Selected Product: | C For Dummies, 2nd Edition Paperback Edition: 2 Author: Dan Gookin Publisher: For Dummies Release Date: 2004-05-07 ISBN-10: 0764570684 ISBN-13: 9780764570681 List Price: $24.99 Average Customer Rating: | | C Programming Language (2nd Edition) (Prentice Hall Software) ISBN-10: 0131103628 ISBN-13: 9780131103627 List Price:$48.67 The C Programming Language (2nd Edition) ISBN-10: 0131103628 ISBN-13: 0076092003106 List Price:$48.67 Beginning Programming For Dummies (Beginning Programming for Dummies) ISBN-10: 0470088702 ISBN-13: 9780470088708 List Price:$24.99 C++ for Dummies ISBN-10: 0764568523 ISBN-13: 9780764568527 List Price:$24.99 Absolute Beginner's Guide to C (2nd Edition) (Other Sams) ISBN-10: 0672305100 ISBN-13: 9780672305108 List Price:$34.99 C All-in-One Desk Reference for Dummies ISBN-10: 0764570692 ISBN-13: 9780764570698 List Price:$34.99 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for C For Dummies, 2nd Edition by Dan Gookin (ISBN-10: 0764570684, ISBN-13: 9780764570681). At this time we have not yet written a review for C For Dummies, 2nd Edition by Dan Gookin (ISBN-10: 0764570684, ISBN-13: 9780764570681). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Find out how to tell your computer what to do Design and develop programs, compile and link code, fix problems, and more Come "C" what all the excitement’s about! C programs are fast, concise, and versatile, and you’ll be writing them in no time. This friendly book unlocks the mysteries of coding, compiling, adding comments, and using keywords, I/O, variables, integers, and all the rest. You’ll write your first C program before you finish Chapter 1! The Dummies Way - Explanations in plain English
- "Get in, get out" information
- Icons and other navigational aids
- Tear-out cheat sheet
- Top ten lists
- A dash of humor and fun
Discover how to: - Understand the entire program development cycle
- Link code to create executable programs
- Debug and deploy your programs
- Use floats, integer variables, and if statements
- Write functions and use loops
Know your audience: beginner | Customer Rating: | The first rule of writing is to know your audience. If you're reading about this product then we can assume two things: (a) you want / need to know C and (b) you need a gentle introduction. To be sure, this book is not an exhaustive resource on all things "C". It's subtitle should probably be "C for Kindergarteners", because it is fun (in a corny way) and easily digestible.
I want to learn C because Pixar's Renderman Shading Language is "C-like", and though I could read it, I didn't completely understand it. As I worked though the exercises of this book, I had many "so that's what that means" moments. Overall, a pretty good introduction; I am 3/4 through the text.
The good: the code snippets are short, so you can observe, study and understand each function or command in isolation with instant gratification syndrome in full effect. A few of the exercises graph / diagram the flow of logic line by line, which is pretty insightful if you are not used to thinking this way.
The bad: the jokes are lame and frequent, in keeping with the decidedly "un-whitepaper-like" tone that the author has chosen to follow. Also the code snippets are short, so even though you have a sense of accomplishment after successfully compiling, running and debugging the programs, you're kinda hungry for something more ambitious.
I would recommend this book to the completely new and uninitiated user who wants to advance their understanding from totally clueless to amateur / novice level. At that time, they can seek out more comprehensive books and not feel lost. | Not much substance.... | Customer Rating: | The idea behind the Dummies books - put the reader at ease - is taken to extremes here. The style is not only very distracting, but a waste of time. This book is almost 400 pages long, but if you took out the dumb jokes and other irrelevant material, you could condense it down to about 50 pages. For a good introduction to C programming, and an excellent example of concise technical writing, spend fifteen bucks to download Coronado's C tutorial:
[...]
I have a total of three introductory books on C programming and none of them is as useful as the Coronado tutorial. | If you want jokes, buy a joke book | Customer Rating: | C for Dummies, as with all of the Dummies offerings, is premised on the idea that you have to be fed a laugh on every line in order to learn anything. The fact is a little humor goes a long way and this one goes way too far. This is not to say that the information offered is either bad or lacking but it is hidden in a jungle of low-grade knee-slappers that do nothing to advance the cause. Worse, a first book on a subject like this tends to become the preferred reference source and this is so cluttered with cutesy corn that it will fail to serve the reader.
If you really need corn with your lessons, try Kellogs. If you are serious about the subject and want to get the straight skinny, go buy a K&R. | Pretty Decent | Customer Rating: | | This book is good for people who want to learn C, but if your running a Windows Vista (specifically 32 bit) your going to have some problems in setting up the stuff. You might have to run the compiler installations a bit differently. If anyone goes so insane as I did in trying to get past the first chapter on a Vista pc/laptop, this site helped me get through some pc issues: "http://phy225.dept.shef.ac.uk/mediawiki/index.php/Running_devcpp_under_Vista " Also helpful if you want to save the trouble of admitting yourself to a mental institute. Regardless, buy the book if you want a good intro to C programming. As far as the first program, somewhat of a pain as he tries to make the popular "Hello World" program into something unique. | Best Introductory Book On C And For The Idealogy Of Programming | Customer Rating: | | This is the best introductory book on C. If you are not a beginner C programmer do not buy this book, buy it's companion C All-In One Desktop Reference For Dummies. If you want to know C,C++,Java,Perl or Python read this book and it's companion and you will know C and be familar with how everything in those other languages work. Dan Gookin is one of the greatest authors of his day he breaks everything down to make you understand it easier. This book is the funniest computer book I've ever read, it is a good break from watching "Ice Melt" with other hard to understand programming books. |
|