Beginning Linux Programming
Neil Matthew, Richard Stones | Wrox Press | 1999-09-19 | 980 pages | English | PDF
If you've already got Linux up and running on your machine and you really want to exploit its capabilities, [color:55d5=#0000FF !important]Beginning Linux Programming is packed full of useful information that will keep you busy for weeks. In spite of its title, Beginning Linux Programming isn't oriented toward novices. It assumes that you're a competent C programmer but are simply new to the specifics of Linux. Authors Neil Matthew and Richard Stones introduce a plethora of fundamental concepts including [color:55d5=#0000FF !important]shellprogramming, file [color:55d5=#0000FF !important]access, and using curses to write full-screen, character-based programs. But that's just the start. They cover advanced topics such as [color:55d5=#0000FF !important]processes, pipes, semaphores, and sockets - and of course, they address issues common to [color:55d5=#0000FF !important]Internetprogramming such as using CGI (Common [color:55d5=#0000FF !important]Gateway Interface). The book is a superb resource for anyone who has really wanted to put the [color:55d5=#0000FF !important]pedal to the metal in Linux. This revised second [color:55d5=#0000FF !important]edition has been completely updated, and now covers programming in Perl, an introduction to writing [color:55d5=#0000FF !important]applications for the GNOME [color:55d5=#0000FF !important]desktop, and a new chapter about writing device [color:55d5=#0000FF !important]drivers.
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