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Spammer C++.jpg (2.24 MB) - 2025-05-26 23:36:35

Not an /agdg/ specific question, but asking about programming in general.

So I'm clearing out things out of the basement and off my shelves, with the intention of "starting things fresh", and just want to keep (Preferably) one book on each programming subject so that I can learn from it and reference later when I need to. The books you see in the images attached are where I have multiple books covering the "same" topic. Yes, I know books are "redundant" because of how everything is "one search away" on the net, but I'm increasingly distrustful of web searches given how much of everything (Especially related to tech today) seems to be controlled and biased. Including Jewtube video recommendations. So I want to have something that is actually concrete and doesn't change with the year, which is what books provide. So which of these books regarding C++, Java, and VB 2010 is probably worth keeping (Or better suited I should say) for the purposes of learning to program and utilizing their appropriate language and tool sets?

https://trashchan.xyz/agdg/thread/478.html#2100  [details]
Time: 2025-05-26 23:36:35
Filename: C++.jpg
SHA256: c2f8cc509a56a7d0fbf3c3d0d438075d45931b377b65898c192e4bb3b932c69d
Body:
Not an /agdg/ specific question, but asking about programming in general.

So I'm clearing out things out of the basement and off my shelves, with the intention of "starting things fresh", and just want to keep (Preferably) one book on each programming subject so that I can learn from it and reference later when I need to. The books you see in the images attached are where I have multiple books covering the "same" topic. Yes, I know books are "redundant" because of how everything is "one search away" on the net, but I'm increasingly distrustful of web searches given how much of everything (Especially related to tech today) seems to be controlled and biased. Including Jewtube video recommendations. So I want to have something that is actually concrete and doesn't change with the year, which is what books provide. So which of these books regarding C++, Java, and VB 2010 is probably worth keeping (Or better suited I should say) for the purposes of learning to program and utilizing their appropriate language and tool sets?

https://zzzchan.xyz/v/thread/253345.html#281111  [details]
Time: 2025-05-26 23:36:22
Filename: C++.jpg
SHA256: c2f8cc509a56a7d0fbf3c3d0d438075d45931b377b65898c192e4bb3b932c69d
Body:
Not an /agdg/ specific question, but asking about programming in general.

So I'm clearing out things out of the basement and off my shelves, with the intention of "starting things fresh", and just want to keep (Preferably) one book on each programming subject so that I can learn from it and reference later when I need to. The books you see in the images attached are where I have multiple books covering the "same" topic. Yes, I know books are "redundant" because of how everything is "one search away" on the net, but I'm increasingly distrustful of web searches given how much of everything (Especially related to tech today) seems to be controlled and biased. Including Jewtube video recommendations. So I want to have something that is actually concrete and doesn't change with the year, which is what books provide. So which of these books regarding C++, Java, and VB 2010 is probably worth keeping (Or better suited I should say) for the purposes of learning to program and utilizing their appropriate language and tool sets?


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