<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>Discover everything you need to know about C++ in a logical progression of small lessons that you can work through as quickly or as slowly as you need. This book divides C++ up into bite-sized chunks that will help you learn the language one step at a time. Fully updated to include C++20, it assumes no familiarity with C++ or any other C-based language. </p><p><i>Exploring C++20</i><i> </i>acknowledges that C++ can be a complicated language, so rather than baffle you with complex chapters explaining functions, classes, and statements in isolation you'll focus on how to achieve results. By learning a little bit of this and a little of that you'll soon have amassed enough knowledge to be writing non-trivial programs and will have built a solid foundation of experience that puts those previously baffling concepts into context.</p><p>In this fully-revised third edition of <i>Exploring C++</i>, you'll learn how to use the standard library early in the book. Next, you'll work with operators, objects, and data-sources in increasingly realistic situations. Finally, you'll start putting the pieces together to create sophisticated programs of your own design confident that you've built a firm base of experience from which to grow.</p><p><b>What You Will Learn</b></p><ul> <li>Grasp the basics, including compound statements, modules, and more</li> Work with custom types and see how to use them <li>Write useful algorithms, functions, and more</li><li>Discover the latest C++ 20 features, including concepts, modules, and ranges<br></li> <li>Apply your skills to projects that include a fixed-point numbers and body-mass index applications</li> Carry out generic programming and apply it in a practical project <li>Exploit multiple inheritance, traits/policies, overloaded functions, and metaprogramming</li> </ul><p><b>Who This Book Is For</b></p>Experienced programmers who may have little or no experience with C++ who want an accelerated learning guide to C++20 so they can hit the ground running. <p></p><p> </p><p> </p><p></p><p/><br></br><p><b> From the Back Cover </b></p></br></br><p>Discover everything you need to know about C++ in a logical progression of small lessons that you can work through as quickly or as slowly as you need. This book divides C++ up into bite-sized chunks that will help you learn the language one step at a time. Fully updated to include C++20, it assumes no familiarity with C++ or any other C-based language.</p><p><i>Exploring C++20</i><i> </i>acknowledges that C++ can be a complicated language, so rather than baffle you with complex chapters explaining functions, classes, and statements in isolation you'll focus on how to achieve results. By learning a little bit of this and a little of that you'll soon have amassed enough knowledge to be writing non-trivial programs and will have built a solid foundation of experience that puts those previously baffling concepts into context.</p><p>In this fully-revised second edition of <i>Exploring C++</i>, you'll learn how to use the standard library early in the book. Next, you'll work with operators, objects, and data-sources in increasingly realistic situations. Finally, you'll start putting the pieces together to create sophisticated programs of your own design confident that you've built a firm base of experience from which to grow.</p><p>You will: <b></b></p><ul><li>Grasp the basics, including compound statements, modules, and more</li><li>Work with custom types and see how to use them</li><li>Write useful algorithms, functions, and more</li><li>Apply your skills to projects that include a fixed-point numbers and body-mass index applications</li><li>Carry out generic programming and apply it in a practical project</li><li>Exploit multiple inheritance, traits/policies, overloaded functions, and metaprogramming</li></ul><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Ray Lischner has a bachelor's degree in computer science from Caltech and a master's in computer science from Oregon State University. He worked as a software developer for a dozen years, at big and small companies across the US, using PL/I, C, C++, Delphi, Smalltalk, and various assembly languages on both large and small systems. He has been self-employed as a consultant, trainer, and author for the last ten years. Ray taught computer science at Oregon State University for several years and specialized in teaching introductory computer programming. He taught courses in C and C++ and software engineering.
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