Hello everyone. |
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Hello everyone. |
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Well, first thing you are going to want to do is get Code::Blocks. |
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Sorry, you can't feasibly be a professional programmer and only one know programming language. You can specialize in one, that's just fine, but you're going to need to be familiar in several. Market demands, you understand. Don't worry though, once you've got a grasp of the first language you'll learn pretty quickly that they're all basically the same. It's only the first language that's conceptually demanding. It's only differences in syntax, really. |
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You're going to need to go to college for software engineering. Tech companies expect a bachelors degree or higher, so you have plenty of time to learn C++. Find a good college that uses C++, there are lots of them. |
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I have some decent programming books on file and threw a little melange together for you. I hope you find them useful: |
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Sorry, I should had phrased myself right. C++ will be my first and then I will continue to learn the others. I'm just focusing on C++ until I have a extremely high understanding of it and then I will continue on to learning the others which are more likely to be used in business. |
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Sorry, for some reason it posted twice so just delete this post. |
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One suggestion: learn Java first. |
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I don't know, the two languages are so syntactically similar that it probably doesn't matter much from a learning perspective. I liked C++ a little better. It felt less restrictive. |
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Go for it! |
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I'm currently a web designer/programmer and I started to learn C when I was about 14 or 15, it's good to get a handle on this stuff early before you head off to college. So props on getting started young. |
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Last edited by SteadyState; 07-09-2010 at 01:40 AM.
"It is better to travel well than to arrive." - Buddha
Microsoft gives away--free--their programming environments Lite. Secondly, books be can had off the torrent market by the buckets. |
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Last edited by Philosopher8659; 07-09-2010 at 12:37 PM.
To get you started, MIT does a very good lecture series: |
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Thank you everyone. |
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You really should go with C++. I'm taking online courses right now for C++ game development now and it's a breeze. |
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"Don't kill me. I'm in a dream right now, and if you kill me I'll die in real life too!" -Me, age 5-8, talking to a dinosaur.
When you are a beginner the first language you learn is going to have a steep learning curve while you get to grips with the fundamentals. The language you choose doesn't really matter so long as it's popular enough that good resources are available. C++ is an excellent choice. |
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I don't think I saw anyone link this: C++ Language Tutorial <-- Has everything on the STL, and general C++ programming. Also the tutorial is easy to understand and moves at a good pace. |
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Yes, cplusplus.com is a godsend. And unlike msdn, it's upkept and up to date. |
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Try going from C to Common Lisp or Haskell and see if you still agree with this. If so, I'd say you're writing one of them poorly. While there are classes of language for which this holds true, each language has it's own way of doing things. |
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Previously PhilosopherStoned
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