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The Annotated C++ Reference Manual
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The Annotated C++ Reference Manual

The Annotated C++ Reference Manual

Margaret A. Ellis, Bjarne Stroustrup

470 pages, parution le 10/12/1991

Résumé

This book provides a complete reference for the C++ programming language. It consists of the C++ reference manual, approved as the base document for ANSI standardization of the language, plus annotations and commentary.

The annotations and commentary discuss what is not included in the language, why certain features are defined as they are, and how one might implement particular features. The commentaries also help the reader to understand the relationships between parts of the language. Comparisons with C and examples explain the more subtle points of the language.

Sixteen chapters cover the latest version of C++ including multiple inheritance, abstract classes, templates, exception handling, and more. A final chapter describes resolutions by the ANSI/ISO committee including new features such as run-time type information and namespaces. Appendices summarize the grammar and evolution of the language, and explain in detail the differences between C and C++.

The Annotated C++ Reference Manual will appeal to language implementors and expert C++ programmers.

Table of contents

Preface
Contents
Chapter 1 Introduction
1.1 Overview
1.2 Syntax Notation
1.1c Evolution of C++
1.2c Acknowledgements
Chapter 2 Lexical Conventions
2.1 Tokens
2.2 Comments
2.3 Identifiers
2.4 Keywords
2.5 Literals
2.1c Implementation Dependencies
Chapter 3 Basic Concepts
3.1 Declarations and Definitions
3.2 Scopes
3.3 Program and Linkage
3.4 Start and Termination
3.5 Storage Classes
3.6 Types
3.7 Lvalues
3.1c Name Spaces
3.2c Numerical Limits
Chapter 4 Standard Conversions
4.1 Integral Promotions
4.2 Integral Conversions
4.3 Float and Double
4.4 Floating and Integral
4.5 Arithmetic Conversions
4.6 Pointer Conversions
4.7 Reference Conversions
4.8 Pointers to Members
4.1c Arithmetic Conversions
Chapter 5 Expressions
5.1 Primary Expressions
5.2 Postfix Expressions
5.3 Unary Operators
5.4 Explicit Type Conversion
5.5 Pointer-to-Member Operators
5.6 Multiplicative Operators
5.7 Additive Operators
5.8 Shift Operators
5.9 Relational Operators
5.10 Equality Operators
5.11 Bitwise AND Operator
5.12 Bitwise Exclusive OR Operator
5.13 Bitwise Inclusive OR Operator
5.14 Logical AND Operator
5.15 Logical OR Operator
5.16 Conditional Operator
5.17 Assignment Operators
5.18 Comma Operator
5.19 Constant Expressions
Chapter 6 Statements
6.1 Labeled Statement
6.2 Expression Statement
6.3 Compound Statement, or Block
6.4 Selection Statements
6.5 Iteration Statements
6.6 Jump Statements
6.7 Declaration Statement
6.8 Ambiguity Resolution
Chapter 7 Declarations
7.1 Specifiers
7.2 Enumeration Declarations
7.3 Asm Declarations
7.4 Linkage Specifications
7.1c Linkage Specifications
7.2c Type-safe Linkage
7.3c Limitations
Chapter 8 Declarators
8.1 Type Names
8.2 Meaning of Declarators
8.3 Function Definitions
8.4 Initializers
8.1c Pointers to Members
Chapter 9 Classes
9.1 Class Names
9.2 Class Members
9.3 Member Functions
9.4 Static Members
9.5 Unions
9.6 Bit-Fields
9.7 Nested Class Declarations
9.8 Local Class Declarations
9.9 Local Type Names
9.1c Interfaces
Chapter 10 Derived Classes
10.1 Multiple Base Classes
10.2 Virtual Functions
10.3 Abstract Classes
10.4 Summary of Scope Rules
10.1c Single Inheritance
10.2c Multiple Inheritance
10.3c Multiple Inheritance and Casting
10.4c Multiple Inheritance and Implicit Conversion
10.5c Virtual Base Classes
10.6c Virtual Base Classes and Casting
10.7c Single Inheritance and Virtual Functions
10.8c Multiple Inheritance and Virtual Functions
10.9c Instantiation of Virtual Functions
10.10c Virtual Base Classes with Virtual Functions
10.11c Renaming
Chapter 11 Member Access Control
11.1 Access Specifiers
11.2 Access Specifiers for Base Classes
11.3 Access Declarations
11.4 Friends
11.5 Protected Member Access
11.6 Access to Virtual Functions
11.7 Multiple Access
11.1c General Ideas
11.2c Per Class Protection
11.3c Access Control
Chapter 12 Special Member Functions
12.1 Constructors
12.2 Temporary Objects
12.3 Conversions
12.4 Destructors
12.5 Free Store
12.6 Initialization
12.7 Constructors and Destructors
12.8 Copying Class Objects
12.1c Temporary Elimination
12.2c Access Control and Special Functions
12.3c Summary of Member, Friend, and Special Functions
Chapter 13 Overloading
13.1 Declaration Matching
13.2 Argument Matching
13.3 Address of Overload Function
13.4 Overloaded Operators
Chapter 14 Templates
14.1 Templates
14.2 Class Templates
14.3 Type Equivalence
14.4 Function Templates
14.5 Declarations and Definitions
14.6 Member Function Templates
14.7 Friends
14.8 Static Members and Variables
Chapter 15 Exception Handling
15.1 Exception Handling
15.2 Throwing an Exception
15.3 Constructors and Destructors
15.4 Handling and Exception
15.5 Exception Specifications
15.6 Special Functions
15.7 Exceptions and Access
Chapter 16 Preprocessing
16.1 Phases of Preprocessing
16.2 Trigraph Sequences
16.3 Macro Definition and Expansion
16.4 File Inclusion
16.5 Conditional Compilation
16.6 Line Control
16.7 Error Directive
16.8 Pragmas
16.9 Null Directive
16.10 Predefined Names
16.1c C++ Constructs versus #define
16.2c Compatibility
16.3c Classic C Preprocessing
Chapter 17 Grammar Summary
17.1 Keywords
17.2 Expressions
17.3 Declarations
17.4 Declarators
17.5 Class
17.6 Statements
17.7 Preprocessor
17.8 Templates
17.9 Exception
Chapter 18 Compatibility
18.1 Extensions
18.2 C++ and ANSI C
18.3 Anachronisms
ANSI/ISO Resolutions
Index

L'auteur - Bjarne Stroustrup

Bjarne Stroustrup est le concepteur du langage C++ et l'auteur des ouvrages C++ Programming Langage (1 édition 1985, 2e édition 1991, 3e édition 1997), The Annotated C++ Référence Manual et The Design and Evolution of C++. Diplômé de l'université d'Aarhus, Danemark, et de l'université de Cambridge, Angleterre, Bjarne Stroustrup est aujourd'hui professeur à la Texas A&M University et membre du département de recherche pour la programmation à grande échelle de AT&T Labs. Ses recherches portent notamment sur les systèmes distribués, les systèmes d'exploitation, la simulation, la conception et la programmation. Il est également l'éditeur de la collection C++ In-Depth, Addison-Wesley.

Caractéristiques techniques

  PAPIER
Éditeur(s) Addison Wesley
Auteur(s) Margaret A. Ellis, Bjarne Stroustrup
Parution 10/12/1991
Nb. de pages 470
EAN13 9780201514599

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