Product Description<br>βWhen you begin using multi-threading throughout an application, the importance of clean architecture and design is critical. . . . This places an emphasis on understanding not only the platformβs capabilities but also emerging best practices. Joe does a great job interspersin
Concurrent Programming on Windows
β Scribed by Joe Duffy
- Publisher
- Addison-Wesley
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 990
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Author Joe Duffy has risen to the challenge of explaining how to write software that takes full advantage of concurrency and hardware parallelism. In Concurrent Programming on Windows, he explains how to design, implement, and maintain large-scale concurrent programs, primarily using C# and C++ for Windows. Concurrent Programming on Windows has four major sections: The first introduces concurrency at a high level, followed by a section that focuses on the fundamental platform features, inner workings, and API details.
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βWhen you begin using multi-threading throughout an application, the importance of clean architecture and design is critical. . . . This places an emphasis on understanding not only the platformβs capabilities but also emerging best practices. Joe does a great job interspersing best practices alongs
<h3>Pressestimmen</h3><p>"I have been fascinated with concurrency ever since I added threading support to the Common Language Runtime a decade ago. That's also where I met Joe, who is a world expert on this topic. These days, concurrency is a first-order concern for practically all developers. Thank
Pearson Education, 2009. β 990 p. ΠΠ° Π°Π½Π³Π». ΡΠ·ΡΠΊΠ΅.<div class="bb-sep"></div><strong>Author Joe Duffy has risen to the challenge of explaining how to write software that takes full advantage of concurrency and hardware parallelism. In <em>Concurrent Programming on Windows</em>, he explains how to desi
Here, one of the leading figures in the field provides a comprehensive survey of the subject, beginning with prepositional logic and concluding with concurrent programming. It is based on graduate courses taught at Cornell University and is designed for use as a graduate text. Professor Schneier emp
GRADUATE TEXTS IN COMPUTER SCIENCE; ON CONCURRENT PROGRAMMING; Copyright; Preface; Contents; List of Figures; Chapter 1 Introduction; Chapter 2 Formal Logic; Chapter 3 Temporal Logic; Chapter 4 Notation and Logic for Sequential Programming; Chapter 5 Concurrency and Interference; Chapter 6 Safety Pr