* study book for learning Ada
@ 1989-02-27 10:04 nobody
1989-03-04 1:20 ` Robert A. Agnew
0 siblings, 1 reply; 2+ messages in thread
From: nobody @ 1989-02-27 10:04 UTC (permalink / raw)
Can someone call a study book for learning Ada? I have designed and programmed
for about six years, mostly bottom-up and object oriented approach designs.
The language I used was HP-Pascal, a language nearer to Modula2 than to Pascal.
Also I'm not unfamilair with Modula2.
These are my credentials. Is there any hope for me? :-).
If possible, please enclose the ISBN of the book within.
Thank you in advance,
Albert Willemsen.
Philips Research Labs, Eindhoven.
The Netherlands.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 2+ messages in thread
* Re: study book for learning Ada
1989-02-27 10:04 study book for learning Ada nobody
@ 1989-03-04 1:20 ` Robert A. Agnew
0 siblings, 0 replies; 2+ messages in thread
From: Robert A. Agnew @ 1989-03-04 1:20 UTC (permalink / raw)
In article <409@prles2.UUCP>, nobody@prles2.UUCP (nobody) writes:
> Can someone call a study book for learning Ada? I have designed and programmed
> for about six years, mostly bottom-up and object oriented approach designs.
> The language I used was HP-Pascal, a language nearer to Modula2 than to Pascal.
> Also I'm not unfamilair with Modula2.
>
> These are my credentials. Is there any hope for me? :-).
>
> If possible, please enclose the ISBN of the book within.
>
> Thank you in advance,
>
> Albert Willemsen.
> Philips Research Labs, Eindhoven.
> The Netherlands.
"Ada for Experienced Programmers" by A. Nico Habermann & Dewayne E. Perry.
Addison Wesley, 1983 in paperback. ISNB 0-201-11481-X. I've used it for
many years and recommended it to many people, all of whom seem to have
been pleased. The book is mis-titled in my opinion and would have been
more accurately titled "Ada for Experienced Pascal Programmers". All
of the examples in the book, and there is a wealth of practical ones,
are presented first in Pascal, then in Ada so that one may get a side-
by-side comparison. It is written at a software engineering level and
as such contains substantially more than a good reference such as
Barnes. Do not misunderstand me, Barnes is great for a quick reference
when you don't have the energy to pour through the LRM, but Habermann &
Perry has much more to teach. As a follow-on or for an accompanying course
in advanced applications or just as a "cookbook" there is "Software
Components with Ada" by Grady Booch, Benjamin Cummings Publishing Co.,
1987. ISBN 0-8053-0610-2
Bob Agnew agnew@trwrc.rc.trw.com
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