide people who are in need of materials to learn but who could not afford to pay a price for it. We do this because we believe that Knowledge is power and the Knowledge should be free!. This would help to build a healthy community of IT Professionals.
'Sam’s Teach yourself C++' post
Sams Teach Yourself C++ Programming for Linux in 21 Days teaches you the C++ programming language using the Linux operating system. You will gain a thorough understanding of the basics of C++ programming from a Linux perspective. The Bonus Week includes topics such as XWindows, KDE with QT toolkit, APE Class Library, and Real -time Middleware. TEACH YOURSELF C++ FOR LINUX IN 21 DAYS, while it may seem the ideal book to the budding Linux programmer because of its size, is a poor book for the beginner, and indeed for most programmers hoping to use C++. The book is a so-so introduction to C++ the language, but doesnýt offer any useful Linux-specific information (if you want to program in Linux, you probably already know what vi and emacs are, and how to open a command-line). The CD-ROM, containing a distribution of Mandrake Linux, is three years old and thus already ancient compared to todayýs Linux scene. The book is not really a “21 day” course, but rather a course made up of 21 units. Some units are too big to tackle in one day, such as the chapters on references and error-handling, unless one has 8 hours to dedicate to this. Iýd say three months is a reasonable amount of time to complete this book. When this book came out, in 1999, the K Desktop Environment (KDE), programmed in C++, was the most popular desktop and thus budding programmers could find plenty of code to work with and improve. In the years since, however, the GNOME desktop, programmed in C, has gained ascendency among power users, and is now the default in many distributions. So, learning C++ on Linux nowadays as a first step in programming gives one very little to work with, as C is the primary language. While in many operating systems one doesnýt have to learn C before C++, in Linux it is almost essential because the kernel, most if not all GNU software, and GNOME programs are all in C. So, for the beginning Linux programmer Iýd advise first going through Samýs C FOR LINUX PROGRAMMING IN 21 DAYS. Afterward, one could use this book, or ideally a more Linux-centric book, to reap the object-oriented benefits of C++. Bottom line, get Samýs C FOR LINUX PROGRAMMING IN 21 DAYS first if youýre a beginner. If youýre an experience programmer who already knows C, this book may be helpful, but it has its problems. http://rapidshare.com/files/23945993/tycl.rar.html You must be logged in to post a comment. |