Learning Cpp----Getting Started it!

I have studied C++ for some time discontinuously.i feel it's hard to catch it.Event i do not be getting started really now.

recently,i found a really good website of C++ tutorial--http://www.learncpp.com/ .

Though it's written in English,it's really simply,and very be suited to the begginer for C++ programming . 

Since i have so many time,and i need to study C++, let's do it !

To study C++ from zero ,and to study english!

 

I hope i will finish the tutorial before the New Year. The following articles will be some summary or some  section i pick from the tutorial.

 

Appendix: the menu of the CPP.COM tutorial

 

 

Chapter 0 Introduction / Getting Started
 0.1 Introduction to these tutorials
 0.2 Introduction to programming languages
 0.3 Introduction to C/C++
 0.4 Introduction to development
 0.5 Installing an Integrated Development Environment (IDE)
 0.6 Compiling your first program
 0.7 A few common C++ problems
 
Chapter 1 C++ Basics
 1.1 Structure of a program
 1.2 Comments
 1.3 A first look at variables (and cin)
 1.4 A first look at functions
 1.5 A first look at operators
 1.6 Whitespace and basic formatting
 1.7 Forward declarations
 1.8 Programs with multiple files
 1.9 Header files
 1.10 A first look at the preprocessor
 1.10a How to design your first programs
 1.11 Comprehensive quiz
 
Chapter 2 Variables Part I
 2.1 Basic addressing and variable declaration
 2.2 Keywords and naming identifiers
 2.3 Variable sizes and the sizeof operator
 2.4 Integers
 2.5 Floating point numbers
 2.6 Boolean Values
 2.7 Chars
 2.8 Constants
 2.9 Hungarian Notation
 2.10 Comprehensive quiz
 
Chapter 3 Operators
 3.1 Precedence and associativity
 3.2 Arithmetic operators
 3.3 Increment/decrement operators, and side effects
 3.4 Sizeof, comma, and arithmetic if operators
 3.5 Relational operators (comparisons)
 3.6 Logical operators
 3.7 Converting between binary and decimal
 3.8 Bitwise operators
 
Chapter 4 Variables Part II
 4.1 Blocks (compound statements) and local variables
 4.2 Global variables (and why they are evil)
 4.3 File scope and the static keyword
 4.4 Type conversion and casting
 4.5 Enumerated types
 4.6 Typedefs
 4.7 Structs
 
Chapter 5 Control Flow
 5.1 Control flow introduction
 5.2 If statements
 5.3 Switch statements
 5.4 Goto statements
 5.5 While statements
 5.6 Do while statements
 5.7 For statements
 5.8 Break and continue
 5.9 Random number generation
 
Chapter 6 Arrays, Strings, Pointers, and References
 6.1 Arrays (Part I)
 6.2 Arrays (Part II)
 6.3 Arrays and loops
 6.4 Sorting an array using selection sort
 6.5 Multidimensional arrays
 6.6 C-style strings
 6.7 Introduction to pointers
 6.8 Pointers, arrays, and pointer arithmetic
 6.9 Dynamic memory allocation with new and delete
 6.10 Pointers and const
 6.11 References
 6.12 References vs pointers, and member selection
 6.13 Void pointers
 
Chapter 7 Functions
 7.1 Function parameters and arguments
 7.2 Passing arguments by value
 7.3 Passing arguments by reference
 7.4 Passing arguments by address
 7.4a Returning values by value, reference, and address
 7.5 Inline functions
 7.6 Function overloading
 7.7 Default parameters
 7.8 Function pointers
 7.9 The stack and the heap
 7.10 Recursion
 7.11 Namespaces
 7.12 Handling errors (assert, cerr, exit, and exceptions)
 7.13 Command line arguments
 7.14 Ellipses (and why to avoid them)
 
Chapter 8 Basic object-oriented programming
 8.1 Welcome to object-oriented programming
 8.2 Classes and class members
 8.3 Public vs private access specifiers
 8.4 Access functions and encapsulation
 8.5 Constructors
 8.6 Destructors
 8.7 The hidden “this” pointer
 8.8 Constructors (Part II)
 8.9 Class code and header files
 8.10 Const class objects and member functions
 8.11 Static member variables
 8.12 Static member functions
 8.13 Friend functions and classes
 8.14 Anonymous variables and objects
 
Chapter 9 Operator overloading
 9.1 Introduction to operator overloading
 9.2 Overloading the arithmetic operators
 9.3 Overloading the I/O operators
 9.4 Overloading the comparison operators
 9.5 Overloading unary operators +, -, and !
 9.6 Overloading operators using member functions
 9.7 Overloading the increment and decrement operators
 9.8 Overloading the subscript operator
 9.9 Overloading the parenthesis operator
 9.10 Overloading typecasts
 9.11 The copy constructor and overloading the assignment operator
 9.12 Shallow vs. deep copying
 
Chapter 10 Composition
 10.1 Constructor initialization lists
 10.2 Composition
 10.3 Aggregation
 10.4 Container classes
 
Chapter 11 Inheritance
 11.1 Introduction to inheritance
 11.2 Basic inheritance in C++
 11.3 Order of construction of derived classes
 11.4 Constructors and initialization of derived classes
 11.5 Inheritance and access specifiers
 11.6 Adding, changing, and hiding members in a derived class
 11.7 Multiple inheritance
 11.8 Virtual base classes
 
Chapter 12 Virtual Functions
 12.1 Pointers and references to the base class of derived objects
 12.2 Virtual functions
 12.3 Virtual destructors, virtual assignment, and overriding virtualization
 12.4 Early binding and late binding
 12.5 The virtual table
 12.6 Pure virtual functions, abstract base classes, and interface classes
 
Chapter 13 Input and output (I/O)
 13.1 Input and output (I/O) streams
 13.2 Input with istream
 13.3 Output with ostream and ios
 13.4 Stream classes for strings
 13.5 Stream states and input validation
 13.6 Basic file I/O
 13.7 Random file I/O
 
Chapter 14 Templates
 14.1 Function templates
 14.2 Function template instances
 14.3 Template classes
 14.4 Expression parameters and template specialization
 14.5 Class template specialization
 14.6 Partial template specialization
 
Chapter 15 Exceptions
 15.1 The need for exceptions
 15.2 Basic exception handling
 15.3 Exceptions, functions, and stack unwinding
 15.4 Uncaught exceptions, catch-all handlers, and exception specifiers
 15.5 Exceptions, classes, and inheritance
 15.6 Exception dangers and downsides
 
Chapter 16 Reserved for C++0x
 
Chapter 17 std::string
 17.1 std::string and std::wstring
 17.2 std::string construction and destruction
 17.3 std::string length and capacity
 17.4 std::string character access and conversion to C-style arrays
 17.5 std::string assignment and swapping
 17.6 std::string appending
 17.7 std::string inserting
 
Appendix A Miscellaneous Subjects
 A.1 Static and dynamic libraries
 A.2 Using libraries with Visual Studio Express 2005
 A.3 Using libraries with Code::Blocks
 A.4 Debugging your program (stepping and breakpoints)
 A.5 Debugging your program (watching variables and the call stack)

转载于:https://www.cnblogs.com/fangmei/archive/2010/12/23/1914364.html

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