Thursday, 28 April 2011

Tutorials [C,C++ coding]

Tutorials about C++
http://cplus.about.com/

C++ Annotations (moving from C to C++)
http://www.icce.rug.nl/documents/cplusplus/

DevCentral tutorials for C and C++
http://devcentral.iftech.com/learning/tutorials/

C++ tutorials for Windows 32, how to do without MFC, getting the compiler
to do the hard work of avoiding memory leaks, games, frequency analysis etc
http://www.relisoft.com/

... interactive guide to C++ ... written with Pascal users in mind
http://tqd.advanced.org/3074/

Coronado enterprises tutorials (formerly Gordon Dodrill's)
You can see sample chapters, but are charged for the full tutorials
http://www.coronadoenterprises.com/

Guru of the week - ie discussion papers on using C++
http://www.cntc.com/resources/gotw.html

Tutorials etc on Borland's CBuilder
http://www.richplum.co.uk/cbuilder/

Tutorial on the STL by Phil Ottewell.
http://www.yrl.co.uk/~phil/stl/stl.htmlx
http://www.pottsoft.com/home/stl/stl.htmlx
He has also got a tutorial on C for Fortran users
http://www.pottsoft.com/home/c_course/course.html

Notes for a university lecture course, but
maybe there is enough here for independent study.
http://m2tech.net/cppclass/

Note on pointers - perhaps more oriented towards C than C++.
http://www.cudenver.edu/~tgibson/tutorial/

Very simple C under DOS or MS-windows. Not much C++;
possibly useful to someone interested in programming
MS-windows without MFC etc.
http://www.cpp-programming.com

Weekly newsletter on C++ and other things: aimed at helping new
and intermediate programmers improve their coding skills.
http://www.cyberelectric.net.au/~collins

http://www.informit.com - a site run by Macmillan USA containing a lot
of information including the several well-known C++ books for
free download - if you are prepared to supply name and email address
http://www.informit.com/

C++ in 21 days - 2nd edition
http://newdata.box.sk/bx/c/

A variety of C++ books on line (Macmillian, Sams, Wiley, IDG etc)
You can see the tables of contents, but you will have to have a
subscription to read the books themselves after a free trial.
http://www.itknowledge.com/reference/dir...es.c1.html

Elementary introduction to C++ (mostly the C subset)
http://clio.mit.csu.edu.au/TTT/

How to use function-pointers in C and C++, callbacks, functors
http://www.function-pointer.org
http://www.newty.de/fpt/fpt.html

Short C++ tutorial, aimed at people who already have
experience with an object-oriented programming language
http://www.entish.org/realquickcpp/

Articles about Win32, C++, MFC articles using VC++ compiler.
http://www.codersource.net

Hope you enjoy

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