The C++ Editor is a text editor for C++ programmers. The editor have
color syntax highlighting. Editor s main purpose is to edit source
code files outside the IDE (Integrated Development Environment) with
multiple opened copies of program, when programmer needs to find,
replace or compare source code. The program can compile the file
using for this purpose the Microsoft VC compiler. Most effectively
the editor can be used with a file search utility. The search utility
Search&Edit or IDE Helper is available for download on developer s
WEB site (http://www.easydevtools.com/dwnl_frame.htm).
This is a GMM related paper written by Dar-Shyan Lee, and useful as well as convenient for programmer to read and research GMM files and improve the efficiency of GMM algorithm
The C++ Cookbook will make your path to mastery much shorter. This practical, problem-solving guide is ideal if you re an engineer, programmer, or researcher writing an application for one of the legions of platforms on which C++ runs. The algorithms provided in C++ Cookbook will jump-start your development by giving you some basic building blocks that you don t have to develop on your own.
This material is not only up-to-date, it defines up-to-date. It is truly cutting-edge. As the only book on the subject, Rootkits will be of interest to any Windows security researcher or security programmer. It s detailed, well researched and the technical information is excellent. The level of technical detail, research, and time invested in developing relevant examples is impressive.
The Fortran 90 Handbook is a definitive and comprehensive guide to Fortran 90
and its use. Fortran 90, the latest standard version of Fortran, has many
excellent new features that will assist the programmer in writing efficient,
portable, and maintainable programs. The Fortran 90 Handbook is an informal
description of Fortran 90, developed to provide not only a readable
explanation of features, but also some rationale for the inclusion of features
and their use. In addition, “models” give the reader better insight as to why
things are done as they are in the language.
Like many of my colleagues in this industry, I learned Windows programming from Charles Petzold s Programming Windows—a classic programming text that is the bible to an entire generation of Windows programmers. When I set out to become an MFC programmer in 1994, I went shopping for an MFC equivalent to Programming Windows. After searching in vain for such a book and spending a year learning MFC the old-fashioned way, I decided to write one myself. It s the book you hold in your hands. And it s the book I would like to have had when I was learning to program Windows the MFC way.