网站购物车   | 店铺购物车  
店铺平均得分:99.96 分,再接再厉!!!【查看全部评价】
评分 40分 50分 60分 70分 80分 90分 100分
数量 0 0 0 0 1 0 471
本店铺共有 0 笔投诉记录,投诉率 0% ,低于平均投诉率 1% 【查看详细】
投诉类型
数量
比例
店主称呼:流年   联系方式:购买咨询请联系我  15758542161    地址:云南省 昆明市 官渡区 黄土坡
促销广告:正版二手旧书,购买多本多仓库发货,多本可优惠
图书分类
店铺公告
正版二手多仓发货,购买多本时会有多个快递发货,不指定快递。
二手书默认不含CD/小册子,有会附赠。
批量上传,套装书只是一本的价格,需要套装联系客服(点击在线交谈)。
不接急单,售后问题请直接电话联系客服(或微信)15758542161。
店铺介绍
正版二手多仓发货,购买多本时会有多个快递发货,不指定快递。
二手书默认不含CD/小册子,有会附赠。
批量上传,套装书只是一本的价格,需要套装联系客服(点击在线交谈)。
不接急单,售后问题请直接电话联系客服(或微信)15758542161。
交易帮助
第一步:选择图书放入购物车。
第二步:结算、填写收货地址。
第三步:担保付款或银行汇款。
第四步:卖家发货。
第五步:确认收货、评价。
作/译者:李普曼 出版社:人民邮电出版社
C++ Primer-(英文版)(第4版)
出版日期:2006年11月
ISBN:9787115151698 [十位:7115151695]
页数:885      
定价:¥99.00
店铺售价:¥20.30 (为您节省:¥78.70
店铺库存:6
注:您当前是在入驻店铺购买,非有路网直接销售。
正在处理购买信息,请稍候……
我要买: * 如何购买
** 关于库存、售价、配送费等具体信息建议直接联系店主咨询。
联系店主:购买咨询请联系我  15758542161
本店已缴纳保证金,请放心购买!【如何赔付?】
买家对店铺的满意度评价:查看更多>>
评分
评价内容
评论人
订单图书
《C++ Primer-(英文版)(第4版)》内容提要:
C++诞生20年后,因其强大的功能、广泛的适用性和极高的效率,已经成为无庸置疑的主流编程语言。但是C++语言也不得不面对这样的挑战:其博大精深不仅令初学者望而生畏,而且即使是许多富于经验的老手也很难全面掌握,更有不少C++程序员一直背负着C语言的历史包袱,常常落入各种微妙难解的**和性能陷阱。如何使现代C++理念深入人心,使C++更加容易学习和使用,已经成为众所瞩目的焦点。
本书是久负盛名的C++经典教程,已经帮助全球无数程序员学会了C++。这一全新版本进行了彻底的修订,章节内容和编排都经过了重新组织,既显著改善了可读性,又充分体现了C++语言的*新进展和当前的业界*佳实践。本书是C++大师Stan B. Lippman丰富的实践经验和C++标准委员会原负责人Josée Lajoie对C++标准深入理解的**结合。新版更加入了C++先驱Barbara E. Moo在C++教学方面的真知灼见。对C++基本概念和技术全面而且权威的阐述,对现代C++编程风格的强调,使本书不仅依然是初学者的*佳C++指南,而且即使对于中**程序员,本书也是不可或缺的参考书。

本书新版特色
《C++ Primer-(英文版)(第4版)》图书目录:
Chapter 1 Getting Started
1.1 Writing a Simple C++Program
1.1.1 Compiling and Executing Our Program
1.2 A First Lookat Input/Output
1.2.1 Standard Input and Output Objects
1.2.2 A Program that Uses the IO Library
1.3 A Word About Comments
1.4 Control Structures
1.4.1 The while Statement
1.4.2 The for Statement
1.4.3 The if Statement
1.4.4 Reading an Unknown Number of Inputs
1.5 Introducing Classes
1.5.1 The Sales_item Class
1.5.2 A First Looka tMember Functions
1.6 The C++Program
Chapter Summary
Defined Terms

Part I The Basics
Chapter 2 Variables and Basic Types
2.1 Primitive Built-in Types
2.1.1 Integral Types
2.1.2 Floating-Point Types
2.2 Literal Constants
2.3 Variables
2.3.1 What Is a Variable?
2.3.2 The Name of a Variable
2.3.3 Defining Objects
2.3.4 Variable Initialization Rules
2.3.5 Declarations and Definitions
2.3.6 Scope of a Name
2.3.7 Define Variables Where They Are Used
2.4 const Qualifier
2.5 References
2.6 Typedef Names
2.7 Enumerations
2.8 Class Types
2.9 Writing Our Own Header Files
2.9.1 Designing Our Own Headers
2.9.2 A Brief Introduction to the Preprocessor
Chapter Summary
Defined Terms
Chapter 3 Library Types
3.1 Namespace using Declarations
3.2 Library stringType
3.2.1 Defining and Initializing strings
3.2.2 Reading and Writing strings
3.2.3 Operations on strings
3.2.4 Dealing with the Characters of a string
3.3 Library vector Type
3.3.1 Defining and Initializing vectors.
3.3.2 Operations on vectors
3.4 Introducing Iterators
3.4.1 Iterator Arithmetic
3.5 Library bitset Type
3.5.1 Defining and Initializing bitsets
3.5.2 Operations on bitsets
Chapter Summary
Defined Terms
Chapter 4 Arrays and Pointers
4.1 Arrays
4.1.1 Defining and Initializing Arrays
4.1.2 Operations on Arrays
4.2 Introducing Pointers
4.2.1 What Is aPointer?
4.2.2 Defining and Initializing Pointers
4.2.3 Operationson Pointers
4.2.4 Using Pointers to Access Array Elements
4.2.5 Pointers and the const Qualifier
4.3 C-Style Character Strings
4.3.1 Dynamically Allocating Arrays
4.3.2 Interfacing to Older Code
4.4 Multidimensioned Arrays
4.4.1 Pointers and Multidimensioned Arrays
Chapter Summary
Defined Terms
Chapter 5 Expressions
5.1 Arithmetic Operators
5.2 Relational and Logical Operators
5.3 The Bitwise Operators
5.3.1 Using bitset Objectsor Integral Values
5.3.2 Using the Shift Operators for IO
5.4 Assignment Operators
5.4.1 Assignment Is Right Associative
5.4.2 Assignment Has Low Precedence
5.4.3 Compound Assignment Operators
5.5 Increment and Decrement Operators
5.6 The Arrow Operator
5.7 The Conditional Operator
5.8 The size of Operator
5.9 Comma Operator
5.10 Evaluating Compound Expressions
5.10.1 Precedence
5.10.2 Associativity
5.10.3 Order of Evaluation
5.11 The new and delete Expressions
5.12 Type Conversions
5.12.1 When Implicit Type Conversions Occur
5.12.2 The Arithmetic Conversions
5.12.3 Other Implicit Conversions
5.12.4 Explicit Conversions
5.12.5 When Casts Might Be Useful
5.12.6 Named Casts
5.12.7 Old-StyleCasts
Chapter Summary
Defined Terms
Chapter 6 Statements
6.1 Simple Statements
6.2 Declaration Statements
6.3 Compound Statements (Blocks)
6.4 Statement Scope
6.5 The if Statement
6.5.1 The if Statement else Branch
6.6 The switch Statement
6.6.1 Using a switch
6.6.2 Control Flow within a switch
6.6.3 The default Label
6.6.4 switch Expression and CaseLabels
6.6.5 Variable Definitions inside a switch
6.7 The while Statement
6.8 The forLoop Statement
6.8.1 Omitting Parts of the for Header
6.8.2 Multiple Definitions in the for Header
6.9 The do while Statement
6.10 The break Statement
6.11 The continue Statement
6.12 The goto Statement
6.13 try Blocks and Exception Handling
6.13.1 A throw Expression
6.13.2 The try Block
6.13.3 Standard Exceptions
6.14 Using the Preprocessor for Debugging
Chapter Summary
Defined Terms
Chapter 7 Functions
Chapter 8 The IO Library

Part II Containers and Algorithms
Chapter 9 Sequential Containers
Chapter 10 Associative Containers
Chapter 11 Generic Algorithms

Part III Classes and Data Abstraction
Chapter 12 Classes
Chapter 13 Copy Control
Chapter 14 Overloaded Operations and Conversions

Part Ⅳ Object-Oriented and Generic Programming
Chapter 15 Object-Oriented Programming
Chapter 16 Templates and Generic Programming

Part Ⅴ Advanced Topics
Chapter 17 Tools for Large Programs
Chapter 18 Specialized Tools and Techniques

AppendixA The Library
Inde