[comp.lang.c] What C book to buy?

amlovell@phoenix.Princeton.EDU (Anthony M Lovell) (10/27/88)

I used C quite a bit in college, but have a steep extinction curve for
knowledge related to languages.

Can someone suggest a superior book on C and where it might be found?
I want something useful for explaining style, syntax, does and don'ts
with a good index and relevent examples.
Resond via email, and I might summarize.
-- 
amlovell@phoenix.princeton.edu     ...since 1963.

knudsen@ihlpl.ATT.COM (Knudsen) (10/28/88)

I vote for _C Wizard's Programming Reference_ by W. David
Schwaderer.  A good concise reference, but also a good tutorial
in not too many pages.  Loaded with warnings about hazards, pitfalls,
portability problems, and the new ANSII standards.
These would have saved me days of hair-pulling if I'd had this book
earlier in life.  Also good "cheat sheets" in the back.

Very clear, but doesn't talk down to you (talking down wastes
extra verbiage, which this book avoids).

Oh yes -- John Wiley & Sons, ISBN 0-471-82641-3
-- 
Mike Knudsen  Bell Labs(AT&T)   att!ihlpl!knudsen
"Lawyers are like nuclear bombs and PClones.  Nobody likes them,
but the other guy's got one, so I better get one too."

ie@gpu.utcs.toronto.edu (Ivar Elznic) (10/30/88)

In 1988 (and onwards) I advise C++.  C++ is C of the future.  With the
availability of a C++ compiler (Zortech) for less than $100 you should be
much better off honing your skills in this language.

Books:

Stroustrup, Bjarne: The C++ programming language.  (Addison-Wesley)
Wiener, Richard S. & Pinson, Lewis J.: An introduction to object-oriented
		programming and C++  (Addison-Wesley)
Berry, John T.: The Waite Group's C++ programming  (Howard W. Sams)

Cheers
--
Ivar von Elsnitz