I use this book...
http://www.amazon.com/Programming-Language-Prentice-Hall-Software/dp/0131103628

On Sat, Mar 8, 2008 at 1:14 PM, Jon Bartels <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:

> This is cross posted from the Geek list, just looking for some opinions
> from anyone I can get in touch with.
>
> I've been writing business applications in Ruby for about two years
> now and this week I've had to write some .NET code for a prototype
> application that records audio does some file operations and other
> things. While writing that I had to deal with managing a buffer for
> the first time since early college and I realized that even with a
> high level abstraction like .NET I had forgotten how to deal with some
> of the lower level concepts.
>
> I also work with a guy who used to work for Amiga as a video driver
> developer and he constantly gives me that "punk ass kid" look when I
> complain about having to "deal with this piddly low level crap".
>
> So long story short, any suggestions for relearning C? I know grabbing
> the Linux kernel source and poking around is going to run over my head
> and the garage sale C books from 1985 are going to bore me reviewing
> the basics of general programming.
>
> I'm thinking of rewriting some libraries I've written in Ruby as C
> then writing a Ruby wrapper for that. I figure that it'll force me to
> review some critical code, rewrite it in a faster language, and I have
> unit tests that will prove I did it right. Does that sound like a
> reasonable way to brush up on C?
>
>
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