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Ellis Horowitz - Fundamentals of Computer Algorithms; Eric Raymond - The Art of Unix Programming; Gerald M. Weinberg - The Psychology of Computer Programming; James Gosling - The Java Programming Language; Joel Spolsky - The Best Software Writing I; Keith Curtis - After the Software Wars; Richard M. Stallman - Free Software, Free Society
Prentice Hall International Series in Computer Science was a series of books on computer science published by Prentice Hall. [1] The series' founding editor was Tony Hoare. Richard Bird subsequently took over editing the series. [2] Many of the books in the series have been in the area of formal methods in particular.
Ahl later noted that “was far more books than there were computers around, so people were buying three, four, five of them for each computer.” [2] The second version, BASIC, was re-printed many times and was the first computer book to sell a million copies. Harry McCracken called it "The single most influential book of the BASIC era". [2]
The first volume of "The Art of Computer Programming", "Fundamental Algorithms", took five years to complete between 1963 and 1968 while working at both Caltech and Burroughs. Knuth's dedication in Volume 1 reads: This series of books is affectionately dedicated to the Type 650 computer once installed at Case Institute of Technology,
How to Solve it by Computer is a computer science book by R. G. Dromey, [1] first published by Prentice-Hall in 1982. It is occasionally used as a textbook, especially in India.
Code: The Hidden Language of Computer Hardware and Software; Compilers: Principles, Techniques, and Tools; Computer Graphics: Principles and Practice; Computers and Intractability; Concepts, Techniques, and Models of Computer Programming; Concrete Mathematics
Code: The Hidden Language of Computer Hardware and Software; Communications, Computers, and Networks; The Computer and the Brain; Computer Graphics: Principles and Practice; Computer: A History of the Information Machine; Computers and Typesetting
The current version uses the *.ptb file format. The Power Tab Editor is able to import MIDI tracks, and can export to ASCII Text, HTML, and MIDI formats. In addition, individual sections may be exported as bitmap files. The program allows for tablature scores to be created alongside standard musical notation. The software achieves this through ...