List Price: $79.99Amazon.com's Price: $55.43 You Save: $24.56 (31%)Prices subject to change.
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Binding: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 005.133
EAN: 9780201700732
ISBN: 0201700735
Label: Addison-Wesley Professional
Manufacturer: Addison-Wesley Professional
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 1030
Publication Date: February 11, 2000
Publisher: Addison-Wesley Professional
Sales Rank: 13097
Studio: Addison-Wesley Professional
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Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - A lot of information. Well organized. From a man who has done an enormous amount of work on C++.
The C++ Programming Language seems like the most thorough documentation of C++ overall. It's written by the guy who is basically the creator of C++. I tend to have a lot of respect for him. This book has a crazy lot of information in it. It seems well organized but very dense. If you were to learn it all, I would be impressed.
Rating: - C++ Stroustrup
awesome book,the best c++ book I've read, the shipping/deliver rates are really good, and the book rules.
Rating: - The Book Of All Books
What else can I say about the book made by the man himself. Well since I didn't say anything yet, I guess I better get started. (I admit that was bad).
I agree that you need previous knowledge of c++, but if people are going through the c++ books and realizing that they are just repeats of old knowledge you already know, then this book does the least of your concerns.
This book does present you with SOME past information, however it seems to present it much more difficult ... Read More
Rating: - Beginner or Advanced, this book is for you
This book is a great reference whether you're a beginner or an expert on C++. Coming from the creator of the C++ language you won't find any book more detailed on the language. This is definitely a keeper.
Rating: - The C++ equivalent of K&R
This book has everything it advertises. It gives you an in-depth description of the language and plenty of examples of how to use it. It should be every C++ programmer's primary reference.
I did find one problem with the book: It does not sufficiently describe how the default compare, assign, and copy operations work. I recently had a problem at work with the default comparison of two instances of an object in an embedded system, and the only way I could debug the problem was by adding ... Read More
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