C++26 for Lazy Programmers

£59.99

C++26 for Lazy Programmers

Quick, Easy, and Fun C++ for Beginners

Open source and other operating systems Programming and scripting languages: general

Author: Will Briggs

Dinosaur mascot

Collection: Professional and Applied Computing

Language: English

Published by: Apress

Published on: 1st January 2026

Format: LCP-protected ePub

ISBN: 9798868818592


Ready to learn programming with less effort and more fun? Then do it the lazy way!

C++26 for Lazy Programmers uses humor and fun to make you actually willing to read and eager to do the projects as you master the popular and powerful C++ language. Along the way it introduces features from the new C++26 standard including increased support for compile-time computation with constexpr and static_assert, as well as contracts, and covers ranges, views, move semantics, format strings, smart pointers, lambda functions and concepts (template parameter requirements), and provides brief introductions to coroutines and lazy evaluation.

With this unique method, you’ll stretch your abilities with a variety of projects, including your own C++ arcade game. You'll construct your own classes, templates, and abstract data types. After reading and using this book you’ll be ready to build real-world C++ applications and game projects on your own.

What You Will Learn:

Explore the brand-new C++26 standard

Program graphics and games with the SDL library, using SSDL, the “Simple SDL” wrapper library

Use the most common C++ compilers – Visual Studio in Windows; g++ with Ubuntu, Fedora, Manjaro or Debian Unix, or MSys2 – and their associated debuggers

Apply “anti-bugging” techniques for easy fixes to common problems

Incorporate best practices for becoming a productive programmer

Create your own big projects, including a C++-based arcade game

Leverage STL functions and classes for easy and efficient programming

Handle the Unicode (UTF-8) output

Understand the uses and limits of views for efficiently pipelining data

Learn core data types (strings, queues, vectors, linked lists) not by reading about them but by building them from scratch

Navigate the basics of C, the still powerful and popular ancestor of C++

Who This Book Is For

All who are new to C++, either self-learners or students in college-level courses.

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