<< 1 >>
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: Great tuturial on how to write great software. Review: This book was reccomended to me by a freind. Initially, I was not thrilled. After all, I didnt know Pascal, and didn't care to learn Pascal. Pascal to me is a langauge only used by some academics and those stuck in the mainframe world. I write in C, C++, Java, Perl. What relevance could Pascal have? Boy was I wrong. It really isn't a book about Pascal, it's a book about writing good software. Pascal is immaterial to the reader. It is just a langauge that is being used to illustrate good software design. I did most of the examples in Perl or C, and learned a good deal about good design and good coding. The programs are a bit simple, but unlike other books the examples really build on each other and seem like useful programs. Unike the typical toy java program, that you see in books. I would reccomend this to anyone who is starting out in programming and would like solid principles to start with.
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: Great tuturial on how to write great software. Review: This book was reccomended to me by a freind. Initially, I was not thrilled. After all, I didnt know Pascal, and didn't care to learn Pascal. Pascal to me is a langauge only used by some academics and those stuck in the mainframe world. I write in C, C++, Java, Perl. What relevance could Pascal have? Boy was I wrong. It really isn't a book about Pascal, it's a book about writing good software. Pascal is immaterial to the reader. It is just a langauge that is being used to illustrate good software design. I did most of the examples in Perl or C, and learned a good deal about good design and good coding. The programs are a bit simple, but unlike other books the examples really build on each other and seem like useful programs. Unike the typical toy java program, that you see in books. I would reccomend this to anyone who is starting out in programming and would like solid principles to start with.
<< 1 >>
|