绝对经典 C++初学者必看的50个建议 (见过好几次了,还是放到我的日志中吧)

1.把C++当成一门新的 语言学习(和C没啥关系!真的。);

  2.看《Thinking In C++》,不要看《C++变成死相》;

  3.看《The C++ Programming Language》和《Inside The C++ Object Model》,不要因为他们很难而我们自己是初学者所以就不看;

  4.不要被VC、BCB、BC、MC、TC等词汇所迷惑——他们都是集成开发环境,而我们要学的是一门语言;

  5.不要放过任何一个看上去很简单的小编程问题——他们往往并不那么简单,或者可以引伸出很多知识点;

  6.会用Visual C++,并不说明你会C++;

  7.学class并不难,template、STL、generic programming也不过如此——难的是长期坚持实践和不遗余力的博览群书;

  8.如果不是天才的话,想学编程就不要想玩游戏——你以为你做到了,其实你的C++水平并没有和你通关的能力一起变高——其实可以时刻记住:学C++是为了编游戏的;

  9.看Visual C++的书,是学不了 C++语言的;

  10.浮躁的人容易说: XX语言不行了,应该学YY;——是你自己不行了吧!?

  11.浮躁的人容易问:我到底该学什么;——别问,学就对了;

  12.浮躁的人容易问:XX有钱途吗;——建议你去抢银行;

  13.浮躁的人容易说:我要中文版!我英文不行!——不行?学呀!

  14.浮躁的人容易问:XX和YY哪个好;——告诉你吧,都好——只要你学就行;

  15.浮躁的人分两种:a)只观望而不学的人;b)只学而不坚持的人;

  16.把时髦的技术挂在嘴边,还不如把过时的技术记在心里;

  17.C++不仅仅是支持面向对象的程序设计语言;

  18. 学习编程最好的方法之一就是阅读源代码;

  19.在任何时刻都不要认为自己手中的书已经足够了;

  20.请阅读《The Standard C++ Bible》(中文版:标准C++宝典),掌握C++标准;

  21.看得懂的书,请仔细看;看不懂的书,请硬着头皮看;

  22.别指望看第一遍书就能记住和掌握什么——请看第二遍、第三遍;

  23.请看《Effective C++》和《More Effective C++》以及《Exceptional C++》;

  24.不要停留在集成开发环境的摇篮上,要学会控制集成开发环境,还要学会用 命令行方式处理程序;

  25.和别人一起讨论有意义的C++知识点,而不是争吵XX行不行或者YY与ZZ哪个好;

  26.请看《程序设计实践》,并严格的按照其要求去做;

  27.不要因为C和C++中有一些语法和关键字看上去相同,就认为它们的意义和作用完全一样;

  28.C++绝不是所谓的C的“扩充”——如果C++一开始就起名叫Z语言,你一定不会把C和Z语言联系得那么紧密;

  29.请不要认为学过XX语言再改学C++会有什么问题——你只不过又在学一门全新的语言而已;

  30.读完了《Inside The C++ Object Model》以后再来认定自己是不是已经学会了C++;

  31.学习编程的秘诀是:编程,编程,再编程;

  32.请留意下列书籍:《C++面向对象高效编程(C++ Effective Object-Oriented Software Construction)》《面向对象软件构造(Object-Oriented Software Construction)》《设计模式(Design Patterns)》《The Art of Computer Programming》;

  33.记住:面向对象技术不只是C++专有的;

  34.请把书上的程序例子亲手输入到电脑上实践,即使配套光盘中有源代码;

  35.把在书中看到的有意义的例子扩充;

  36.请重视C++中的异常处理技术,并将其切实的运用到自己的程序中;

  37.经常回顾自己以前写过的程序,并尝试重写,把自己学到的新知识运用进去;

  38.不要漏掉书中任何一个练习题——请全部做完并记录下解题思路;

  39.C++语言和C++的集成开发环境要同时学习和掌握;

  40.既然决定了学C++,就请坚持学下去,因为学习程序设计语言的目的是掌握程序设计技术,而程序设计技术是跨语言的;

  41.就让C++语言的各种平台和开发环境去激烈的竞争吧,我们要以学习C++语言本身为主;

  42.当你写C++程序写到一半却发现自己用的方法很拙劣时,请不要马上停手;请尽快将余下的部分粗略的完成以保证这个设计的完整性,然后分析自己的错误并重新设计和编写(参见43);

  43.别心急,设计C++的class确实不容易;自己程序中的class和自己的class设计水平是在不断的编程实践中完善和发展的;

  44.决不要因为程序“很小”就不遵循某些你不熟练的规则——好习惯是培养出来的,而不是一次记住的;

  45.每学到一个C++难点的时候,尝试着对别人讲解这个知识点并让他理解——你能讲清楚才说明你真的理解了;

  46.记录下在和别人交流时发现的自己忽视或不理解的知识点;

  47.请不断的对自己写的程序提出更高的要求,哪怕你的程序版本号会变成Version 100.XX;

  48.保存好你写过的所有的程序——那是你最好的积累之一;

  49.请不要做浮躁的人;

  50.请热爱C++!
Contents Preface v Foreword to the second edition xiii About the accompanying CD-ROM xiv On the bibliography, Internet sources and exercises xv Contents xvii PART A: THE ISSUES 1 Chapter 1: Software quality 3 1.1 EXTERNAL AND INTERNAL FACTORS 3 1.2 A REVIEW OF EXTERNAL FACTORS 4 1.3 ABOUT SOFTWARE MAINTENANCE 17 1.4 KEY CONCEPTS INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER 19 1.5 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 19 Chapter 2: Criteria of object orientation 21 2.1 ON THE CRITERIA 21 2.2 METHOD AND LANGUAGE 22 2.3 IMPLEMENTATION AND ENVIRONMENT 31 2.4 LIBRARIES 33 2.5 FOR MORE SNEAK PREVIEW 34 2.6 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES AND OBJECT RESOURCES 34 PART B: THE ROAD TO OBJECT ORIENTATION 37 Chapter 3: Modularity 39 3.1 FIVE CRITERIA 40 3.2 FIVE RULES 46 3.3 FIVE PRINCIPLES 53 3.4 KEY CONCEPTS INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER 64 3.5 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 64 EXERCISES 65CONTENTS xviii Chapter 4: Approaches to reusability 67 4.1 THE GOALS OF REUSABILITY 68 4.2 WHAT SHOULD WE REUSE? 70 4.3 REPETITION IN SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT 74 4.4 NON-TECHNICAL OBSTACLES 74 4.5 THE TECHNICAL PROBLEM 81 4.6 FIVE REQUIREMENTS ON MODULE STRUCTURES 83 4.7 TRADITIONAL MODULAR STRUCTURES 89 4.8 OVERLOADING AND GENERICITY 93 4.9 KEY CONCEPTS INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER 98 4.10 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 99 Chapter 5: Towards object technology 101 5.1 THE INGREDIENTS OF COMPUTATION 101 5.2 FUNCTIONAL DECOMPOSITION 103 5.3 OBJECT-BASED DECOMPOSITION 114 5.4 OBJECT-ORIENTED SOFTWARE CONSTRUCTION 116 5.5 ISSUES 117 5.6 KEY CONCEPTS INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER 119 5.7 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 119 Chapter 6: Abstract data types 121 6.1 CRITERIA 122 6.2 IMPLEMENTATION VARIATIONS 122 6.3 TOWARDS AN ABSTRACT VIEW OF OBJECTS 126 6.4 FORMALIZING THE SPECIFICATION 129 6.5 FROM ABSTRACT DATA TYPES TO CLASSES 142 6.6 BEYOND SOFTWARE 147 6.7 SUPPLEMENTARY TOPICS 148 6.8 KEY CONCEPTS INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER 159 6.9 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 160 EXERCISES 161 PART C: OBJECT-ORIENTED TECHNIQUES 163 Chapter 7: The static structure: classes 165 7.1 OBJECTS ARE NOT THE SUBJECT 165 7.2 AVOIDING THE STANDARD CONFUSION 166 7.3 THE ROLE OF CLASSES 169 7.4 A UNIFORM TYPE SYSTEM 171 7.5 A SIMPLE CLASS 172 7.6 BASIC CONVENTIONS 177CONTENTS xix 7.7 THE OBJECT-ORIENTED STYLE OF COMPUTATION 181 7.8 SELECTIVE EXPORTS AND INFORMATION HIDING 191 7.9 PUTTING EVERYTHING TOGETHER 194 7.10 DISCUSSION 203 7.11 KEY CONCEPTS INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER 213 7.12 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 215 EXERCISES 216 Chapter 8: The run-time structure: objects 217 8.1 OBJECTS 218 8.2 OBJECTS AS A MODELING TOOL 228 8.3 MANIPULATING OBJECTS AND REFERENCES 231 8.4 CREATION PROCEDURES 236 8.5 MORE ON REFERENCES 240 8.6 OPERATIONS ON REFERENCES 242 8.7 COMPOSITE OBJECTS AND EXPANDED TYPES 254 8.8 ATTACHMENT: REFERENCE AND VALUE SEMANTICS 261 8.9 DEALING WITH REFERENCES: BENEFITS AND DANGERS 265 8.10 DISCUSSION 270 8.11 KEY CONCEPTS INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER 276 8.12 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 277 EXERCISES 277 Chapter 9: Memory management 279 9.1 WHAT HAPPENS TO OBJECTS 279 9.2 THE CASUAL APPROACH 291 9.3 RECLAIMING MEMORY: THE ISSUES 293 9.4 PROGRAMMER-CONTROLLED DEALLOCATION 294 9.5 THE COMPONENT-LEVEL APPROACH 297 9.6 AUTOMATIC MEMORY MANAGEMENT 301 9.7 REFERENCE COUNTING 302 9.8 GARBAGE COLLECTION 304 9.9 PRACTICAL ISSUES OF GARBAGE COLLECTION 309 9.10 AN ENVIRONMENT WITH MEMORY MANAGEMENT 312 9.11 KEY CONCEPTS INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER 315 9.12 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 315 EXERCISES 316 Chapter 10: Genericity 317 10.1 HORIZONTAL AND VERTICAL TYPE GENERALIZATION 317 10.2 THE NEED FOR TYPE PARAMETERIZATION 318 10.3 GENERIC CLASSES 320CONTENTS xx 10.4 ARRAYS 325 10.5 THE COST OF GENERICITY 328 10.6 DISCUSSION: NOT DONE YET 329 10.7 KEY CONCEPTS INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER 329 10.8 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 330 EXERCISES 330 Chapter 11: Design by Contract: building reliable software 331 11.1 BASIC RELIABILITY MECHANISMS 332 11.2 ABOUT SOFTWARE CORRECTNESS 333 11.3 EXPRESSING A SPECIFICATION 334 11.4 INTRODUCING ASSERTIONS INTO SOFTWARE TEXTS 337 11.5 PRECONDITIONS AND POSTCONDITIONS 338 11.6 CONTRACTING FOR SOFTWARE RELIABILITY 341 11.7 WORKING WITH ASSERTIONS 348 11.8 CLASS INVARIANTS 363 11.9 WHEN IS A CLASS CORRECT? 369 11.10 THE ADT CONNECTION 373 11.11 AN ASSERTION INSTRUCTION 378 11.12 LOOP INVARIANTS AND VARIANTS 380 11.13 USING ASSERTIONS 389 11.14 DISCUSSION 398 11.15 KEY CONCEPTS INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER 406 11.16 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 407 EXERCISES 408 POSTSCRIPT: THE ARIANE 5 FAILURE 410 Chapter 12: When the contract is broken: exception handling 411 12.1 BASIC CONCEPTS OF EXCEPTION HANDLING 411 12.2 HANDLING EXCEPTIONS 414 12.3 AN EXCEPTION MECHANISM 419 12.4 EXCEPTION HANDLING EXAMPLES 422 12.5 THE TASK OF A RESCUE CLAUSE 427 12.6 ADVANCED EXCEPTION HANDLING 431 12.7 DISCUSSION 435 12.8 KEY CONCEPTS INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER 437 12.9 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 438 EXERCISES 438 Chapter 13: Supporting mechanisms 439 13.1 INTERFACING WITH NON-O-O SOFTWARE 439 13.2 ARGUMENT PASSING 444CONTENTS xxi 13.3 INSTRUCTIONS 447 13.4 EXPRESSIONS 452 13.5 STRINGS 456 13.6 INPUT AND OUTPUT 457 13.7 LEXICAL CONVENTIONS 457 13.8 KEY CONCEPTS INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER 458 EXERCISES 458 Chapter 14: Introduction to inheritance 459 14.1 POLYGONS AND RECTANGLES 460 14.2 POLYMORPHISM 467 14.3 TYPING FOR INHERITANCE 472 14.4 DYNAMIC BINDING 480 14.5 DEFERRED FEATURES AND CLASSES 482 14.6 REDECLARATION TECHNIQUES 491 14.7 THE MEANING OF INHERITANCE 494 14.8 THE ROLE OF DEFERRED CLASSES 500 14.9 DISCUSSION 507 14.10 KEY CONCEPTS INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER 516 14.11 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 517 EXERCISES 517 Chapter 15: Multiple inheritance 519 15.1 EXAMPLES OF MULTIPLE INHERITANCE 519 15.2 FEATURE RENAMING 535 15.3 FLATTENING THE STRUCTURE 541 15.4 REPEATED INHERITANCE 543 15.5 DISCUSSION 563 15.6 KEY CONCEPTS INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER 566 15.7 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 567 EXERCISES 567 Chapter 16: Inheritance techniques 569 16.1 INHERITANCE AND ASSERTIONS 569 16.2 THE GLOBAL INHERITANCE STRUCTURE 580 16.3 FROZEN FEATURES 583 16.4 CONSTRAINED GENERICITY 585 16.5 ASSIGNMENT ATTEMPT 591 16.6 TYPING AND REDECLARATION 595 16.7 ANCHORED DECLARATION 598 16.8 INHERITANCE AND INFORMATION HIDING 605 16.9 KEY CONCEPTS INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER 609CONTENTS xxii 16.10 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE 610 EXERCISES 610 Chapter 17: Typing 611 17.1 THE TYPING PROBLEM 611 17.2 STATIC TYPING: WHY AND HOW 615 17.3 COVARIANCE AND DESCENDANT HIDING 621 17.4 FIRST APPROACHES TO SYSTEM VALIDITY 628 17.5 RELYING ON ANCHORED TYPES 630 17.6 GLOBAL ANALYSIS 633 17.7 BEWARE OF POLYMORPHIC CATCALLS! 636 17.8 AN ASSESSMENT 639 17.9 THE PERFECT FIT 640 17.10 KEY CONCEPTS STUDIED IN THIS CHAPTER 641 17.11 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 641 Chapter 18: Global objects and constants 643 18.1 CONSTANTS OF BASIC TYPES 643 18.2 USE OF CONSTANTS 645 18.3 CONSTANTS OF CLASS TYPES 646 18.4 APPLICATIONS OF ONCE ROUTINES 648 18.5 CONSTANTS OF STRING TYPE 653 18.6 UNIQUE VALUES 654 18.7 DISCUSSION 656 18.8 KEY CONCEPTS INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER 659 18.9 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 660 EXERCISES 660 PART D: OBJECT-ORIENTED METHODOLOGY: APPLYING THE METHOD WELL 661 Chapter 19: On methodology 663 19.1 SOFTWARE METHODOLOGY: WHY AND WHAT 663 19.2 DEVISING GOOD RULES: ADVICE TO THE ADVISORS 664 19.3 ON USING METAPHORS 671 19.4 THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING HUMBLE 673 19.5 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 674 EXERCISES 674 Chapter 20: Design pattern: multi-panel interactive systems 675 20.1 MULTI-PANEL SYSTEMS 675 20.2 A SIMPLE-MINDED ATTEMPT 677CONTENTS xxiii 20.3 A FUNCTIONAL, TOP-DOWN SOLUTION 678 20.4 A CRITIQUE OF THE SOLUTION 682 20.5 AN OBJECT-ORIENTED ARCHITECTURE 684 20.6 DISCUSSION 693 20.7 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE 694 Chapter 21: Inheritance case study: “undo” in an interactive system 695 21.1 PERSEVERARE DIABOLICUM 695 21.2 FINDING THE ABSTRACTIONS 699 21.3 MULTI-LEVEL UNDO-REDO 704 21.4 IMPLEMENTATION ASPECTS 707 21.5 A USER INTERFACE FOR UNDOING AND REDOING 711 21.6 DISCUSSION 712 21.7 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 715 EXERCISES 715 Chapter 22: How to find the classes 719 22.1 STUDYING A REQUIREMENTS DOCUMENT 720 22.2 DANGER SIGNALS 726 22.3 GENERAL HEURISTICS FOR FINDING CLASSES 731 22.4 OTHER SOURCES OF CLASSES 735 22.5 REUSE 740 22.6 THE METHOD FOR OBTAINING CLASSES 741 22.7 KEY CONCEPTS INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER 743 22.8 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 744 Chapter 23: Principles of class design 747 23.1 SIDE EFFECTS IN FUNCTIONS 748 23.2 HOW MANY ARGUMENTS FOR A FEATURE? 764 23.3 CLASS SIZE: THE SHOPPING LIST APPROACH 770 23.4 ACTIVE DATA STRUCTURES 774 23.5 SELECTIVE EXPORTS 796 23.6 DEALING WITH ABNORMAL CASES 797 23.7 CLASS EVOLUTION: THE OBSOLETE CLAUSE 802 23.8 DOCUMENTING A CLASS AND A SYSTEM 803 23.9 KEY CONCEPTS INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER 806 23.10 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 806 EXERCISES 807CONTENTS xxiv Chapter 24: Using inheritance well 809 24.1 HOW NOT TO USE INHERITANCE 809 24.2 WOULD YOU RATHER BUY OR INHERIT? 812 24.3 AN APPLICATION: THE HANDLE TECHNIQUE 817 24.4 TAXOMANIA 820 24.5 USING INHERITANCE: A TAXONOMY OF TAXONOMY 822 24.6 ONE MECHANISM, OR MORE? 833 24.7 SUBTYPE INHERITANCE AND DESCENDANT HIDING 835 24.8 IMPLEMENTATION INHERITANCE 844 24.9 FACILITY INHERITANCE 847 24.10 MULTIPLE CRITERIA AND VIEW INHERITANCE 851 24.11 HOW TO DEVELOP INHERITANCE STRUCTURES 858 24.12 A SUMMARY VIEW: USING INHERITANCE WELL 862 24.13 KEY CONCEPTS INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER 863 24.14 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 863 24.15 APPENDIX: A HISTORY OF TAXONOMY 864 EXERCISES 869 Chapter 25: Useful techniques 871 25.1 DESIGN PHILOSOPHY 871 25.2 CLASSES 872 25.3 INHERITANCE TECHNIQUES 873 Chapter 26: A sense of style 875 26.1 COSMETICS MATTERS! 875 26.2 CHOOSING THE RIGHT NAMES 879 26.3 USING CONSTANTS 884 26.4 HEADER COMMENTS AND INDEXING CLAUSES 886 26.5 TEXT LAYOUT AND PRESENTATION 891 26.6 FONTS 900 26.7 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 901 EXERCISES 902 Chapter 27: Object-oriented analysis 903 27.1 THE GOALS OF ANALYSIS 903 27.2 THE CHANGING NATURE OF ANALYSIS 906 27.3 THE CONTRIBUTION OF OBJECT TECHNOLOGY 907 27.4 PROGRAMMING A TV STATION 907 27.5 EXPRESSING THE ANALYSIS: MULTIPLE VIEWS 914 27.6 ANALYSIS METHODS 917 27.7 THE BUSINESS OBJECT NOTATION 919 27.8 BIBLIOGRAPHY 922CONTENTS xxv Chapter 28: The software construction process 923 28.1 CLUSTERS 923 28.2 CONCURRENT ENGINEERING 924 28.3 STEPS AND TASKS 926 28.4 THE CLUSTER MODEL OF THE SOFTWARE LIFECYCLE 926 28.5 GENERALIZATION 928 28.6 SEAMLESSNESS AND REVERSIBILITY 930 28.7 WITH US, EVERYTHING IS THE FACE 933 28.8 KEY CONCEPTS COVERED IN THIS CHAPTER 934 28.9 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 934 Chapter 29: Teaching the method 935 29.1 INDUSTRIAL TRAINING 935 29.2 INTRODUCTORY COURSES 937 29.3 OTHER COURSES 941 29.4 TOWARDS A NEW SOFTWARE PEDAGOGY 942 29.5 AN OBJECT-ORIENTED PLAN 946 29.6 KEY CONCEPTS STUDIED IN THIS CHAPTER 948 29.7 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 948 PART E: ADVANCED TOPICS 949 Chapter 30: Concurrency, distribution, client-server and the Internet 951 30.1 A SNEAK PREVIEW 951 30.2 THE RISE OF CONCURRENCY 953 30.3 FROM PROCESSES TO OBJECTS 956 30.4 INTRODUCING CONCURRENT EXECUTION 964 30.5 SYNCHRONIZATION ISSUES 977 30.6 ACCESSING SEPARATE OBJECTS 982 30.7 WAIT CONDITIONS 990 30.8 REQUESTING SPECIAL SERVICE 998 30.9 EXAMPLES 1003 30.10 TOWARDS A PROOF RULE 1022 30.11 A SUMMARY OF THE MECHANISM 1025 30.12 DISCUSSION 1028 30.13 KEY CONCEPTS INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER 1032 30.14 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 1033 EXERCISES 1035CONTENTS xxvi Chapter 31: Object persistence and databases 1037 31.1 PERSISTENCE FROM THE LANGUAGE 1037 31.2 BEYOND PERSISTENCE CLOSURE 1039 31.3 SCHEMA EVOLUTION 1041 31.4 FROM PERSISTENCE TO DATABASES 1047 31.5 OBJECT-RELATIONAL INTEROPERABILITY 1048 31.6 OBJECT-ORIENTED DATABASE FUNDAMENTALS 1050 31.7 O-O DATABASE SYSTEMS: EXAMPLES 1055 31.8 DISCUSSION: BEYOND O-O DATABASES 1058 31.9 KEY CONCEPTS STUDIED IN THIS CHAPTER 1060 31.10 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 1061 EXERCISES 1062 Chapter 32: Some O-O techniques for graphical interactive applications 1063 32.1 NEEDED TOOLS 1064 32.2 PORTABILITY AND PLATFORM ADAPTATION 1066 32.3 GRAPHICAL ABSTRACTIONS 1068 32.4 INTERACTION MECHANISMS 1071 32.5 HANDLING THE EVENTS 1072 32.6 A MATHEMATICAL MODEL 1076 32.7 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 1076 PART F: APPLYING THE METHOD IN VARIOUS LANGUAGES AND ENVIRONMENTS 1077 Chapter 33: O-O programming and Ada 1079 33.1 A BIT OF CONTEXT 1079 33.2 PACKAGES 1081 33.3 A STACK IMPLEMENTATION 1081 33.4 HIDING THE REPRESENTATION: THE PRIVATE STORY 1085 33.5 EXCEPTIONS 1088 33.6 TASKS 1091 33.7 FROM ADA TO ADA 95 1092 33.8 KEY CONCEPTS INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER 1097 33.9 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 1097 EXERCISES 1098CONTENTS xxvii Chapter 34: Emulating object technology in non-O-O environments 1099 34.1 LEVELS OF LANGUAGE SUPPORT 1099 34.2 OBJECT-ORIENTED PROGRAMMING IN PASCAL? 1100 34.3 FORTRAN 1102 34.4 OBJECT-ORIENTED PROGRAMMING AND C 1106 34.5 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 1112 EXERCISES 1112 Chapter 35: Simula to Java and beyond: major O-O languages and environments 1113 35.1 SIMULA 1113 35.2 SMALLTALK 1126 35.3 LISP EXTENSIONS 1130 35.4 C EXTENSIONS 1131 35.5 JAVA 1136 35.6 OTHER O-O LANGUAGES 1137 35.7 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 1138 EXERCISES 1139 PART G: DOING IT RIGHT 1141 Chapter 36: An object-oriented environment 1143 36.1 COMPONENTS 1143 36.2 THE LANGUAGE 1144 36.3 THE COMPILATION TECHNOLOGY 1144 36.4 TOOLS 1148 36.5 LIBRARIES 1150 36.6 INTERFACE MECHANISMS 1152 36.7 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 1160 Epilogue, In Full Frankness Exposing the Language 1161
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