

- #HOW TO USE DOSBOX TURBO HOW TO#
- #HOW TO USE DOSBOX TURBO MANUAL#
- #HOW TO USE DOSBOX TURBO PORTABLE#
If you don't know how to learn new technologies (that is, technologies that are new to you), you'll end up like some of those dinosaurs who only know how to write COBOL for banks or dead-simple assembly for tiny PICs and microcontrollers.Įhh, that can cut both ways.

Learning new languages and new libraries is part of the field. You should go learn it," and be expected to teach yourself the language. Towards the end of a college degree in computer science, you may well walk into a senior-level class and hear "In this class you'll use the Xyz programming language to write your projects. Based on their performance or ease of expressing certain things, some are better suited for some tasks than others, but all basically have the same ideas. At that point, you begin to realize that the programming language doesn't matter. After a few years of practice, you ought to see that the same things apply in every language. Ideally you'll learn them in multiple programming languages. Your goal is to learn concepts like data structures, flow control constructs ( if, while, for, functions), and algorithms. The same things apply whether you're writing assembly or C or Python or APL. More applicable to you is that the point of getting an education in this field is to learn those fundamentals, which apply no matter what programming language you use. We can prove things about algorithms-what they can and can't do, how long they will take-and those will be true for all eternity, no matter how much our computer technology advances. The reason the field is called "computer science" is because it's derived from mathematical principles. You're thinking the point of studying this is to learn particular programming languages, or libraries, or whatever. /r/programminghelp – for beginner questions about programming./r/programming – for discussion and news about computer programming./r/learnprogramming – for people interested in learning to code./r/dailyprogrammer – for programming challenges of varying difficulty./r/cs50 – Harvard's Introduction to Computer Science./r/cpp_questions – for questions about C++./r/cplusplus and /r/cpp – for discussions about C++./r/computerscience – for discussion about computer science./r/coding – for a tighter focus on code.r/C_Homework – another subreddit for questions r/cprog – another subreddit for articles and discussions
#HOW TO USE DOSBOX TURBO PORTABLE#
#HOW TO USE DOSBOX TURBO MANUAL#
