burtonics wrote: > We are on Chapter5 Repetitions and Loop Statements > Repetitions in programs|Counting Loops and the while statement > Computing a Sum or a product loop|the For Statement|conditional Loops > Loop Design|Nested Loops| Do-While statment and Flag-Controlled Loops| > > The book we are using is Problem Solving and Program Design In C > Fourth Edition. Which even the Professor said it is not a very good > book for newbies and he is trying to get them to change it. I have to > agree. > > Thank you Paul > DB
There is no reason why you can't read more than one book at a time. And, while you should be learning C++, you can still at least obtain something better than any book on the market: The ANSI 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/ The Standard tells compiler authors the minimal requirements to be considered "compliant". The Standard also tells coders what code a compiler should be capable of compiling. It is a very terse, technical document with no examples, which is one of the reasons authors write books on the C/C++ languages. -- Thomas Hruska CubicleSoft President Ph: 517-803-4197 *NEW* MyTaskFocus 1.1 Get on task. Stay on task. http://www.CubicleSoft.com/MyTaskFocus/
