Date: Wed, 18 Aug 1999 15:02:55 -0600 From: Darren WIebe <dkwiebe@heartland.ab.ca> To: Laurence Berland <stuyman@confusion.net> Cc: freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: Good c newbie documentation Message-ID: <37BB1F7F.BC441549@heartland.ab.ca> References: <Pine.OSF.4.10.9908181116180.16316-100000@saturn.math.uaa.alaska.edu> <37BB0B3C.6615530E@confusion.net>
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Hello:
Can you tell me about where on this globe you are? It may make a slight
difference if you are on the
other side of the world I am very interested though, and would appreciate it
if you could give me a rough guess
as to what the weight is.
Thanks in Advance
Darren Wiebe
dkwiebe@hagenhomes.com
Laurence Berland wrote:
> I've got an old edition of both K&R and Practical C that id be willing
> to give up if you'd cover the cost of shipping. (When I'm out of school
> and not living on barebones money I'll start paying to ship this sort of
> thing myself, but those books would cost me lunch for a day or two :)
> Just let me know if you're interested.
>
> "Frederick J Polsky v1.0" wrote:
> >
> > While K&R is the canonical C reference for newbies something along the
> > lines of _Practical C Programming_ from O'Reilly is probably more apropos.
> > Would still recommend K&R as a reference though.
> >
> > --
> > Frederick J. Polsky v1.0 <fred@saturn.math.uaa.alaska.edu>
> > Chair, UAA ACM Student Chapter
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