Java And Algorithmic Thinking For The Complete Beginner: Learn To Think Like A Programmer
by Aristides S Bouras /
2015 / English / PDF
12.3 MB Download
This book is for anyone who wants to learn computer programming and
knows absolutely nothing about it. Of course, if you are wondering
whether this book is going to teach you how to create amazing
applets or incredible desktop or mobile applications, the answer is
"no"—that is a job for other books. So many books out there can
teach you those skills in Java, C++, or C#. Many of them even claim
that they can teach you in 24 hours! Don’t laugh! They probably can
do that, but all of them take one thing for granted—that the reader
knows some basics about computer programming. None of those books,
unfortunately, bothers to teach you the first thing that a novice
programmer needs to learn, which is "Algorithmic Thinking."
Algorithmic Thinking involves more than just learning code. It is a
problem solving process that involves learning how to code. With
over 800 pages, and containing more than 300 solved and 400
unsolved exercises, over 450 true/false, 150 multiple choice, and
180 review questions (the solutions and the answers to which can be
found on the Internet), this book is ideal for students, teachers,
professors, novices or average programmers, or for anyone who wants
to start learning or teaching computer programming using the proper
conventions and techniques.
This book is for anyone who wants to learn computer programming and
knows absolutely nothing about it. Of course, if you are wondering
whether this book is going to teach you how to create amazing
applets or incredible desktop or mobile applications, the answer is
"no"—that is a job for other books. So many books out there can
teach you those skills in Java, C++, or C#. Many of them even claim
that they can teach you in 24 hours! Don’t laugh! They probably can
do that, but all of them take one thing for granted—that the reader
knows some basics about computer programming. None of those books,
unfortunately, bothers to teach you the first thing that a novice
programmer needs to learn, which is "Algorithmic Thinking."
Algorithmic Thinking involves more than just learning code. It is a
problem solving process that involves learning how to code. With
over 800 pages, and containing more than 300 solved and 400
unsolved exercises, over 450 true/false, 150 multiple choice, and
180 review questions (the solutions and the answers to which can be
found on the Internet), this book is ideal for students, teachers,
professors, novices or average programmers, or for anyone who wants
to start learning or teaching computer programming using the proper
conventions and techniques.











