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ISBN example (book) 0 English Language area ISBN 0-330-28498-3 Douglas Adams, So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish, Pan Books (1984) 1 English Language area ISBN 1-58182-008-9 James Reasoner, Manassas, Cumberland House (1999) 2 French Language area ISBN 2-226-05257-7 Bernard Werber, Les Fourmis, Albin Michel (1991) 3 German Language area
Joyce Farrell is the author of many programming books for Course Technology, a part of Cengage Learning. [1] Her books are widely used as textbooks in higher education institutions.
Gerrards Cross, Buckinghamshire, UK also 0-85105, 0-86140, 0-901072, 0-905715, 900771 University of Exeter 901072 Colin Smythe Limited Gerrards Cross, Buckinghamshire, UK also 0-85105, 0-86140, 0-900675, 0-905715 901096 Industrial Railway Society: 901115 Railway Correspondence and Travel Society: 901144 Health Protection Agency: Didcot, England ...
ISBN 0-233-98001-6; The Palace of Varieties: An Insider's View of Westminster, John Murray, 1989. ISBN 0-719-54729-6; A Bag of Boiled Sweets. An Autobiography, Faber and Faber, 1994. ISBN 0-571-17496-5; Collapse of Stout Party: The Decline and Fall of the Tories, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1997. (with Morrison Halcrow) ISBN 0-575-06277-0
Hardcover edition (ISBN 0-19-957112-0/ ISBN 978-0-19-957112-3): Includes 12-month access to Oxford Dictionaries Online. 1st? impression (2010-09-15) Android version: Published by MobiSystems, Inc. Premium version includes unlimited dictionary use, audio pronunciation, regular content updates, offline mode, priority support, ad-free experience.
One of Schildt's most enduring projects is the Little C interpreter, which is a lengthy example of a hand-written recursive-descent parser which interprets a subset of the C language.
Big Brother (alias BB) was a tool for systems and network monitoring, generally used by system administrators.The advent of the dynamic web page allowed Big Brother to be one of the first monitoring systems to use the web as its user interface.
Design By Numbers (DBN) was an influential experiment in teaching programming initiated at the MIT Media Lab during the 1990s. Led by John Maeda and his students they created software aimed at allowing designers, artists and other non-programmers to easily start computer programming.