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Professional Linux Programming

Professional Linux Programming

List Price: $59.99
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good reference
Review: I bought the Beginners Guide to Linux Programming and I really liked that book. This book is a very good follow-up, but it doesn't give the reader more programming tips.
It covers many topics which makes this book a great reference for anyone who deals with Linux and even other flavors of Unix on a day to day basic. Buy this book if you are looking for a reference book on developing software on Linux that covers advanced topics.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good reference
Review: I bought the Beginners Guide to Linux Programming and I really liked that book. This book is a very good follow-up, but it doesn't give the reader more programming tips.
It covers many topics which makes this book a great reference for anyone who deals with Linux and even other flavors of Unix on a day to day basic. Buy this book if you are looking for a reference book on developing software on Linux that covers advanced topics.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent follow-up
Review: I have found this book to be the excellent follow-up to the Beginning Linux Programming title, with just a few remarks. I don't like the title, more than "Professional" is it much more a second part of the first book, even if it discusses advanced topics. It's just one book, so the view of different topics isn't very thorough sometimes, it's just the introduction. But the book is still great for this purpose, I liked it very much. I don't have any access to my Linux box for a few months, so I wasn't able to check the validity of source code provided.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: heavy reading
Review: The biggest problem I have with this book is its weight. It's just too big and clunky to hold up to read. Splitting into two bindings would have been nice. But it does cover a lot and it needs to be large to do so.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: heavy reading
Review: The biggest problem I have with this book is its weight. It's just too big and clunky to hold up to read. Splitting into two bindings would have been nice. But it does cover a lot and it needs to be large to do so.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Good reference for a wide range of Open Source technologies
Review: This book is a follow-up to Beginning Linux Programming, but with a wider range of authors. The book is a series of chapters on various tools and applications, all of them Open Source, based mainly round things that application developers might use, though there is a single chapter on device drivers.

Most topics only get a single chapter, so there isn't as much depth as you would find in a dedicated book on each topic, but there is a very wide range of material all covered in enough depth to get the more experienced programmer started with a new topic. There are one or two weaker areas, but overall a good choice of material succinctly presented for the more experienced application developer. I've given it 5 stars as it was exactly what I was looking for - a single reference to help me create a Linux-based web database application, your mileage may vary. I recommend you at least consider it.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Excellent book for developing real-world linux solutions
Review: This book is a solid followup to their first edition. What I like about it is its breadth. It covers several topics (CVS, PHP, XML, CORBA, MySQL/Postgresql ) that would often have a whole book devoted to them. This book targets the developer who just needs a concise primer on the given topics, and doesn't have the time to read 1000 pages of fluff on every topic in the book.

I only gave it four stars, because I felt that "Beginning Linux Programming" was more essential than this book. However, this is a very strong book and some of the topics here are not covered elsewhere ( for example, ORBit ). And there's certainly no other book that covers *all* the topics this book covers.

Get this, but get "Beginning Linux Programming" first.


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