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Programming in Objective C

Programming in Objective C

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Author: Stephen Kochan
Publisher: Sams
Category: Book

List Price: £25.50
Buy New: £14.08
You Save: £11.42 (45%)



New (20) Used (6) from £13.60

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 7096

Media: Paperback
Edition: New title
Pages: 576
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.1
Dimensions (in): 8.7 x 7 x 1.3

ISBN: 0672325861
Dewey Decimal Number: 005.133
UPC: 752063325865
EAN: 9780672325861
ASIN: 0672325861

Publication Date: December 18, 2003
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Ships from U.S.A., to anywhere in the United Kingdom! Orders only take 7-10 days! We specialise in service to the U.K. and only ship airmail.

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  • Learning Cocoa with Objective-C
  • Mac OS X Leopard: The Missing Manual

Customer Reviews:

2 out of 5 stars out of date   July 18, 2008
R. Rutter (West Midlands)
the book refers to project builder rather than xcode. admits xcode was on the way when it was written, but says 'these instructions should work fine'. They didn't for me - the output from the first program never appears on screen. I've been googling for answers to this, and discovered the Apple documentation for xcode which I'll now have to study first.
Admittedly it does give instructions for compiling from terminal or windows if you prefer.



5 out of 5 stars A great book!   November 3, 2006
M. Tsoukalos (Greece)
4 out of 4 found this review helpful

A really great book for learning Objective-C. Buy it and you will not regret it. It contains small (but complete) Objective-C examples for better understanding the language concepts.


4 out of 5 stars One of the truly great language tutorials   March 2, 2006
A. J. Gauld (Scotland)
4 out of 5 found this review helpful

I first discovered Objective C in 1989 from Brad Cox's original book, but I wasn't impressed and learned C++ instead. Now I have an Apple and Objective C has won me round. I've read Hillegass and the Apple online help and that was OK, but this book really takes you into the language properly. It is very clearly explained and covers all the nooks and crannies that would otherwise trip you up - and had been tripping me up. There are very few great language tutors - and I say that as someone who has tried writing one, and know how hard it is! This is one of them.


5 out of 5 stars Hey, where's the sixth star?   July 19, 2005
mabolek
13 out of 13 found this review helpful

If it was possible I would have given this book six stars. It brought me into programming Objective C in a week (I tried to learn C many years ago, but got nowhere)! It's seriously the best book I have ever read on the topic of programming.

Kochan takes you through the fundamentals of Objective C programming in an easy and very straight-forward way. When writing my first 100% self-made programs I was stunned that most errors I made were mentioned as possible errors in the book.

The examples are also short. That's a big plus, because you can easily execute them in your head, keeping your level of understanding up.

Kochan also mentiones special fields that you MUST understand to continue. That's very nice, and probably saved me many times!

This book is a MUST BUY for anyone interested in programming in Objective C and especially for the Mac.


5 out of 5 stars If only there were more programming books like this one...   July 28, 2004
Kayembi (London, UK)
64 out of 66 found this review helpful

This book is the most lucid book on programming I have ever read. Having a little (self-taught) experience in C, this book was recommended to me as a good foundation before trying to learn Cocoa for programming on Max OS X. I fully expected to be confronted with the sort of doorstopper that I would never finish, as has been the case with several C++ books; instead, I found a straightforward, uncluttered guide, written by somebody with a genuine talent for teaching.

The author takes the approach of not trying to teach you C first, and this has two advantages: first, if you have no C experience, you get started immediately learning Objective-C, so you don't get taught one thing only to be told to forget it later; second, if you do have some C experience, you are thrown into object-oriented programming right from the start. The explanations are consistently concise but clear, and I found myself getting through a chapter or two every night after work and feeling that I was learning something significant on every page. I read someone describe it elsewhere as "Teach Yourself Objective-C in 21 Days," except that this book really could live up to such a title. I wholeheartedly agree - it took me only three weeks to work through the whole book, including nearly all of the exercises. If, like me, you have seen terms such as "polymorphism", "inheritance", "instance method" and "subclassing" bandied around only to stare at them in mute incomprehension, this book is a revelation. The author introduces all such major concepts very gently - in fact they seem to creep up on you, so that by the time you are presented with the proper terminology you either already know what it means or find yourself exclaiming - as I did - "Oh, so that's all polymorphism is!"

My only gripe - and it is very minor - is that the explanations of bitwise operators and bitfields are near incomprehensible to anybody who doesn't have a programming background (or rather, they are explained well, but there is no indication of when you would ever use them), and the author does occasionally (though rarely) seem to assume that the reader has a solid maths background (when there are those of us out there from humanities and arts backgrounds who want to learn to program, too). These topics take up little more than several paragraphs of the 500 or so pages, though, so if you're a novice, don't let them daunt you as they are the exception rather than the rule.

One thing I appreciated about this book was that full code is provided for 99% of the examples - you are never left with an example that won't compile because the author assumed you could guess the rest yourself. Moreover, whilst the examples and exercises do develop on code from previous chapters - in particular, you will develop a Calculator, Fraction, and Rectangle class in the first part of the book, and AddressCard and AddressBook classes in the second part - the author wisely avoids the build-one-big-program approach that some books adopt. This keeps things fresh and lively - you have to type in different examples, meaning you become familiar with the language through repetition, but at the same time you are doing different things in the examples themselves. Moreover the exercises at the end of each chapter are well judged - you are forced to think and look back through the book to recap on what you have learned, and they are difficult without being too difficult. (Don't skip them!)

In the second part of the book, the author moves on to the Foundation framework, which forms half of Cocoa (Cocoa also uses the AppKit for creating GUI's). You will learn how to use NSString, NSArray, NSDictionary (and their mutable counterparts) and a lot more. It builds on everything you've learned in Part One and provides a bridge between the basics of Objective-C and moving on to Cocoa. I expect that this part of the book especially will become dog-eared very quickly. To sum up, this book took me from knowing nothing about Ojbective-C to feeling as though I could write all the background code for the app I have in mind (ie. everything except the GUI). I am now just hoping that Hillegass's book on Cocoa is half as good.

A word of advice: I urge anybody who buys this book to print off the errata on the author's website (the address is given in the book), as there are a few minor errors that might stump you if you don't. Also, if you use Xcode instead of the command-line tools, you will need to delete the contents of the automatically-generated ..._Prefix.pch file as well as the #import line at the top of main.m each time you start a project (the book only specifies the latter). The prefix file caused me some headaches in one of the later chapters.

A lot of people on various forums say that this is the only book from which to learn Objective-C, and I can see why. In short, if you are reading this review you are probably thinking about learning Objective-C, either for its own sake or as groundwork for moving on to Cocoa. Which means that if you are reading this review, you should buy this book.

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