From: Tero Pulkkinen <terop@assari.cc.tut.fi>
Subject: Re: C++ book.
Date: 1998/08/19
Date: 1998-08-19T00:00:00+00:00 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <xdug1es92vu.fsf@assari.cc.tut.fi> (raw)
In-Reply-To: 35DA8618.544693E9@killspam.cts.com
> Richard Toy wrote:
> > Can anyone recommend the right book that an experienced Ada programmer
> > should read to quickly learn C++ ?
Dave Wood <dpw@killspam.cts.com> writes:
> I would think Simon Johnston's "Ada 95 for C and
> C++ Programmers", published by Addison Wesley
> Longman, would provide the ideal direct mapping
> and related discussion.
>
> Of course, you need to read it backwards. :)
:-)
I recommend a book "Scientific and Engineering C++" by
Barton&Nackman. (from awl too)
Its meant for fortran or C programmers to learn C++ not-so-quickly,
but I believe ada programmers can learn from it too and you dont need
to read it backwards. Its not a book for beginner programmers, but
people who have done programming on other languages for a long time.
--
-- Tero Pulkkinen -- terop@modeemi.cs.tut.fi --
next prev parent reply other threads:[~1998-08-19 0:00 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 7+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
1998-08-18 0:00 C++ book Richard Toy
1998-08-18 0:00 ` Chris Morgan
1998-08-18 0:00 ` David Weller
1998-08-19 0:00 ` Dave Wood
1998-08-19 0:00 ` Tero Pulkkinen [this message]
1998-08-19 0:00 ` Richard D Riehle
-- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
1998-08-24 0:00 Simon Johnston
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