@AlfPSteinbach What's your opinion on that book? I've been reading "Real world" and "a gentle introduction" but haven't been thrilled with either of them.
@Pubby u mean the tutorial? well it's ok so far but it did skip very lightly over a few issues that i think an ordinary user would have trouble with. like, that most examples are meant to be typed into an editor and not in the interactive command line
@AlfPSteinbach I assume you have some FP background...the only thing I worry about is that I tend to read for a while before I play with it, and the concepts (embarrasingly) get a little harder for me to grasp
The Base Class Library (BCL) is a standard library available to all languages using the .NET Framework. .NET includes the BCL in order to encapsulate a large number of common functions, such as file reading and writing, graphic rendering, database interaction, and XML document manipulation, which makes the programmer's job easier. It is much larger in scope than standard libraries for most other languages, including C++, and is comparable in scope to the standard libraries of Java. The BCL is sometimes incorrectly referred to as the Framework Class Library (FCL), which is a superset includi...
@keithlayne It's humorous? I thought the artwork was for the kids. Although I must say, I strongly hate that style. Besides the art, how's the content?
@Pubby he's just silly like me...I had the same basic question for @RMartinhoFernandes when he recommended the book, it gets deep enough I think. I think a combination of all three would be a good thing to try.
@Pubby I think (unless I'm just the dumbest person in the world) that the kids are gonna have difficulty grasping monads, etc. He does spend a lot of time going over syntax. I'm in the stage of playing with concepts now in order to really get it before moving on.
The syntax chapters help as a reference when I go back. I've played a little with Haskell before, so I've looked some at the other two tutorials, but not lately.
My first formal programming education was Scheme, which I like probably better than any other Lisp, but Haskell's features (automatic currying, etc.) put it to shame
@IDWMaster yes, but sizeof(char) is 1 by definition. you can get the bitsize from CHAR_BIT from <limits.h>, or std::numeric_limits<char>::digits() from <limits>
Surprisingly most schools that I know of still use MSVCC and REFUSE to allow the use of GCC in their classrooms
I'm ironically still in 12th grade in high school, not even college yet, and I'm trying to learn multiple languages by myself. I've heard from people who've went to college they don't allow GCC though...
I personally think GCC is a lot better than MSVCC, but I have used both for different purposes.
@IDWMaster what I've seen a lot is that schools have a "partnership" with Microsoft. The upshot is that you can get a lot of software for free (Windows, VS, etc.) but the teachers are pressured to use BS stuff like VB. It's smart from their perspective, but lame.
The reason I'm so focused on Unicode by the way is because I'm creating a BCL for C++, that can run on any platform without the need for porting a bulky Mono
I'd like Android support without having to pay the outrageous fee for Mono support
@IDWMaster you're probably going to be just as disappointed when you go college with what you learn there...just suck it up for a few years and then find an interesting job.
I think you'll find that if you find some decent CS faculty you can find something interesting to work on. Professors are having such a tough time finding work (schools moving away from tenure) that you find a surprising number of smart teachers all over the place, even when students are dumb.
@keithlayne You don't need to be a math expert to understand 3D graphics, or programming in general. It's still mainly a "logical" understanding that you need.
@IDWMaster that's kind of my point...there will always be guys like you willing to do that, it's just not as interesting to me. But good for you if you enjoy it, that's what really matters.
i remember we did Laplace transformations in high school (and at college). but if you threw one at me today it would just bounce off without making any impact whatsoever
The reason I made a new library, instead of using an existing one was because there was no existing .NET library which supported DirectX, OpenGL, and XNA (Windows Phone) in a single package.
it fills in the right arg because $ is infix, normally invoked like func $ arg
so it "curries" the $ function, binding the right argument, yielding a function with one argument (which argument is a function that it will apply to the bound arg)
@IDWMaster Best solution is to use std::vector. cccp committee decided that std::vector is the only portable way to do this. It really bothers me that they rejected hinnant's proposal to fix it.