On Nov 7, 2006, at 5:06 PM, Jonathan Duncan wrote:

Is this the one?  There did not seem to be one just called
"Object-Oriented Design":

Object oriented design with applications (Benjamin/Cummings series in Ada and software engineering) by Grady Booch (Hardcover - Sep 1990)

http://www.amazon.com/oriented-applications-Benjamin-Cummings- engineering/dp/0805300910/sr=1-1/qid=1162943646/ ref=sr_1_1/002-7548996-2549610?ie=UTF8&s=books


That may be the one, but I told you about all I know about it. It was Stroustrup's recommendation, not mine. ;) Might be best to see if you can find it in a library or something, though the piles of 'practical' pulp that fill the computer shelves these days have probably displaced it everywhere but university libraries.


Also, which "Functional Programming" book were you thinking of when you recommend it as a follow-up to my current studies?

I didn't have any particular book in mind, but The Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs and ML For the Working Programmer are both good books. The former is also available for free online, so there's little excuse not to check it out. :) It's not the sort of book that will teach you how to write business applications, but it will teach you the essence of programming.

                --Levi

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