Rabu, 14 April 2010

[L357.Ebook] PDF Ebook C++ How to Program: Late Objects Version (7th Edition) (How to Program (Deitel)), by Paul Deitel, Harvey Deitel

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C++ How to Program: Late Objects Version (7th Edition) (How to Program (Deitel)), by Paul Deitel, Harvey Deitel

C++ How to Program: Late Objects Version (7th Edition) (How to Program (Deitel)), by Paul Deitel, Harvey Deitel



C++ How to Program: Late Objects Version (7th Edition) (How to Program (Deitel)), by Paul Deitel, Harvey Deitel

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C++ How to Program: Late Objects Version (7th Edition) (How to Program (Deitel)), by Paul Deitel, Harvey Deitel

Late Objects Version: C++ How to Program, 7/e is ideal for Introduction to Programming (CS1) and other more intermediate courses covering programming in C++. Also appropriate as a supplement for upper-level courses where the instructor uses a book as a reference for the C++ language.

 

This best-selling comprehensive text is aimed at readers with little or no programming experience. It teaches programming by presenting the concepts in the context of full working programs and takes a late objects approach. The authors emphasize achieving program clarity through structured and object-oriented programming, software reuse and component-oriented software construction. The Seventh Edition encourages students to connect computers to the community, using the Internet to solve problems and make a difference in our world. All content has been carefully fine-tuned in response to a team of distinguished academic and industry reviewers.

 

The Late Objects Version delays coverage of class development until Chapter 9, presenting control statements, functions, arrays and pointers in a non-object-oriented, procedural programming context.

  • Sales Rank: #345394 in Books
  • Published on: 2010-08-22
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x 2.00" w x 7.00" l, 2.64 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 960 pages
Features
  • includes Access Code

Review

Comments from the C++ How to Program, 6/e and 7/e Reviewers

"Finally, an accurate and complete C++ book that everybody can understand. It will help you achieve a solid knowledge of C++ and of software engineering in general. A ‘must-have.’ — José Antonio González Seco, Parliament of Andalusia, Spain

"As an instructor, I appreciate the thorough discussion of the C++ language, especially the comprehensive use of code examples and demonstrations of best coding practices. For my consulting work I use the Deitel books as my primary reference." — Dean Mathias, Utah State University

"Chapter 12, Object-Oriented Programming: Inheritance, is so well done. It’s evident that the authors are diligent and focused on quality!" — David Topham, Ohlone College

"Just when you think you are focused on learning one topic, suddenly you discover you’ve learned more than you expected." — Chad Willwerth, University of Washington, Tacoma

"Accessible to beginners. The example-driven presentation is enriched by the optional UML case study that contextualizes the material in a software engineering project." — Gavin Osborne, Saskatchewan Institute of Applied Science and Technology

"The Deitel & Deitel How to Program Series provides a complete basis of fundamental instruction in all core aspects of C++. Comprehensive discussion and examples provide a solid grounding in the construction of C++ programs." — Peter DePasquale, The College of New Jersey

"Code examples are well presented and easy to read. . . Very impressive that so many resources are identified. . . and mostly free, too!" — David Topham, Ohlone College

"The Pointers chapter clearly explains a complex subject. The Simpletron exercises are simply brilliant. The Polymorphism chapter explains one of the hardest topics to understand in OOP in a clear manner. Great job! The writing is excellent, the examples are well developed and the exercises are interesting." — José Antonio González Seco, Parliament of Andalusia, Spain

"Introducing the UML early on is a great idea." — Raymond Stephenson, Microsoft

"Good use of diagrams, especially of the activation call stack and recursive functions." — Amar Raheja, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona

"Terrific discussion of pointers–the best I have seen." — Anne B. Horton, Lockheed Martin

"Very good, thorough and detailed coverage of exceptions from an object-oriented point of view." — Dean Mathias, Utah State University

"I wish I'd had such a clear presentation of data structures when I was a student. Great coverage of polymorphism and how the compiler implements polymorphism ‘under the hood.’" — Ed James-Beckham, Borland

"Replete with real-world case studies covering the full software development lifecycle. Code examples are extraordinary!" — Terrell Hull, Logicalis Integration Solutions

"Aimed at someone new to C++, this is a good introduction to the C++ Standard Template Library (STL) with clear descriptions, examples and plenty of useful tips. The example code is excellent: clean, well documented, with extensive descriptions of what the code is doing and why." — Chris Cox, Adobe Systems

"A nice introduction to searching and sorting, and Big-O." — Robert Myers, Florida State University

"Chapter 20, Data Structures, is very good. The examples are accessible to CS, IT, software engineering and business students." — Thomas J. Borrelli, Rochester Institute of Technology

"The best book on C++ programming for the serious student! Excellent introduction to the Standard Template Library (STL)." — Richard Albright, Goldey-Beacom College

"Ogre is a free world-class rendering engine that has been used in several commercial games. The Ogre chapter is a great introduction, providing well documented and easy to understand examples that will have you creating your own simple computer games in no time." — Casey Borders (Creator of OgreAL), Sensis Corp.

"The Boost/C++0x chapter will get you up and running quickly with the memory management and regular expression libraries, plus whet your appetite for new C++ features being standardized." — Ed Brey, Kohler Co.

From the Back Cover

C++ Programming

More Comments Inside Back Cover
"Finally, an accurate and complete C++ book that everybody can understand. It will help you achieve a solid knowledge of C++ and of software engineering in general. A ‘must-have.’–José Antonio González Seco, Parliament of Andalusia, Spain
"As an instructor, I appreciate the thorough discussion of the C++ language, especially the comprehensive use of code examples and demonstrations of best coding practices. For my consulting work I use the Deitel books as my primary reference."–Dean Mathias, Utah State University

Since the 1990s, over a million students and professionals have learned programming and software development with Deitel® textbooks, professional books and multimedia publications. This Late Objects Version of C++ How to Program, 7/e provides clear and thorough coverage of C++ programming. It’s appropriate for one-semester procedural programming courses with little or no objects coverage, one semester courses that begin with procedural programming then proceed to object-oriented programming and possibly a selection of upper-level C++ topics, and second courses in intermediate-level

C++ How to Program, Late Objects Version, 7/e includes:

• Procedural programming from the start: The first eight chapters provide rich coverage of C++ fundamentals, including two full chapters on control statements.
• Objects and classes in the middle: The next chapters present object technology concepts, including classes, inheritance, polymorphism, operator overloading, templates and exception handling.
• Intermediate-level topics: The book includes substantial coverage of strings, files, streams, searching and sorting, data structures and the Standard Template Library. Additional chapters on game programming, an optional OOD ATM case study, the Boost C++ Libraries, the future of C++ and more, are available online.

Also by Paul & Harvey Deitel
C++ How to Program, 7/e
ISBN: 0-13-611726-0
Introduces classes and objects in Chapter 3, before control statements, functions and arrays. It’s suitable for those who prefer an early objects approach to C++ programming.

Contact the authors at: deitel@deitel.com
Register for the DEITEL® BUZZ ONLINE newsletter: www.deitel.com/newsletter/subscribe.html
For information on Deitel® onsite training delivered worldwide, visit www.deitel.com/training/
Follow us on Twitter® @deitel and Facebook® at www.deitel.com/deitelfan/



About the Author

Paul J. Deitel, CEO and Chief Technical Officer of Deitel & Associates, Inc., is a graduate of MIT’s Sloan School of Management, where he studied Information Technology. He holds the Java Certified Programmer and Java Certified Developer certifications, and has been designated by Sun Microsystems as a Java Champion. Through Deitel & Associates, Inc., he has delivered Java, C, C++, C# and Visual Basic courses to industry clients, including IBM, Sun Microsystems, Dell, Lucent Technologies, Fidelity, NASA at the Kennedy Space Center, the National Severe Storm Laboratory, White Sands Missile Range, Rogue Wave Software, Boeing, Stratus, Cambridge Technology Partners, Open Environment Corporation, One Wave, Hyperion Software, Adra Systems, Entergy, CableData Systems, Nortel Networks, Puma, iRobot, Invensys and many more. He has also lectured on Java and C++ for the Boston Chapter of the Association for Computing Machinery. He and his father, Dr. Harvey M. Deitel, are the world’s best-selling programming language textbook authors.


Dr. Harvey M. Deitel, Chairman and Chief Strategy Officer of Deitel & Associates, Inc., has 45 years of academic and industry experience in the computer field. Dr. Deitel earned B.S. and M.S. degrees from the MIT and a Ph.D. from Boston University. He has 20 years of college teaching experience, including earning tenure and serving as the Chairman of the Computer Science Department at Boston College before founding Deitel & Associates, Inc., with his son, Paul J. Deitel. He and Paul are the co-authors of several dozen books and multimedia packages and they are writing many more. With translations published in Japanese, German, Russian, Spanish, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese, Korean, French, Polish, Italian, Portuguese, Greek, Urdu and Turkish, the Deitels’ texts have earned international recognition. Dr. Deitel has delivered hundreds of professional seminars to major corporations, academic institutions, government organizations and the military.

Most helpful customer reviews

59 of 64 people found the following review helpful.
Terrific book
By Vijay Krishna
I have always been a fan of the Deitel series and have read quite a few books - C, C++ and Java How 2 Program as well as H.M. Deitel's book on OPerating Systems. I have little doubts in recommending this book to anyone starting C++.
So much to say about this book, however I'll limit myself to a few points which I found salient:
This book does not keep referring to C, so you won't get bugged down. (In case you want to learn C, try 'C How to Program' by the same authors.)
This book has been written keeping the beginner in mind (beginner = someone new to programming). So, it contains good, solid, perfect, working code you can try out.
Each page is littered with observations on Good Programming Practices and Software Engineering. That helps in refinement of code, so you need not buy another book to find out how to code 'effectively'.
The exercise questions are elaborate and will keep the reader busy for hours on end. But all that's time that's spent usefully.
And this book does not leave out those who already know C++. It's as good as any book for an intermediate level programmer.
An excellent book. Buy this one, it's certain that this will be the last C++ book you'll need.

71 of 79 people found the following review helpful.
Mediocre book with no improvements from 8th Edition - Will drain your enthusiasm
By Rae_Jr
This book suffers from all the shortcomings of the 8th edition. I was first planning on doing a detailed review, but came to realize I would be repeating exactly what many readers pointed out in the previous editions. Besides, the authors don't care much to read them. The prudent reader would do well to read the reviews of the 8th edition to have an idea of what to expect at C++ How to Program (8th Edition).

For the sake of completeness, I will point of a few things.

You are looking at the most expensive book on C++ ever written, with nothing magical to show for that $110+ price [edit: with the fall semester underway, the price is now $135+]. We know books marketed as textbooks are targeted towards students who allegedly have deep pockets (from grants, parents' savings, or loans), hence the $100+ price tag. Simply put, it says a lot that the authors take part in this robbery. In comparison, a reference such as The C++ Programming Language by Stroustrup costs $54; C++ Primer Plus, by Prata and Stephen is a meager $38, while Effective C++ by Scott Meyers sits at $35. Their content far exceeds the quality and breadth of Deitel (though they are not formatted as textbooks). Furthermore, to make the biggest profits, the Deitel series churns out new editions at $100+ every other year, so that students can't purchase used copies for cheap from their graduating friends (exercises will mismatch). These morally despicable plays on the price of this book itself justify 2 stars off.

The chief issue with this book though is the incoherent wordiness used. At the time of this review, the publisher has chosen not to enable Amazon's "Click to Look Inside" (draw your own conclusions). So I can't point you to live examples (I will update this once they do). C++ is not an easy language to learn, so random wordiness is your enemy.

As an example, imagine being explained the difference between declaring a pointer ptr1 as { const int * ptr1 } vs. using { int * const ptr1 }. Both declarations are valid, and optional, but the difference is critical and a life-saver. But to explain this, the authors do not bother with short and sweet examples. Instead, they roll out paragraphs of frustrating text. If somehow you make it through those explanations, by the time you get to heavy concepts such as 'base class virtual constructors', the STL best practices, etc., this book will have you gouging your eyes out. Now some subjects deserve 1000 pages, but jumping around with lengthy explanations does disservice. Programming explained right is beautiful.

In addition, the layout of the book is atrocious: the authors use pages of code to demonstrate simple concepts, even in the first part of the book. Why not keep examples short and compile-worthy? That way the reader can type them, see what matters, change things around, and see what breaks. Instead of that, the lines of code never finish, and the reader has little incentive to type it all out (which is so important). Even worse, later chapters refer to lengthy examples listings in previous chapters (warning to Kindle readers).

Again, the reviews of the previous editions stand, so check them out. This book is dangerous for beginners because it risks discouraging them. The table of content, coloring, and the first chapter of the book are attractive. But things quickly unravel. I never heard of a professional using this book as a reference, and for the beginner, notice how even the 5-star reviews encourage this being a supplement instead. I would give it 3 stars if the price wasn't a bad joke.

-=-= If you have some options in choosing a book, here are my recommendations below -=-=-=-

If you are a true beginner and have to start at C++, pick up C++ Primer Plus (6th Edition) (Developer's Library). I question the wisdom of using C++ as you very first programming language (see the first comment to this review below), but hey, maybe you don't have a choice: C++ Primer Plus should serve you well then.

If you know a good bit how to program, but need to get up to speed on C++, I recommend Sams Teach Yourself C++ in One Hour a Day (7th Edition). I usually hate the "Teach yourself X in Y hours" trick, but this author nails it. You will be going dilly-dolly until you finish the book, without needing too much motivation. This book needs more coding exercices for beginners though, so I wouldn't recommend it as a first programming book.

If you need a complete reference, I recommend the powerhouse The C++ Programming Language, 4th Edition. The author wrote the C++ language, and knows what he is talking about.

If you know C++, but would like to learn a few cool tricks, Effective C++: 55 Specific Ways to Improve Your Programs and Designs (3rd Edition) does the job quite well.

There might be more out there, but these gets my vote.

35 of 37 people found the following review helpful.
Comprehensive guide . Not the cheapest book out there but well worth it
By Lazarus
Unlike many C++ books, this seems to cover pretty much everything - from getting started through to the meat of C++ and also covering the Standard Template Library (STL). It is written in a somewhat didactic style with plenty of full examples, end of section summaries and tests (Q&A) to ensure the principles have hit home. Unlike many other C++ texts, it is clearly aimed at teaching from scratch, rather than 'starting from C'.

The format is great - color is used for section and for syntax highlighting which aids reading and comprehension.

There are a number of 'tips' scattered throughout the text highlighting frequent misunderstandings and programming pitfalls. The title is justified; the book teaches the fundamentals of C++ AND also how to program - hopefully how to write a good, well structured, easily maintainable C++ program.

The appendices are available in pdf only - a shame the entire book isn't also available that way also. I suspect the appendices were not included in the printed book to (understandably) save paper.

The one niggle with this is that it's a sizable tome already and in order to keep it below 'telephone book' size, it is printed on very thin paper (thinner than that in my bible). The thin paper causes the reverse side to be visible and also means that care is required not to tear the pages.

In all, this is an excellent book for both learning and reference. Highly recommended.

See all 346 customer reviews...

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