Programming Logic and Design, Introductory, Third Edition provides the beginning programmer with a guide to developing structured program logic. This textbook assumes no programming experience and... This description may be from another edition of this product.
I am using this book in conjunction with a programming class I am taking and its a wonderful reference and guide book. It really helps you get a feel for the correct way to develop psuedocode and flowcharts for your programs. The only problem I have is that I wish there were more practice sessions within the book. Other than that really well developed. I would recommend this to any budding developers.
OO and event driven programming
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
Recently, I reviewed another programming book, How to Think Like a Programmer. Farrell's text can be regarded as going beyond that one. Both do cover similar ground. As in explaining the mindset of a programmer; especially the need to think strictly and rigourously. But here, Farrell takes the reader into the subject of object oriented programming. Showing why this has perhaps become the dominant preferred coding methodology for professional programmers. As opposed to procedural coding, which was the earlier paradigm. She also covers event driven programs. Which can at first seem quite different from introductory examples of programs. You can see that event driven code is often closely associated with programs that need a GUI. And it is a reality of much current coding that you'll have to write a GUI. So long as you carefully read the text, event driven programming will not be anything mysterious.
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