Graders:
- Nicolas Ioannou
- Jie Bing
Lecture Hours: 3:35 - 5:00 p.m. on Wednesdays in CMPSCI 142. This course will span eight lectures starting September 7, 2011. Please make sure that you attend this first lecture.
Office Hours: Thursdays, 10am-12pm, currently in room 366.
Online Resources:[/url]
- Mark Corner's (and edited by Emery Berger) intro to C++ for Java programmers.
- C++ FAQ (this is a really great document)
- Stroustrup's page on C++
- A great C++ reference - even covers C++11
- An online C++ reference that has loads of examples for the STL
- GDB Documentation
- Emacs Reference Card (PDF)
- Vim Reference Card (PDF)
- U. of Minnesota Unix Quick Reference Card (PDF) (looks like a good intro)
- GNU's Make Manual
Textbooks:No textbook is required for the course. Computer Science textbooks get expensive quickly, and I believe about 90% of the most common details can be learned from online resources. However far be it for me to deny someone a book recommendation if they eagerly want one. Below are a few books I recommend. While I do not think you need a book to learn C++, having one as a reference is very convenient.
Recommended Books:"C++ for Java Programmers"by Mark Allen Weiss, Pearson Prentice Hall, 2004."Practical C++"by Robert W. McGregor"C++ Primer"by Stanley B. Lippman (I have this one. It's a hefty thing, but I really like it)
Note : The template and a lot of material for this course page (including lectures and some homeworks) is borrowed from the course pages of Mark Smucker, Ed Walters and Nilanjan Banerjee.
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Marc Cartright Programming in C++,UMASS 2011.rar
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