muhammad shoaib wrote:
> no no its not my home work . i start to learn c++ by myself. I strat learning 
> 3 days back. i am trying to slove and stuck in for loop. 

Here's a hint:  Use two for-loops and the value of the variable as the 
limit of the second for-loop.


Learning C/C++ using a trial-and-error approach is considered by those 
who know this industry to be the worst way to 'learn' C/C++.  You most 
likely won't learn anything and will generally get frustrated and give up.

Learning from a book is the best way to go.  Programming books that go 
through a publisher are scrutinized by many people.  Even then, mistakes 
can still make it through the process and some authors are considered 
better than others.

When you joined c-prog, you should have received an e-mail containing 
the group welcome message. In that message was a list of books that you 
should read. Just in case you missed the message, here is that list of 
books again and the order in which you should be reading them:

"Accelerated C++" by Koenig and Moo (ISBN #020170353X)
"Safe C++ Design Principles" by Thomas Hruska
"The C++ Standard Library" by Nicolai Josuttis (ISBN #0201379260)
"Effective C++" by Scott Meyers (ISBN #0201924889)
"More Effective C++" by Scott Meyers (ISBN #020163371X)

If you are learning or looking to learn C, consider learning C++ 
instead. It is much more versatile and offers powerful features that C 
doesn't offer. If you happen to be already reading something other than 
the books above, seriously consider supplementing or replacing your book 
with the above.

If you can't afford the books mentioned, Bruce Eckel offers "Thinking in 
C++" for free from his website:

http://www.eckelobjects.com/


And the group owner, Thomas Hruska, has generously donated his book 
"Safe C++ Design Principles" to c-prog group members for free:

http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/c-prog/files/Books/


Beware any C/C++ author who does not adhere closely to the ANSI C/C++ 
Standard. One very popular author is Yashavant Kanetkar who is the 
author of "Let Us C". His writing may be simple to understand however 
his code is non-ANSI Standard. Similar great writers have shown up over 
the years who tell wonderful stories but don't adhere to the Standards 
defined by the ANSI C/C++ committees.

You should also obtain at least copy of a draft copy of the ANSI C/C++ 
Standard. Draft copies are free and c-prog links to quite a few of them 
here:

http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/c-prog/links/Standards_001012496381/



> Paul Herring <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:          On Dec 26, 2007 10:03 PM, 
> muhammad shoaib <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Hej! to all
>>
>> i am new learner of c++. i want to devlop a program using for loop that 
>> shows output like this
>>
>>
>>
>> x
>> xx
>> xxx
>> xxxx
>> xxxxx
>> xxxxxx
>> xxxxxxx
>> xxxxxxxx
>> xxxxxxxxx
>> xxxxxxxxxx
> 
> It looks like you're trying to solve a homework problem. Would you
> like to show what you've done so far and indicate where you're stuck?



-- 
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