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Introducing Delphi Programming: Theory through Practise

Introducing Delphi Programming: Theory through Practise

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Authors: John Barrow, Helene Gelderblom, Linda Miller
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Category: Book

Buy Used: $49.99



Used (3) from $49.99

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 1438097

Media: Paperback
Edition: 3
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 560
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.8
Dimensions (in): 10.6 x 8.4 x 1.3

ISBN: 019578135X
Dewey Decimal Number: 005
EAN: 9780195781359
ASIN: 019578135X

Publication Date: April 29, 2004
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Written by three members of the UNISA Department of Information Systems, the book teaches distance-learning students how to program in Delphi, a major computer language used to design a variety of programs.


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars The best option for the beginner.   April 7, 2005
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

Excellent introduction to Delphi programming! What a pity it came to my hands so late! During my recent graduate studies I had to develop software working under Windows using Pascal and, since I studied computer programming several years ago, it was really painful for me. I just couldn't get it with this new stuff (new for me): event driven programming, developing GUIs, etc. I tried Marco Cantu's book, but I found it was not really written for people with little knowledge, like me. Thank God I could finally solve my problems, but it's was really hard. After all this, I read about "Introducing Delphi Programming: Theory through Practise" in Amazon Web pages, and decided to buy it, just to see what it had. To my surprise, this book had everything I needed and much more! It is a very well organized, progressive, and comprehensive textbook for the beginner in Delphi programming. It includes lots of solved problems that give you that know how a novice programmer like me doesn't have and needs. I sincerely recommend it as a fine book to start with Delphi programming. You can use it in classrooms or by yourself. It surely is the best option for the beginner! I can tell you, because I was one of them.


4 out of 5 stars Good Intro to Delphi, but not great   June 25, 2004
 8 out of 8 found this review helpful

In general, I recommend this book. It is an easy-to-use introduction to Delpi, Visual IDEs, and event-driven programming. As an experienced programmer (FORTRAN, COBOL, C++), I found the book a little boring, but I definitely learned some Pascal and got a mercifully gentle introduction (which I needed) to Visual IDEs and event-driven programming with Delphi. The book was written as a text for an introductory programming course using Delphi, which brings me to my only concern. The book does not do a good job of preparing students for a more advanced course. Important concepts are explained only by analogy and the analogies are often misleading. This could present a problem for a beginning student who might want to move on to Java or (Visual) C++, which are notoriously unforgiving of ignorance or misunderstanding. If you are an instructor considering this book, be careful to include rigorous explanations of basic concepts in your lectures. Otherwise, the book is quite serviceable and I reiterate my recommendation.


5 out of 5 stars Practical and Effective Teaching of Delphi Programming   April 21, 2004
 21 out of 21 found this review helpful

For several years, I searched for ways to learn to use Delphi to create language-analysis programs. No courses are offered in Atlanta. All of the "learn to program with Delphi" books that I found on Amazon are horrible in similar ways: (a) They promise to start at the beginning but can't figure out where the beginning is. (b) They make huge leaps between levels. (c) They do not have enough practical activities to help the learn understand and apply features in Delphi. (d) They give exercise/practice activities that require knowledge not presented in the book.

I had given up. Then, over the 2003 Christmas holidays, I decided to check around the Internet one last time for Delphi materials. I stumbled over an online course offered through the University of South Africa that is built around "Introducing Delphi Programming: Theory through Practice." The example materials for the course demonstrated a very practical set of explanations and exercises. So, I ordered the book through Amazon-UK because it was not at that time available in the U.S.

"Introducting Delphi programming: Theory through Practice" turned out to be outstanding: it begins where I needed to begin; it progresses smoothly from task to task; it is built around sets of practical exercises and practice activities; explanations are clear and well organized. It is the best "how to" book of any type that I've ever used.

In addition, there's an online course offered through the University of South Africa. I've signed up and am progressing through the book at the schedule required for the course; the schedule helps to keep me working away at learning Delphi in the midst of a busy life. The course also offers email contact with 2 of the authors of the book (Gelderblom and Miller) for help with the activities.

(...)Pat

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