We all have our favorite beginer, advanced and reference book(s) for C but I prefer:
Begin: ISBN 0-393-96945-2 || C Programming: A Modern Aproach by K. N. King ( A real spoon feeder ) Middle: ISBN 0201433079 || Advanced Programming in the UNIX Environment ( get some interesting things done ) Advanced: Experience ( find an unsupported wireless card and build support for it ) Reference: ISBN 0131103628 || The C Programming Language (2nd Edition) Quoting Craig McCormick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > I asked a similar question on here recently and had some good books > recommended to me. This relates to C programming. > > http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=openbsd-misc&m=113596339716980&w=2 > > As a starting point, until my books arrive, I have been working from > this online primer, which is getting me going: > > http://www.its.strath.ac.uk/courses/c/ > > Hope that helps in some way. > > Good luck. > > Craig > > On Tue, 2006-01-03 at 14:35 -0800, Joe S wrote: > > Hello list members. > > > > I'd like to direct this post to those that develop code for OpenBSD. > > > > I'd like a start developing software, and in turn, contribute to > > projects like OpenBSD and others. Right now, I'm working as a > > sysadmin/infosec person. I can write some simple perl and shell scripts, > > but that's about it. > > > > Do you have any recommendations on how I should get started? > > * Community college courses? > > * College courses? > > * Self-study books? > > > > I am aware that it will take a number of years before I can contribute > > quality code. > > > > I'm asking the OpenBSD folks for recommendations because I think the > > project goals are conducive to writing good software. I also think the > > quality of code in this project is superior to the alternatives. > > > > Any help or recommendations would be appreciated. > > > > -joe

