Ivor Horton's Beginning Visual C++ 2008
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Ivor Horton graduated as a mathematician and was lured into information technology by promises of great rewards for very little work. In spite of the reality being usually a great deal of work for relatively modest rewards, he has continued to work with computers to the present day. He has been engaged at various times in programming, systems design, consultancy, and the management of the implementation of projects of considerable complexity.
Horton has many years of experience in the design and implementation of computer systems applied to engineering design and to manufacturing operations in a variety of industries. He has considerable experience developing occasionally useful applications in a wide variety of programming languages, and teaching primarily scientists and engineers to do likewise. He has been writing books on programming for more than 10 years now, and his currently published works include tutorials on C, C++, and Java. At the present time, when he is not writing programming books or providing advice to others, he spends his time fishing, traveling, and trying to speak better French.

English

Acknowledgments.

Introduction.

Chapter 1: Programming with Visual C++ 2008.

Chapter 2: Data, Variables, and Calculations.

Chapter 3: Decisions and Loops.

Chapter 4: Arrays, Strings, and Pointers.

Chapter 5: Introducing Structure into Your Programs.

Chapter 6: More about Program Structure.

Chapter 7: Defining Your Own Data Types.

Chapter 8: More on Classes.

Chapter 9: Class Inheritance and Virtual Functions.

Chapter 10: The Standard Template Library.

Chapter 11: Debugging Techniques.

Chapter 12: Windows Programming Concepts.

Chapter 13: Windows Programming with the Microsoft Foundation Classes.

Chapter 14: Working with Menus and Toolbars.

Chapter 15: Drawing in a Window.

Chapter 16: Creating the Document and Improving the View.

Chapter 17: Working with Dialogs and Controls.

Chapter 18: Storing and Printing Documents.

Chapter 19: Writing Your Own DLLs.

Chapter 20: Connecting to Data Sources.

Chapter 21: Updating Data Sources.

Chapter 22: More on Windows Forms Applications.

Chapter 23: Accessing Data Sources in a Windows Forms Application.

Appendix A: C++ Keywords.

Appendix B: ASCII Codes.

Appendix C: Windows Message Types.

Index.

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