[Home] [Downloads] [Search] [Help/forum]

Gammon Software Solutions forum

See www.mushclient.com/spam for dealing with forum spam. Please read the MUSHclient FAQ!

[Folder]  Entire forum
-> [Folder]  Programming
. -> [Folder]  STL
. . -> [Subject]  Whats a good STL book?

Home  |  Users  |  Search  |  FAQ
Username:
Register forum user name
Password:
Forgotten password?
(New message)
Subject: Whats a good STL book?
Name:
Your forum user name.
Register forum user name
Password:
Your forum password.
Forgotten password?
Message:
Message to be posted (in English, please)
Maximum of 6000 characters. Text only please, no HTML.
Forum codes:
Check this if your message uses 'forum codes' or templates (auto-detected for new posts).
Forum codes Templates

Save this message ...


Subject review (reverse sequence)

Posted by Nick Gammon   Australia  (18,770 posts)  [Biography] bio   Forum Administrator
Date Tue 20 Jan 2004 10:04 AM (UTC)  quote  ]

Amended on Tue 20 Jan 2004 06:46 PM (UTC) by Nick Gammon

Message
The first book I would buy is:

The C++ Standard Library - A Tutorial and Reference
By Nicolai M. Josuttis
Published by Addison-Wesley
ISBN: 0-201-37926-0
Cover price: $US 59.99

This is indeed an excellent introduction (around 800 pages), and covers the various container types (lists, maps, vectors etc.) plus the algorithms (sort, etc.), function objects, strings and a whole lot of stuff.


There is also:

STL Tutorial and Reference Guide - C++ Programming with the Standard Template Library
By David R. Musser and Atul Saini
Published by Addison-Wesley
ISBN: 0-201-63398-1
Cover price: $US 44.95

This one is 400 pages. However if you have the Josuttis book I think it is not really necessary.



I also have:

Effective STL - 50 Specific Ways to Improve Your Use of the Standard Template Library
By Scott Meyers
Published by Addison-Wesley
ISBN: 0-201-74962-9
Cover Price: $US 39.99

This has some interesting tips and covers some more obscure points (260 pages).


However I really recommend the Josuttis book first and foremost, and look at the other ones once you become more familiar with STL.


- Nick Gammon

www.gammon.com.au, www.mushclient.com
[Go to top] top

Posted by David Haley   USA  (3,881 posts)  [Biography] bio   Moderator
Date Mon 19 Jan 2004 10:16 AM (UTC)  quote  ]

Amended on Tue 20 Jan 2004 04:11 PM (UTC) by David Haley

Message
Nick took most of his stuff from the same book he recommended me, which is Josuttis's "C++ Standard Library- A tutorial and reference" or something like that.

Excellent, excellent book. However, it does assume that you know C++ quite well.

[edit to fix spelling of Josuttis's name. :)]

David Haley aka Ksilyan
Head Programmer,
Legends of the Darkstone

http://david.the-haleys.org
[Go to top] top

Posted by Nick Cash   USA  (626 posts)  [Biography] bio
Date Mon 19 Jan 2004 06:42 AM (UTC)  quote  ]
Message
Alright, well, I just got bored and read all of this stuff about STL, and now I'm interested. Like I did with C, C++, Java, HTML, XML, PHP and MySQL, I believe I'll start with a book. Which one would you reccomend? Or two? Or three? :)
Thanks.

~Nick Cash
http://www.nick-cash.com
[Go to top] top

The dates and times for posts above are shown in Universal Co-ordinated Time (UTC).

To show them in your local time you can join the forum, and then set the 'time correction' field in your profile to the number of hours difference between your location and UTC time.


8,233 views.

[Reply to this subject]  Reply to this subject   [New subject]  Start a new subject   [Refresh] Refresh page

Go to topic:           Search the forum


[Go to top] top

[Home]

Written by Nick Gammon - 5K

Comments to: Gammon Software support
[RH click to get RSS URL] Forum RSS feed ( http://www.gammon.com.au/rss/forum.xml )

[Best viewed with any browser - 2K]    [Internet Contents Rating Association (ICRA) - 2K]    [Web site powered by FutureQuest.Net]