Daily Deal: The Complete C++ Programming Bundle

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C++ is an object-oriented programming language that is viewed by many as the best language for creating large-scale applications. The Complete C++ Programming Bundle will help you on your way to mastering this important language. With 67+ hours of tutorials, you'll move through the fundamentals of C++ and onto more advanced techniques. This bundle is available in the Techdirt Deals Store for $45.


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  1. identicon
    Lawrence D’Oliveiro, 23 Jun 2016 @ 2:38pm

    What Version Of C++?

    Recent C++ standards include C++11 and C++14. Does this course cover them? Doesn’t say. For example, Microsoft Visual C++ doesn’t implement the newer standards very well, so to learn them you would be better off with, say, GCC.

    Also, I like this quote from the blurb:

    “Learning C++ will set you apart from other programmers in the market as it is a vast and complex language that will make learning any other language much easier.”


    You may need to unlearn a bunch of C++ stuff before learning a more high-level language like Python...

    link to this | view in thread ]

  2. identicon
    Pseudonym, 23 Jun 2016 @ 9:21pm

    Re: What Version Of C++?

    "You may need to unlearn a bunch of C++ stuff before learning a more high-level language like Python..."

    According to my resume, I speak over 60 programming languages to varying levels of fluency. My postgrad work was on compilers, in case you were curious, and I still do the Pragmatic Programmers thing of a new language every year.

    No matter what your first programming language is, you need to unlearn stuff to learn your second programming language. There does come a point where you no longer need to unlearn anything, which happens somewhere around the 4th paradigm.

    Incidentally, you probably have to unlearn more going from Python to C++ than you would going from C++ to Python. C++ has sane variable scoping rules, for a start.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  3. identicon
    Lawrence D’Oliveiro, 24 Jun 2016 @ 2:42am

    Re: sane variable scoping rules, for a start.

    That can cope with this?

        if freetype2 != None :

            @staticmethod
            def create_for_ft_face(face, load_flags = 0) :
                "creates a FontFace from a freetype2.Face."
                if not isinstance(face, freetype2.Face) :
                    raise TypeError("face must be a freetype2.Face")
                #end if
                cairo_face = cairo.cairo_ft_font_face_create_for_ft_face(face._ftobj, load_flags)
                result = FontFace(cairo_face)
                if cairo.cairo_font_face_get_user_data(cairo_face, ct.byref(_ft_destroy_key)) == None :
                    check(cairo.cairo_font_face_set_user_data
                       (
                        cairo_face,
                         ct.byref(_ft_destroy_key),
                        ct.cast(face._ftobj, ct.c_void_p).value,
                        freetype2.ft.FT_Done_Face
                       ))
                    freetype2.check(freetype2.ft.FT_Reference_Face (face._ftobj))
                      # need another reference since Cairo has stolen previous one
                      # not expecting this to fail!
                #end if
                result.ft_face = face
                return \
                    result
            #end create_for_ft_face

            @staticmethod
            def create_for_file(filename, face_index = 0, load_flags = 0) :
                "uses FreeType to load a font from the specified filename, and returns" \
                " a new FontFace for it."
                _ensure_ft()
                return \
                    FontFace.create_for_ft_face(ft_lib.new_face(filename, face_index), load_flags)
            #end create_for_file

        else :

            @staticmethod
            def create_for_ft_face(face) :
                "not implemented (requires python_freetype)."
                raise NotImplementedError("requires python_freetype")
            #end create_for_ft_face

            @staticmethod
            def create_for_file(filename, face_index = 0, load_flags = 0) :
                "uses FreeType to load a font from the specified filename, and returns" \
                " a new FontFace for it."
                _ensure_ft()
                ft_face = ct.c_void_p()
                status = _ft.FT_New_Face(ct.c_void_p(_ft_lib), filename.encode("utf-8"), face_index, ct.byref(ft_face))
                if status != 0 :
                    raise RuntimeError("Error %d loading FreeType font" % status)
                #end if
                try :
                    cairo_face = cairo.cairo_ft_font_face_create_for_ft_face(ft_face.value, load_flags)
                    result = FontFace(cairo_face)
                    check(cairo.cairo_font_face_set_user_data
                      (
                        cairo_face,
                        ct.byref(_ft_destroy_key),
                        ft_face.value ,
                        _ft.FT_Done_Face
                      ))
                    ft_face = None # so I don't free it yet
                finally :
                    if ft_face != None :
                        _ft.FT_Done_Face(ft_face)
                    #e nd if
                #end try
                return \
                    result
            #end create_for_file

        #end if freetype2 != None

    link to this | view in thread ]

  4. identicon
    Umar Babankanwa, 25 Jun 2016 @ 6:11am

    c-programming

    want to learn and teach c++,as the best object oriented programming language.I have found the patfom in your course and very interesting.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  5. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 27 Jun 2016 @ 5:10am

    Re: Re: sane variable scoping rules, for a start.

    Now why the hell would you want to do that? And in Python to boot! Talk about language abuse...
    I mean this is basically "pythonized" C FFS.

    Python was never meant for this kind of crap...

    link to this | view in thread ]


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