jlt@duke.cs.duke.edu (John L. Turnley) (02/09/88)
Are there any good books on C++ other than Stroustrup? John Turnley Department of Computer Science, Duke University, Durham, NC 27706 CSNET: jlt@duke UUCP: {ihnp4!decvax}!duke!jlt ARPA: jlt@cs.duke.edu
owen@cod.NOSC.MIL (Wallace E. Owen) (02/13/88)
In article <11069@duke.cs.duke.edu> jlt@duke.cs.duke.edu (John L. Turnley) writes: >Are there any good books on C++ other than Stroustrup? Are there ANY books on C++ other than Stroustrup? P.S. I'm interested in hearing of anyone porting the OOPS lib to MSDOS. The default (only) library of classes under MSDOS is 'PForCE++' sold by Phoenix. B-trees, databases, windows, etc. Not enough examples in the user manual. Works with Advantage or Guidelines C++ and Lattice C (v3.x) or MS C (v4 or v5). Wallace Owen Naval Ocean Systems Center (619) 553-3567 (Human) ARPA: owen@cod.nosc.mil
reggie@pdn.UUCP (George W. Leach) (02/16/88)
In article <981@cod.NOSC.MIL> owen@cod.nosc.mil.UUCP (Wallace E. Owen) writes: >In article <11069@duke.cs.duke.edu> jlt@duke.cs.duke.edu (John L. Turnley) writes: >>Are there any good books on C++ other than Stroustrup? > > >Are there ANY books on C++ other than Stroustrup? > Scheduled to be released soon: An Introduction to Object-Oriented Programming and C++ Richard Wiener and Lewis Pinson, U of Colorado Addison-Wesley Publishing Company Table of Contents Chapter 1: Object-Oriented Programming Chapter 2: History and Goals of C++ Chapter 3: From C to Shining C++ Chapter 4: Getting up to Speed with C++ Chapter 5: Data Encapsulation and Data Hiding Using Classes Chapter 6: Inheritance and Derived Classes Chapter 7: Polymorphism and Virtual Functions Chapter 8: Case Studies in Object-Oriented Programming For more information call (617) 944-3700 -- George W. Leach Paradyne Corporation {gatech,rutgers,attmail}!codas!pdn!reggie Mail stop LF-207 Phone: (813) 530-2376 P.O. Box 2826 Largo, FL 34649-2826