70 Tango Charlie
Well-Known Member
@JasKinasis @captain-sensible
Just a little background on what I have been doing. I have a few books on Linux ranging from 'Cathedral and the Bazaar' to 'Introduction to the Command Line' to 'Assembly Language' and a few others.
What I have been practicing is 'C'. I guess that's why g++ and clang kind of threw me for a loop.
My purpose for learning 'C' was simply to get a little acquainted with what programming is and perhaps a little about how it works.
I have a book on 'C' that I have looked at {got it from Z-Library online}. It's called 'C Programming in Linux by David Haskins.
So far, I have learned much more than I thought I ever would - which isn't really very much.
However, onward we go!!! Charge on ahead is my motto!!!
Jas - Would you recommend that I practice 'C++' instead of 'C'? My understanding is that if I learn 'C' it is a small jump to learn 'C++'.
OG TC
Just a little background on what I have been doing. I have a few books on Linux ranging from 'Cathedral and the Bazaar' to 'Introduction to the Command Line' to 'Assembly Language' and a few others.
What I have been practicing is 'C'. I guess that's why g++ and clang kind of threw me for a loop.
My purpose for learning 'C' was simply to get a little acquainted with what programming is and perhaps a little about how it works.
I have a book on 'C' that I have looked at {got it from Z-Library online}. It's called 'C Programming in Linux by David Haskins.
So far, I have learned much more than I thought I ever would - which isn't really very much.
However, onward we go!!! Charge on ahead is my motto!!!
Jas - Would you recommend that I practice 'C++' instead of 'C'? My understanding is that if I learn 'C' it is a small jump to learn 'C++'.
OG TC