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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Gcc now handles key set of languages,
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This review is from: Using GCC: The GNU Compiler Collection Reference Manual for GCC 3.3.1 (Paperback)
Given the the author of this book wrote the original gcc, and has been closely involved with its development in the intervening years, you can safely regard the book as definitive.
Stallman clearly is writing for someone already familiar with C. Very little of your time is wasted by wading through elementary material. When I first used gcc years ago, it was just that: strictly for compiling C programs. But Stallman and other developers have dramatically expanded the scope. Now, the book describes how gcc can handle a key set of languages - the original (ANSI) C, C++, Fortran and Java. The set of C, C++ and Fortran probably spans most engineering and scientific legacy applications. Terrific value!
3.0 out of 5 stars
Not what I was looking for,
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This review is from: Using GCC: The GNU Compiler Collection Reference Manual for GCC 3.3.1 (Paperback)
Over half of the manual was a descrition of the many command line parameters. If I were using it in a unix environment or developing my own GUI interface for it, it would be useful. Otherwise...
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Using GCC: The GNU Compiler Collection Reference Manual for GCC 3.3.1 by Richard M. Stallman (Paperback - Oct. 2003)
$45.00
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