@sbi The total number of upvotes you've received is at the top of the /reputation report. Mine is 7,917 and I have no more than 53 downvotes (I searched for "(-").
@FredOverflow I have a copy and have skimmed over a few chapters. It looks like it's worth reading.
@FredOverflow I've never actually read many of his answers on SO. His book was good though.
@JamesMcNellis I am looking to broaden my view and was thinking of getting one D book and one C# book. Think I'll settle for Alexandrescu and Skeet. (I already have 10 C++ books, that's enough :) Although maybe I'll get the 2003 standard in dead tree form just for hun.)
@FredOverflow Wait off on getting C# in Depth; there's a second ed. about to be published. If you buy the book directly from Manning you can get a PDF copy immediately and they'll ship you the hardcopy when it goes to print.
I went to a presentation Walter Bright gave a couple of months ago on the many paradigms of D. It was interesting, but I wasn't impressed enough to really take the time to learn it.
@FredOverflow Oh, so it is. 28. Oktober 2010. Well, I guess I'm at least 16 days behind in my keeping track of "when every computer book is published." :-P
It's 28th of october in germany and 8th of November in the USA, apparently. But it's currently not available in germany. And it has not been released yet in UK.
Old Style (or O.S.) and New Style (or N.S.) are used in English language historical studies either to indicate that the start of the Julian year has been adjusted to start on 1 January (N.S.) even though contemporary documents use a different start of year (O.S.); or to indicate that a date conforms to the Julian calendar (O.S.), formerly in use in many countries, rather than the Gregorian calendar (N.S.). The internationally used Latin cognates of O.S. are stili veteris or stilo vetere, abbreviated st.v. and translating as "(of) old style", and the respective cognates of N.S. are sti...
If you actually want to learn C# though it's probably not the best book for that. It's more like what Effective C++ is for C++: it doesn't teach C#, it gives best practices.
BTW, *some advice for newcomers* here: You can edit your messages for 2mins. Try the `v` arrow to the left of it. You can edit your last messages using `cursor up`, `escape` cancels this. Markdown sort of works here, but we've come to rename it as Letdown, because it's pretty buggy. Links to a few sites (all SE site, Wikipedia, Twitter etc.) will inline an excerpt of the page linked to, when they are the only text in a message. Reply to others using the familiar @syntax. Reply to specific messages by clicking on the little down-right arrow appearing at its very right when you hover over it.
@FredOverflow I learned C+ from O'Reilly's Pocket reference book, SO, and bothering my fellow-workers.
How hard is it to learn C# if you already know Java and C++ and Haskell? Is there anything completely mind-blowing that isn't in any of those three languages?
@sbi It appears learning new languages mostly comes down to learning new syntax, not new concepts... :-( I was so excited about C++0x "concepts" and now they are removed :-( BTW how can you name a concept "concept", that's just asking for trouble and confusion :-)
@FredOverflow Yes, there is. It's in Scott Meyers' Effective ... series. Scott's goal with EC++ was to write the best second C++ book money can buy, and I'm pretty sure that stretches to the other books in the series. I wouldn't have learned easily from EC#.
@JamesMcNellis Well, what alternatives are there to IDisposable if you don't have destructors? The using statement is tied to that interface, isn't it?
@JohannesSchaublitb Oh, you should at least look at one some time. Once you know enough not to take it seriously, some of it can be pretty funny. The best was his "Annotated C Standard", which contained literally hundreds of mistakes varying from stupid to downright silly in a few places. It starts with main returning void, and goes downhill from there.
The best part is the format: one page from the standard with his page of annotations directly across from it, apparently to make his mistakes as easy to find as possible.
"The American National Standards Institute sells ISO 9899:1990 (the C language standard) for around $130. Schildt's annotated version sells for about $30-40. The price difference reflects the value of the annotations. At no time do the annotations clarify, enhance, or supplement the standard. The difficult or obscure points are often ignored; occasionally, "clarifying" text is added which flatly contradicts the meaning of the text."
Despite (in at least one edition) a missing page of the standard, a few missing punctuation marks, and a few other botches, this does contain the text of the standard as it stood in 1990.
The rating would (and should) be 10 (best). However, there are the unfortunate annotations from Herb Schildt. These "helpful notes" are brimming with errors, half-truths, untruths and sheer fantasy.
The sad part of it is that the standards (both C and C++) could really benefit from decent annotations. There are hundreds of details like which reference tell you what important points that really are hard to find -- but he didn't even try to cover anything like that.
@FredOverflow Since I'm no longer programming in C++ aside from a few hobby projects, I'm having a hard time justifying taking the time to watch the rest of the STL videos.
To answer your previous question about IDisposable, I just have a hard time understanding why you'd want automatic management of memory but manual management of every other resource (which is how it works in C#) when you can have automatic management of every resource (e.g. C++ with RAII)...
@FredOverflow I wasn't really paying that close attention to him, lol
@JamesMcNellis Yes, I don't understand that either. It seems lots of people aren't even aware of the fact that a garbage collector only handles the memory "problem".
@JamesMcNellis You don't, really. The problem is that Sun (among others) has done a good enough job of selling people (PHBs) on the idea that memory management is terribly difficult that they probably have no choice but to include GC. That, in turn, makes it almost impossible to do anything else well at all.
Although I must say I love the idea of GC for immutable value objects with structural sharing. That is not "possible" (at least not idiomatically) in C++.
@FredOverflow Yes, I meant GC in general. GC is a small gain, but deterministic destruction is a big loss. For the wrong situation, GC can cause other problems as well, but must of the time it's not really much to worry about (with a modern GC).
@FredOverflow D has garbage collection. It also has deterministic destruction though. (I know that doesn't answer your question; I don't know the answer to your question...)
There is a middle way between Java-like GC and pure C++ RAII, and that's deferred deallocation. That calls to operator delete() simply hand the memory over to a garbage collector. Which can do its stuff when app otherwise idling. Assumption being that deallocation is costly.
The delete[] operator is used to delete arrays. The delete operator is used to delete non-array objects. It calls operator delete[] and operator delete function respectively to delete the memory that the array or non-array object occupied after (eventually) calling the destructors for the array's...
@FredOverflow: Thanks, I'd like to think so. The first parts were extensively peer-reviewed. But I think it was Dave Abrahams disagreed with precisely that statement... ;-) Nothing engenders "discussion" in C++ as much as terminology.
@FredOverflow: it started out as a continuation of a hopefully correct tutorial on C++, the one linked to from the FAQ. except it's nowhere on the net now.
@AlfPSteinbach I don't see a big difference from int or anything else -- there are pointer rvalues and pointer lvalues (and in C++0x prvalues, and xvalues and on and on...) "An int" can be either a variable or a value, and the same basic idea is true with pointers.
@FredOverflow I was thinking there were at least a couple more, but I'm like those African tribes that count "one", "two", "many" -- C++0x just has "many" types of values! :-)
@JohannesSchaublitb I must say I was terribly confused the first time I heard that named rvalue references are lvalues and anonymous rvalue references are xvalues. But it all makes sense :)
@FredOverflow Unfotunately, it wouldn't let me put the text with the graphic. The point is there really are more than three, so my excuse for not remembering all of them remains intact (sort of, anyway).
I would like to use tables in answers and questions. Without such support, I find myself using ASCII art tables with the code-text tool, but that takes too long, and isn't really maintainable.
This could be used to illustrate memory cells, and of course to create "real tables" with information c...
@JohannesSchaublitb You can read that in two ways, because the language C++ introduced the notion of ("created", so to speak) one-past-the-end pointers, right? :)
@JerryCoffin Yes, but you hit more keys on the keyboard.