1st Edition

Programming in C++ for Engineering and Science

By Larry Nyhoff Copyright 2012
    744 Pages 354 Color Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    744 Pages
    by CRC Press

    Developed from the author’s many years of teaching computing courses, Programming in C++ for Engineering and Science guides students in designing programs to solve real problems encountered in engineering and scientific applications. These problems include radioactive decay, pollution indexes, digital circuits, differential equations, Internet addresses, data analysis, simulation, quality control, electrical networks, data encryption, beam deflection, and many other areas.

    To make it easier for novices to develop programs, the author uses an object-centered design approach that helps students identify the objects in a problem and the operations needed; develop an algorithm for processing; implement the objects, operations, and algorithm in a program; and test, correct, and revise the program. He also revisits topics in greater detail as the text progresses. By the end of the book, students will have a solid understanding of how C++ can be used to process complex objects, including how classes can be built to model objects.

    Web Resource
    The book’s website at http://cs.calvin.edu/books/c++/engr-sci provides source code, expanded presentations, links to relevant sites, reference materials, lab exercises, and projects. For instructors, solutions to exercises and PowerPoint slides for classroom use are available upon qualifying course adoption.

    Introduction to Computing

    Programming and Problem Solving—Software Engineering

    Types in C++

    Getting Started with Expressions

    Control Structures

    Functions and Libraries

    Using Classes

    More Selection Control Structures

    More Repetition Control Structures

    Functions in Depth

    Files and Streams

    Arrays and the vector Class Template

    Multidimensional Arrays and Vectors

    Building Classes

    Pointers and Linked Structures

    Data Structures

    Answers to Test Yourself Questions

    Appendix A: ASCII Character Codes

    Appendix B: C++ Keywords

    Appendix C: C++ Operators

    Appendix D: Other C++ Features

    Biography

    Larry Nyhoff is a professor emeritus at Calvin College, where he continues to teach part-time. He retired in 2003 after 41 years of teaching mathematics and computing. Upon retirement, Professor Nyhoff was awarded the College’s highest faculty honor, the Presidential Award for Exemplary Teaching. He earned a PhD from Michigan State University, has co-authored more than 25 textbooks on programming in Fortran, Turbo Pascal, Modula-2, Java, and C++, and has authored several textbooks on introductory data structures.

    "The book is lavishly illustrated with examples and exercises, which would make it both an ideal course companion and a book for private study. The author’s abilities to explain briefly the history of computing and to write an engaging text are to be commended. If you buy only one text on programming in C++, then this should be the one for you."
    —Carl M. O’Brien, International Statistical Review (2013), 81