I think the question you are asking is fairly straight-forward and deserves a corresponding answer, rather than a bibliography or a lecture about how you'll never be a decent C++ programmer until you've fulfilled a certain number of specific criteria, bla, bla, bla...
Therefore,
No, this is not a bad start to the subject. In fact I regard it as a very concise, well-written and highly understandable start to the subject of the C++ programming language.
It is not, however, (and doesn't propose to be) a guide to good programming practice and theory in general.
English is inherently an extremely bastardized language. Its rapid and continual evolution has in fact been a major reason for its success. It is also a much less splintered language than it has been in the past when it usage was confined to a much small geographical area.
I think the question you are asking is fairly straight-forward and deserves a corresponding answer, rather than a bibliography or a lecture about how you'll never be a decent C++ programmer until you've fulfilled a certain number of specific criteria, bla, bla, bla...
Therefore,
No, this is not a bad start to the subject.
In fact I regard it as a very concise, well-written and highly understandable start to the subject of the C++ programming language.
It is not, however, (and doesn't propose to be) a guide to good programming practice and theory in general.
English is inherently an extremely bastardized language. Its rapid and continual evolution has in fact been a major reason for its success.
It is also a much less splintered language than it has been in the past when it usage was confined to a much small geographical area.
Sorry, I was hoping for a picture of it.
Did I miss it?
Like the links tho'.
Good luck scanning in the recipes from your 100k cookbooks.
That should keep you busy for a while.
Thank you.
I was unaware of this.
Do you have a plausible explanation for the fact that all your scores (less 1) are higher than 1?
Am I missing something here??