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On Tue, 20 Aug 2024 20:56:00 -0000 (UTC)"Usually" suggests you have statistics to back that up.
kalevi@kolttonen.fi (Kalevi Kolttonen) boringly babbled:In comp.unix.programmer David Brown <david.brown@hesbynett.no> wrote:The advantage of books written by professionals is that the code andNo, you do not need your particular favourite out of the thousand and>
one Linux programming books in order to program for Linux. You do not
need /any/ book in order to write useful and successful code for Linux.
Of course you need /some/ reference - and in the days before the
internet was so easily available and so full of information, I went
through a lot of programming books. Some were good, some less so, and
some have become famous. But none of them were /necessary/ in any way.
Well, I am a quite bad programmer but I am interested enough in the
Linux/UNIX workings so that reading the newest APUE and The Linux
Programming Interface did not feel painful or unnecessary at all. On
the contrary, it was a great pleasure to examine what kind of
programming facilities my favourite OS offers.
>
Having these two books, or just one of them, is a great way to educate
oneself about Linux/UNIX. I see that The Linux Programming Interface
is available online as a free PDF, but I am not sure whether it is
a pirated version.
>
There is no better way to learn Linux/UNIX workings than these two
books. Period.
explanations are usually much clearer and of better equality than the quickly
knocked up might-work-might-not crap you often find on stack overflow and
similar sites. Thats not to say good example code isn't out there but wading
through the rubbish can be a tedious business and IME its often quicker just
to reach for APUE or similar.
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