Book Image

Beginning C++ Programming

By : Richard Grimes
Book Image

Beginning C++ Programming

By: Richard Grimes

Overview of this book

C++ has come a long way and is now adopted in several contexts. Its key strengths are its software infrastructure and resource-constrained applications, including desktop applications, servers, and performance-critical applications, not to forget its importance in game programming. Despite its strengths in these areas, beginners usually tend to shy away from learning the language because of its steep learning curve. The main mission of this book is to make you familiar and comfortable with C++. You will finish the book not only being able to write your own code, but more importantly, you will be able to read other projects. It is only by being able to read others' code that you will progress from a beginner to an advanced programmer. This book is the first step in that progression. The first task is to familiarize you with the structure of C++ projects so you will know how to start reading a project. Next, you will be able to identify the main structures in the language, functions, and classes, and feel confident being able to identify the execution flow through the code. You will then become aware of the facilities of the standard library and be able to determine whether you need to write a routine yourself, or use an existing routine in the standard library. Throughout the book, there is a big emphasis on memory and pointers. You will understand memory usage, allocation, and access, and be able to write code that does not leak memory. Finally, you will learn about C++ classes and get an introduction to object orientation and polymorphism.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)

C++ exceptions

As the name suggests, exceptions are for exceptional conditions. They are not normal conditions. They are not conditions that you want to occur but they are conditions that may happen. Any exceptional condition will often mean that your data will be in an inconsistent state, so using exceptions means that you need to think in transactional terms, that is, an operation either succeeds, or the state of an object should remain the same as it was before the operation was attempted. When an exception occurs in a code block, everything that happened in the code block will be invalid. If the code block is part of a wider code block (say, a function that is a series of function calls by another function) then the work in that other code block will be invalid. This means that the exception may propagate out to other code blocks further up the call stack, invalidating the...