Programming from the Ground Up Programming from the Ground Up uses Linux assembly language to teach new programmers the most important concepts in programming.. Programming from the Ground Up starts by teaching how the computer works under the hood, so that the programme
TITLE | : | Programming from the Ground Up |
AUTHOR | : | |
RATING | : | 4.63 (144 Votes) |
ASIN | : | 0975283847 |
FORMAT TYPE | : | Paperback |
PAGES | : | 332 Pages |
PUBLISH | : | 2004-07-01 |
GENRE | : |
Programming from the Ground Up uses Linux assembly language to teach new programmers the most important concepts in programming. It takes you a step at a time through these concepts: * How the processor views memory * How the processor operates * How programs interact with the operating system * How computers represent data internally * How to do low-level and high-level optimizationMost beginning-level programming books attempt to shield the reader from how their computer really works. Programming from the Ground Up starts by teaching how the computer works under the hood, so that the programmer will have a sufficient background to be successful in all areas of programming.This book has been used by universities as diverse as Princeton and DeVry.
EDITORIAL :
I highly recommend working through this book even if you'll never program assembly again you'll be a vastly better programmer. -- Joel Spolsky, JoelOnSoftware
REVIEW :
Then actual component cooperation is tested.
Sample code from the book is easy to read, I'd take it more as illustration than working demo or system
configuration benchmark.. However, if you do not yet know or are a new Christian you may find some wonderful words of peace and hope between the pages.. Perhaps Mr Green can try his hand at "Memoirs of a Mirror Journalist" next.
I am sure that would be eminently readable too.. The accompaniments are accessible.. Finally, Keller deals with how our work lives reveal our most deeply held and pervasive idols. In this comprehensive, well-organised argument for a meaningful post-capitalist political economy, Michael Albert critiques both free-market capitalism as well as its existing (or failed) alternatives of central-planning (the Soviet model) and market socialism (the Yugoslav model) offering a well-thought out vision of democra
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