The Largest Free eBooks Provider on Web. Please Bookmark Us if you like us.

Creating Games in C++: A Step-by-Step Guide



Creating Games in C++: A Step-by-Step Guide
Publisher: New Riders Games | ISBN: 0735714347 | edition 2007 | CHM | 464 pages | 1,24 mb

Do you love video games? Ever wondered if you could create one of your own, with all the bells and whistles? It’s not as complicated as you’d think, and you don’t need to be a math whiz or a programming genius to do it. In fact, everything you need to create your first game, “Invasion of the Slugwroths,” is included in this book and CD-ROM.
Author David Conger starts at square one, introducing the tools of the trade and all the basic concepts for getting started programming with C++, the language that powers most current commercial games. Plus, he’s put a wealth of top-notch (and free) tools on the CD-ROM, including the Dev-C++ compiler, linker, and debugger--and his own LlamaWorks2D game engine. Step-by-step instructions and ample illustrations take you through game program structure, integrating sound and music into games, floating-point math, C++ arrays, and much more. Using the sample programs and the source code to run them, you can follow along as you learn.
Bio: David Conger has been programming professionally for over 23 years. Along with countless custom business applications, he has written several PC and online games. Conger also worked on graphics firmware for military aircraft, and taught computer science at the university level for four years. Conger has written numerous books on C, C++, and other computer-related topics. He lives in western Washington State and has also published a collection of Indian folk tales.

Download:
Link_1
Or
Link_2

1 comment:

aminosäuren said...

One of the things that sets C++ apart from C is its use of classes and structures, which provide "encapsulation", whereas procedural languages such as C or FORTRAN would use functions in a more linear fashion. Object oriented languages attempt to emulate real world systems and structures more closely that procedural programming. In the past computers weren't as powerful and memory was very expensive.

Post a Comment

 

eBooksProvider.Blogspot.com © 2009-15.

Real Hot Masala