Kenneth Louden and Kenneth Lambert's new edition of PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES: PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE, 3E gives advanced undergraduate students an overview of programming languages through general principles combined with details about many modern languages. Major languages used in this edition include
Programming languages: principles and practice
โ Scribed by Kenneth C Louden; Kenneth Alfred Lambert
- Publisher
- Course Technology/Cengage Learning
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 666
- Edition
- 3ed.
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Introduction -- Language design criteria -- Functional programming -- Logic programming -- Object-oriented programming -- Syntax -- Basic semantics -- Data types -- Control I - Expressions and statements -- Control II - Procedures and environments -- Abstract data types and modules -- Formal semantics -- Parallel programming
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Kenneth Louden and Kenneth Lambert's new edition of PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES: PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE, 3E gives advanced undergraduate students an overview of programming languages through general principles combined with details about many modern languages. Major languages used in this edition include
Kenneth Louden and Kenneth Lambert's new edition of PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES: PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE, 3E gives advanced undergraduate students an overview of programming languages through general principles combined with details about many modern languages. Major languages used in this edition include
xii, 641 pages : 25 cm
<p><P>This excellent addition to the UTiCS series of undergraduate textbooks provides a detailed and up to date description of the main principles behind the design and implementation of modern programming languages. </P><P></P><P>Rather than focusing on a specific language, the book identifies the
<p><P>This excellent addition to the UTiCS series of undergraduate textbooks provides a detailed and up to date description of the main principles behind the design and implementation of modern programming languages. </P><P></P><P>Rather than focusing on a specific language, the book identifies the