Return Styles: Pseud0ch, Terminal, Valhalla, NES, Geocities, Blue Moon. Entire thread

Book recommendation for learning C++

Name: Anonymous 2006-06-13 1:26

What's the best book for learning C++?

I've been wanting to learn C++ for a while, but none of the schools around here teach it and I haven't found anything online that I can easily get myself into.

Name: Anonymous 2006-06-17 8:19 (sage)

>>32
If time and space are discrete, it's below the plack scale.
Why?

How will you simulate that?
With a huge computer, obviously. And you don't need to simulate it at large scales, you could still apply Quantum physics, General Relativity, and Newtonian physics where appropriate. Perhaps with some new math you could derive predictions without having to simulate every single bit. Also, it would be nice to know the exact masses of fundamental particles, the actual behaviour of the universe at the smallest scale, etc, etc.

Newer Posts
Don't change these.
Name: Email:
Entire Thread Thread List