by my007ms@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Jul 14, 2008 at 02:36 AM
On Jul 14, 10:19 am, Francis Glassborow
<francis.glassbo...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> my00...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
> > I have read
>
>http://groups.google.com/group/alt.comp.lang.learn.c-c++/browse_threa...
> > and need to give hint abut something.
> > I understand the distance between C and C++ and i am not try say which
> > is more good so it's not the same case.
> > plus i need to master C no matter how C++ programmer see it. i am not
> > searching for easy and fast developing if i was i head to go with
> > Java ;)
> > i am trying to involved in C but every time C++ pop-up so i consider
> > learning both
>
> Learning to program is not the same as learning a programming language.
> If you cannot already program you need a book that is more aimed at
> learning to program. Until you can program (i.e. design and write your
> own programs) the language you learn is less im****tant. I happen to
> believe that C++ is a better language for novices than C but then I am
> eccentric (in the 1980s I spent several years (successfully) introducing
> programming skills to teenagers using a language called FORTH)
Thanks for value advice.
I want tell you that i am finish all the book i have and doing every
exercises and even more i am doing small program but i feel no comfort
with my design.you know this code that work but can not
reuse ,modified or debugging and when i try get help most of coder
can not understand it. in the end it's work which make the problem :)
I will be so grateful if there is book specialize in design using C.
by the way i am learning all by myself as my main job is Unix/Linux
system. hope i was teenager ;)