Quote:Original post by Talroth There is a book with the C++ workshop? Or which "the" book are you talking about? There are many many books printed on C++, some good, many bad.
this is from the week one thread.
Quote:Original post by jwalsh
Because everyone will be working from the same textbook (Teach Yourself C++ in 21 days 5th Ed.), students may find it easier to get answers to the specific questions they might have.
there are many bad books but a bad book can be a good book if there is a big enough group of people using it in my opinion.
__________________________________________________________Maybe one day i can not be affraid of venturing out of the beginners section.
Quote:Original post by laserbeak43 there are many bad books but a bad book can be a good book if there is a big enough group of people using it in my opinion.
Yes. The important thing is to realize that there are a lot of things the book isn't telling you. C++ books typically have a really poor coverage of the standard C++ library, which is a pity.
"Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place. Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are, by definition, not smart enough to debug it." — Brian W. Kernighan
i'm sure there are a lot of people like me, theyve tried to learn programming for years with no real help and was really stuck. so this big community of people who have probably read every book published should be able to cover lots of different un/misdocumented aspects in c++
__________________________________________________________Maybe one day i can not be affraid of venturing out of the beginners section.