As far as a book to learn from goes, I would Recommend C++: How to Program, Deitel/Deitel 2nd Ed., Prentice Hall, 1998. I learned from the previous edition of this book. It's really good, IMHO.
HTH, Steve /\ / \ / \ / /\/\ \ / \ Steve Beitzel / /\ /\ \ [EMAIL PROTECTED] / \/ \/ \ http://www.iit.edu/~beitste / /\ \ ICQ#: 19510745 \ \/ / \ ___ / \ /___\ / \ \___/ / \ / \ / \ / \/ On Sun, 17 Jan 1999, ari gold wrote: > > everybody learns in different ways. that's for sure. so the stroustrup book > may be the one for you. > > however, i have had much more success with other books (like the > primer). while he may be a buddha when it comes to writing languages, i don't > think stroustrup is that great of a teacher ... so far. the book is good to > have because it is THE WORD on the language. but i'd go elsewhere to learn... > > best of luck, > > ari > > ==> shaul writes: > > > Can you recommend a good C++ book ? How about the 3rd edition of > > Stroustrup's book ? Is it better then the new edition of the C++ > > Primer ? > > > -- > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null > >