A C++ tutorial that can (hopefully?) be followed without jumping from chapter to chapter at every step.
Via a bash shell, compiling all chapters:
for a in Chapter*; do g++ -std=c++11 -o "$a/out" "$a"/*.cpp; done
On OSX:
- You must install XCode and the Command Line Tools package. As of 9/04/2013, Mac OS X doesn't ship with a C++11 compiler.
- Then use clang to build:
for a in Chapter*; do clang++ --std=c++11 --stdlib=libc++ "$a"/*.cpp -o "$a"/out; done
Also, when compiling your own files on either of those two platforms, I recommend you add -Wall
and -Wextra
to your flags. Clang users may also want to add -fsanitize=undefined
.
Thanks to @Gullumluvl it's possible to export these chapters as Markdown or epub files!
To do so, just run
./cpp_2_markdown.py Chapter\ NN*
where NN
is the number of the chapter.
You can use
./cpp_2_markdown.py .
to build the whole book.
For building an epub, make sure you have pandoc
and run
pandoc -M author=jesyspa \
--standalone \
-V 'header-includes="<style>pre > code.sourceCode {white-space: pre-wrap !important;}</style>"' \
--toc --toc-depth=1 \
-o linear-cpp.epub \
ebook.md
The header-includes
argument is needed to wrap long code lines.
This project is discontinued. I don't plan to update it for new C++ standards or add any new language features.
Outline of what's coming missing:
- Practical Examples
- Variants, Optional
- Most of inheritance
- Scope
- Storage Duration
- Undefined Behaviour
- File IO
- Libraries: Boost, Abseil...
- Metaprogramming
- C++14 and up
- The preprocessor
- Most C features
So while I'm glad people have found it useful, please don't rely on this by itself to learn C++! It really only scratches the surface, and you'll do yourself a service if you get a good book.