Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Sat, 1 Jul 2000 17:48:42 +1000
From:      Danny <dannyh@idx.com.au>
To:        TEWisdom@cs.com, freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Hi! Bunch of newbie questions
Message-ID:  <00070117524000.24420@dannyh.freebsd.org>
References:  <73.4a8f626.268ef7b9@cs.com>

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help

Good tutorials on php3, cgi etc etc (www.webmonkey.com), (www.devshed.com), 
(builders.com)

Good C Mailing list (www.egroups.com or maybe www.egroup.com)

YEs you can have a partition with both FreeBSD and Window. You can use a boot
manager called booteasy which will allow you to do this.

And yes there is a C compiler in FreeBSD is used like so cc -o foobar.c foobar
I believe

Please send your reply to everyone in the freebsd-questions mailing list so you
can get a broader answer to your questions below.


On Sat, 01 Jul 2000, TEWisdom@cs.com wrote:
> To introduce myself, I'm a total newbie with no knowledge of UNIX, FreeBSD, 
> servers,  and compilers other than the fact that such things exist.  My only 
> programming experience involves a dos/Basic (not visual basic, not even 
> Qbasic, BASIC) course I took 8 years ago.  (when I was 13, no less--long 
> story.) Despite this, I'm trying to learn about all of these things.  So if I 
> aggravate y'all with my ignorance, be gentle.
> 
> I'm trying to make my own website.  So, I began by learning HTML.  Except, it 
> seems, to do all the really cool stuff I need to learn coding languages such 
> as CGI, ASP, PHP4, Java, JavaScript, Perl. . . the list is endless.  Plus 
> everywhere I look someone's offering "developer's tools" that cost an arm and 
> a leg. Then I learn that not all webservers will accept such things anyway, 
> and that every browser has different requrements themselves.  to add insult 
> to injury, all of the tutorials on the above I find are written for someone 
> who already KNOWS how to code in another language, usually c/c++.  
> 
> So, going one step further, I start researching c/c++.  The first thing 
> GOOGLE leads me to are a whole bunch of things called "compilers."  From what 
> I gather, a "compiler" is something that turns readable typing (albeit barely 
> readble, unless you know the language) into machine language.  Cool.  The 
> problem is, there's not one, not a dozen, but a practically endless list of 
> these compilers, each a variation of C, each extolling its particular 
> virtues.  Some are free, not are definitely NOT free, and all of them are 
> described in language that anyone unfamiliar with C/C++ would not understand. 
>  Namely, me.  
> 
> Moving on, these languages, I find, are designed for unix.  What's UNIX??!!  
> I look into unix.  Unix, it seems, is an old OS (wowee, I now know what OS 
> stands for!!) developed in the 70's, and has a whole bunch of 
> variants--Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD. . . Which lead me here.  Now for the 
> questions:
> 
> *Where's a good mailing list or newsgroup to start asking stupid questions 
> about C/C++?
> 
> *Can I install FreeBSD on my computer, and switch back and forth between it 
> and Windows when I need to?  How would this be done?
> 
> *Do I need to install a UNIX platform, such as Free BSD, to use a C/C++ 
> compiler?  If not, how would I use such a thing on Windows?
> 
> *Of these different compilers, can someone tell me what  good (free) c++ 
> variant they might reccommend?  I hear that Borland is really easy to use 
> (from the Borland website, so I take this with a grain of salt), is there a 
> free variant that is as easy?
> 
> *Are there any good, free tutorials written for newbies (on any or all of the 
> subjects above, 'cept for HTML--I've got that one licked) that I might be 
> able to use? (I already know 'bout the ones on the FreeBSD site, and I'm 
> looking through them)
> 
> Thanks.  Oh, BTW, since I'm mailing this through a link I found on the 
> FreeBSD webpage, and not through a subscription to the mailing list, please 
> mail direct to my personal box, not the list--and CC the list, if you want 
> everyone else to see your message.  Thanks again.      
> --Tiberius (Ty) Wisdom 
> TEWisdom@CS.com
> 
> 
> To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org
> with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message
--

----------------------------------------------------------------
You are not authorized to use my email address for any purpose.
This is a violation of my privacy. Remove my email
address from your databases immediately.
----------------------------------------------------------------


To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org
with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message




Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?00070117524000.24420>