by Randal L. Schwartz and Tom Phoenix
ISBN 0-596-00132-0
Third Edition, published July 2001.
(See the catalog page for this book.)
the text of Learning Perl, 3rd Edition.
Table of Contents
Copyright Page
Preface
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Scalar Data
Chapter 3: Lists and Arrays
Chapter 4: Subroutines
Chapter 5: Hashes
Chapter 6: I/O Basics
Chapter 7: Concepts of Regular Expressions
Chapter 8: More About Regular Expressions
Chapter 9: Using Regular Expressions
Chapter 10: More Control Structures
Chapter 11: Filehandles and File Tests
Chapter 12: Directory Operations
Chapter 13: Manipulating Files and Directories
Chapter 14: Process Management
Chapter 15: Strings and Sorting
Chapter 16: Simple Databases
Chapter 17: Some Advanced Perl Techniques
Appendix A: Exercise Answers
Appendix B: Beyond the Llama
Index
Colophon
by Randal L. Schwartz and Tom Phoenix
ISBN 0-596-00132-0
Third Edition, published July 2001.
(See the catalog page for this book.)
Learning Perl, 3rd Edition.
Table of Contents
Copyright Page
Preface
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Scalar Data
Chapter 3: Lists and Arrays
Chapter 4: Subroutines
Chapter 5: Hashes
Chapter 6: I/O Basics
Chapter 7: Concepts of Regular Expressions
Chapter 8: More About Regular Expressions
Chapter 9: Using Regular Expressions
Chapter 10: More Control Structures
Chapter 11: Filehandles and File Tests
Chapter 12: Directory Operations
Chapter 13: Manipulating Files and Directories
Chapter 14: Process Management
Chapter 15: Strings and Sorting
Chapter 16: Simple Databases
Chapter 17: Some Advanced Perl Techniques
Appendix A: Exercise Answers
Appendix B: Beyond the Llama
Index
Colophon
This book is the most accurate and up-to-date source of information the STL currently available. ... It has an approach and appeal of its own: it explains techniques for building data Structures and algorithms on top of the STL, and in this way appreciates the STL for what it is - a framework. Angelika Langer, Independent Consultant and C++ Report Columnist "A superbly authored treatment of the STL......an excellent book which belongs in any serious C++ developer s library." Jim Armstrong, President 2112 F/X, Texas. \n
The C++ Standard Template Library (STL) represents a breakthrough in C++ programming techniques. With it, software developers can achieve vast improvements in the reliability of their software, and increase their own productivity.
This program displays all SMBIOS/DMI information within the BIOS. The
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certain Type. For more details, see a copy of the SMBIOS
specification "System Management BIOS Reference Specification".
This cookbook contains a wealth of solutions to problems that SQL programmers face all the time. Recipes inside range from how to perform simple tasks, like importing external data, to ways of handling issues that are more complicated, like set algebra. Each recipe includes a discussion that explains the logic and concepts underlying the solution. The book covers audit logging, hierarchies, importing data, sets, statistics, temporal data, and data Structures.
Linux編程的經(jīng)典書,OReilly系列。The new edition of Understanding the Linux Kernel takes you on a guided tour through the most significant data Structures, many algorithms, and programming tricks used in the kernel.
華東師范大學(面向?qū)ο蟪绦蛟O(shè)計基于C++)課程全部作業(yè)(12次)代碼,包含一個大整數(shù)類。(包含作業(yè)內(nèi)容)
1 How to use VC++ & IBM Visual Age (XL) C++
2 Pointers, Arrays and Structures
3 Operators & Statements
4 Functions
5 Use of classes in STL
6 Define concrete classes
7 Data abstraction
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9 Define integer type with arbitrary precision
10 Virtual functions
11 Templates
12 Exception handling
As science advances, novel experiments are becoming more and more complex, requiring a zoo of control devices and electronics executing complicated sequences of steps. Device availability and monetary constrains usually lead to a highly heterogeneous setup with components from several different manufacturers using many different protocols and interfacing mechanisms. This often results in control software being puzzled together to use and provide a multitude of interfacing and control functionality, each using their own calling conventions, data Structures, etc. To make matters worse, usually a group of relatively independent programmers is trying to write and maintain the code base. Often this causes extensive duplication of effort as program segments are hard to reuse, since unpredictable changes to the segments by the original authors might compromise other code using these segments.
The second volume in the Write Great Code series supplies the critical information that today s computer science students don t often get from college and university courses: How to carefully choose their high-level language statements to produce efficient code. Write Great Code, Volume 2: Thinking Low-Level, Writing High-Level, teaches software engineers how compilers translate high-level language statements and data Structures into machine code. Armed with this knowledge, a software engineer can make an informed choice concerning the use of those high-level Structures to help the compiler produce far better machine code--all without having to give up the productivity and portability benefits of using a high-level language