Re: Offtopic: C Programming Tutorial
- Posted by Beaumont Furniss <bfurniss at IHUG.CO.NZ> Jun 13, 2000
- 478 views
On 2000-06-11 EUPHORIA at LISTSERV.MUOHIO.EDU said: EU>You can try these: EU>http://home.swipnet.se/progzone/chtm.zip EU>http://home.swipnet.se/progzone/csrc.zip EU>http://home.swipnet.se/progzone/cpphtm.zip EU>http://home.swipnet.se/progzone/cppsrc.zip EU>I recommend you to get some books about C programming from your EU>local library. Books were of great help for me when I was learning EU>assembler and Win32 programming. EU>____________________________________________________________________ EU>____ Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www. EU>hotmail.com from beaumont; I'm in agreement , books are also good because you can browse through them at a slower or faster pace ; depending upon your level of comprehension. After trying numerous computer languages , finding that none are 'standard' , I resumed my studies of C . This might well of been inappropriate , prior to 1989 -1990 , the year the ansi standard for C was introduced. Hopefully a standard , like ansi , now exists for C++. As for assembly language , this was something I learnt through a very roundabout way. The least you need is a manual that lists all of the codes and, graphically , illustrates what they do. If I were to learn this all over again I'd use asm.e or d86 alongside the other approaches I took ; like using the debug from DOS... What books might you reccomend , some of the Osbourne texts , are just too detailed for most types of assembly language construction. Net-Tamer V 1.11 - Test Drive