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Understanding Control Flow [electronic resource] : Concurrent Programming Using (So(BC++ / by Peter A. Buhr.

By: Buhr, Peter A [author.].
Contributor(s): SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2016Description: XXI, 741 p. 100 illus. in color. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783319257037.Subject(s): Computer science | Microprogramming | Computer software -- Reusability | Computer programming | Software engineering | Programming languages (Electronic computers) | Computer Science | Programming Languages, Compilers, Interpreters | Programming Techniques | Software Engineering | Performance and Reliability | Control Structures and MicroprogrammingAdditional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification: 005.13 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Introduction -- Advanced Control Flow -- Exceptions -- Coroutine -- Concurrency -- Atomicity -- Locks -- Concurrency Errors -- High-level Concurrency Constructs -- Active Objects -- Enhancing Concurrency -- Optimization -- Control Flow Paradigms -- (So(BC++ Grammar. .
In: Springer eBooksSummary: The control-flow issues presented in this textbook are extremely relevant in modern computer languages and programming styles. In addition to the basic control-flow mechanisms, virtually all new computer languages provide some form of exceptional control flow to support robust programming introduced in this textbook. Also, concurrency capabilities are appearing with increasing frequency in both new and old programming languages, and are covered in this book. Understanding Control Flow: With Concurrent Programming Using (So(BC++ starts with looping, and works through each of the basic control-flow concepts, examining why each is fundamental and where it is useful. Time is spent on each concept according to its level of difficulty. Examples and exercises are also provided in this textbook. New programming methodologies are requiring new forms of control flow, and new programming languages are supporting these methodologies with new control structures, such as the concurrency constructs discussed in this textbook. Most computers now contain multi-threading and multi-cores, while multiple processors and distributed systems are ubiquitous - all of which require advanced programming methodologies to take full advantage of the available parallelism summarized in this textbook. Advance forms of control flow are becoming basic programming skills needed by all programmers, not just graduate students working in the operating systems or database disciplines. This textbook is designed for advanced-level students studying computer science and engineering. Professionals and researchers working in this field, specifically programming and software engineering, will find this book useful as a reference. .
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Introduction -- Advanced Control Flow -- Exceptions -- Coroutine -- Concurrency -- Atomicity -- Locks -- Concurrency Errors -- High-level Concurrency Constructs -- Active Objects -- Enhancing Concurrency -- Optimization -- Control Flow Paradigms -- (So(BC++ Grammar. .

The control-flow issues presented in this textbook are extremely relevant in modern computer languages and programming styles. In addition to the basic control-flow mechanisms, virtually all new computer languages provide some form of exceptional control flow to support robust programming introduced in this textbook. Also, concurrency capabilities are appearing with increasing frequency in both new and old programming languages, and are covered in this book. Understanding Control Flow: With Concurrent Programming Using (So(BC++ starts with looping, and works through each of the basic control-flow concepts, examining why each is fundamental and where it is useful. Time is spent on each concept according to its level of difficulty. Examples and exercises are also provided in this textbook. New programming methodologies are requiring new forms of control flow, and new programming languages are supporting these methodologies with new control structures, such as the concurrency constructs discussed in this textbook. Most computers now contain multi-threading and multi-cores, while multiple processors and distributed systems are ubiquitous - all of which require advanced programming methodologies to take full advantage of the available parallelism summarized in this textbook. Advance forms of control flow are becoming basic programming skills needed by all programmers, not just graduate students working in the operating systems or database disciplines. This textbook is designed for advanced-level students studying computer science and engineering. Professionals and researchers working in this field, specifically programming and software engineering, will find this book useful as a reference. .

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