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Date:      Tue, 18 Mar 2014 09:26:34 +0800
From:      by <free7by@yahoo.com>
To:        Erich Dollansky <erichsfreebsdlist@alogt.com>
Cc:        "freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org" <freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: Something related to C and C++
Message-ID:  <63845FA1-7C69-4BD9-90F5-CB05FD1EB14A@yahoo.com>
In-Reply-To: <20140318090352.403e6f1f@X220.alogt.com>
References:  <B2051FAA-63AA-4F96-90BA-84157CE1F7AB@yahoo.com> <20140317103830.53c42ade@X220.alogt.com> <611B8DE5-F593-4574-96AB-0965CA7EDF33@yahoo.com> <CABze5AD6STPLfriTJJazM%2BqhHJkVtBMgMzNWsQi%2B6vMkWox_0g@mail.gmail.com> <5326D093.90308@yahoo.com> <CABze5AC6WZfyG9VYUunCjtQS66mY1Ahfu%2BMhYN=SkJgR%2BTHcLw@mail.gmail.com> <39562806-80F4-4D4C-BAFD-20DCB537B303@yahoo.com> <DD029BFE-D06E-4102-915D-B379D8200A9F@yahoo.com> <CABze5AA-Y%2Ba-DsftK8_sz=mspJ4A6uaqfTpGeqozWQ%2BvpM7=Kw@mail.gmail.com> <BF60A6D6-9948-4E1A-B199-AB3055751ED7@yahoo.com> <20140318090352.403e6f1f@X220.alogt.com>

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Yes, you are right.
I think the way you said is a good way to practice, first read from the sour=
ce, then write something myself.
: )

- by

> On Mar 18, 2014, at 9:03, Erich Dollansky <erichsfreebsdlist@alogt.com> wr=
ote:
>=20
> Hi,
>=20
> On Tue, 18 Mar 2014 07:54:50 +0800
> by <free7by@yahoo.com> wrote:
>=20
>> I got no chance to learn in college, cause I will graduate this
>> summer and I want find a job Unix-related, C-related, in my college,
>> I had not learn much in C and Unix, cause my college use Windows, and
>> not focus on C-related, and for me, I start learning these this year,
>> and I think I prefer read books just a little everyday, it can make
>> me continuously familiar with these material which I like work on. I
>> got four books in my hand now: C related, Unix related, FreeBSD
>> related, and C++ related. And I think that the src in FreeBSD base
>> system is a good way to practice C, like some simple utilities: echo,
>> ls, etc. And FreeBSD got many historical docs in base system, and I
>> think it is a great way to understand FreeBSD or Unix world more. The
>> only problem is that, I find no passion if I just learn, maybe this
>> will change after I got a related job.
>=20
> just take any small program of your choice and try to write it again.
> You might look at the sources at the beginning but later you try to
> write a program by just using 'man program' to get the description. The
> closer your solution comes to the description, the better you are
> getting.
>=20
> A question to the others. When I see these comments here, I wonder how
> bad university education got over time. Is this here typical now or
> just an exception.
>=20
> Erich



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