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- Path: news.mistral.co.uk!usenet
- From: mikebarnard@mistral.co.uk (Mike Barnard)
- Newsgroups: comp.lang.c
- Subject: Re: Memory. How is it organised?
- Date: Tue, 05 Mar 1996 23:18:05 GMT
- Organization: Mistral Internet (Brighton)
- Message-ID: <4hipt4$48t@news.mistral.co.uk>
- References: <4hf5gs$1f7@news.mistral.co.uk> <4hf9j8INNko4@keats.ugrad.cs.ubc.ca>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: l58.mistral.co.uk
- X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
-
- Hi Kazimir
-
- >Mike Barnard <mikebarnard@mistral.co.uk> wrote:
- > >I want to find out as much as possible about the stack and
- > >the heap. I know some of this is machine specific, but not
-
- >ALL of it is machine specific, make no mistake.
-
- So I see, now.
-
- ... lot's cut...
-
- Thanks for taking the time to write such a full reply. I've
- read over it briefly and will study it a bit closer during
- the evening. Why isn't such information included in newbie
- tutorials...
-
- > >I presume there's something in C++ that relates to this, but
- > >I don't feel ready for OO yet. I want to learn to walk, not
- > >run.
- >More like, you have to learn to walk before you can fall on your butt. :)
-
- I'm just crawling in the mud!
-
- >There is plenty you can do in the ordinary ANSI C language that can keep you
- >busy. Incidentally, object-oriented design and implementation is certainly
- >possible in C, but it requires programming maturity and discipline.
-
- Do you mean that I **can** program in OO then? After all, I
- am 40 yrs old. :-)
-
- Seroiusly folks, many thanks.
-
-
- ---
- Mic.
- From windy and damp Worthing; England.
- mikebarnard@mistral.co.uk
-
-