On Sunday, May 6, 2012 8:27:31 PM UTC+1, Charles Richmond wrote:
> <
nick_keigh...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
> news:19373891.198.1336231017277.JavaMail.geo-discussion-forums@vbvx4...
>
> > K&R is a very "dense" book, there is a lot of information packed into very
> > few pages. In my
> > experience of mentoring someone K&R is difficult for programming
> > beginners, one reasons
> > being the lack of "model" answers to the questions. Look for the
> > comp.lang.c wiki a project
> > now moribund (or last time I looked it was) but it did provide model
> > answers to K&Rs
> > questions. But if you use them you *must* try to answer the questions
> > yourself first.
>
> But the density of information is what I *liked* about K&R.
it was a statement not a critcism. I was attempting to explain why some beginners found it hard going. I loved it, but C was not my first programming language.
> And I used K&R one to learn C
> in the beginnin, although it was *not* my first language. I really dislike
> the books that
> have so much fluff...
ditto. But you and I aren't the entirity of the programming community. Cute icons, big margins, cartoons are notmy cup of tea in a programming book. Did Knuth have cartoons?
> that you have to read a half dozen pages to come up
> with three or four
> pieces of *real* information. I think it's called "dumbing down".
ever read any of "Head Up" stuff? They drive me insane.