by Prentice Hall
| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 86126 (lower is better) |
| Price Used: | $28.13 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Label: | Prentice Hall |
| UPC: | 076092025887 |
| Pages: | 832 |
| Binding: | Paperback |
| Publication Date: | 2003-12-27 |
| Published By: | Prentice Hall |
| ASIN: | 0130353132 |
| Category: | Book |
Authors
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Book Description
Best selling author Bruce Eckel has joined forces with Chuck Allison to write Thinking in C++, Volume 2, the sequel to the highly received and best selling Thinking in C++, Volume 1. Eckel is the master of teaching professional programmers how to quickly learn cutting edge topics in C++ that are glossed over in other C++ books. In Thinking in C++, Volume 2, the authors cover the finer points of exception handling, defensive programming and string and stream processing that every C++ programmer needs to know. Special attention is given to generic programming where the authors reveal little known techniques for effectively using the Standard Template Library. In addition, Eckel and Allison demonstrate how to apply RTTI, design patterns and concurrent programming techniques to improve the quality of industrial strength C++ applications. This book is targeted at programmers of all levels of experience who want to master C++.
Customer Reviews
More of a reference than the first one. - Reviewed on 2007-07-05
2 customers found this review not to be helpful.
Bruce Eckel, Thinking in C++, vol. 2 (Mindview, 2004)
I was a big, big fan of Volume I of this two-volume set. I first read it four or five years ago, and it was a big part of the foundation that helped me to understand why some of the newer pieces of the C++ architecture are useful (read "newer" as "when I was your age, boy, we had to walk to school, `cause we didn't have none of them new-fangled templates to ride on!"). It took me a while to get round to reading the second volume. It's more of the same, but different. Volume 2 seems more like a reference book, and far more of it is devoted to bleeding-edge (at the time) concepts than was vol. 1--design patterns, threading, that sort of thing. Of course, these days, they're all relatively common (thanks in no small part to Microsoft having already implemented most of this stuff in .NET), so this one's better thought of as a refresher course, or a book for people like me who are hopelessly backed up trying to keep pace with the Joneses (or the Redmonds). ***
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Book Subjects
- C & Visual C
- C (Programming Language)
- Computers
- Computers - Languages / Programming
- Computer Books: General
- Programming Languages - C++
- Computers / Programming Languages / C++