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Paperback Structured Basic Programming Book

ISBN: 0471810878

ISBN13: 9780471810872

Structured Basic Programming

An introduction to computer programming via well-structured BASIC. Assuming no prior knowledge of BASIC, this book presents the fundamentals of programming, then shows, through examples and problems, how algorithmic processes from many fields can be transcribed into computer programs. Emphasis is on use of subroutines, and on collections of external subroutines called libraries, as well as on use of top-down design. Section on programming techniques...

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Old but relevant book for learning True BASIC

In 1964, the BASIC programming language got its start as Dartmouth BASIC, so named because it was designed and implemented at Dartmouth College by John Kemeny and Thomas Kurtz. BASIC was invented to give Dartmouth students in the Arts a simple programming language that was easy-to-learn. BASIC was cooked up to let operators sitting at remote terminals write and run programs interactively instead of serially, a single job at a time, wherein punched cards were fed in batches to a computer in s room filled with large equipment. Consequently, Dartmouth BASIC is best known for giving computer programming a human face and making it accessible to everyone. Teletype teleprinters were used as the terminal units of choice for the innovative Dartmouth Time Sharing System. Twenty years later, three years after the birth of the IBM personal computer, True BASIC was developed by the same John Kemeny and Thomas Kurtz. They hoped it would supplant Bill Gates' Microsoft BASIC which they regarded as a corruption of their brain child, Dartmouth BASIC. Incidentally, when the street fight was over, Bill Gates' "corrupt" version of Microsoft BASIC, later QuickBASIC, and finally Visual BASIC, emerged as the winner, not True BASIC. Structured BASIC Programming (1987) was written by John Kemeny and Thomas Kurtz as a textbook for an introductory course in BASIC. It is assumed that students either will be in possession of or will have access to a True BASIC reference manual, True BASIC being the version of BASIC used in this book. It is also assumed that the readers of this book are reasonably competent in high school algebra. The emphasis in this book is on algorithms and problem-solving. The book is divided into four parts: (1) Introduction to Programming, (2) Text Applications, (3) Mathematical Applications, and (4) Other Applications. Part One should be studied in its entirety before moving on to the rest of the book. Parts Two, Three, & Four can be read in any order. The book also stresses the use of subroutines, both internal and external, for building reusable libraries of code. DO-LOOP and SELECT-CASE are promoted in the place of the GOTO statement for creating structured BASIC programs. Mathematical applications are enhanced by the presence of True BASIC's powerful MAT statements for matrix manipulation, a capability that is missing from all versions of Microsoft BASIC. Some of the "Other Applications" in Part Four include business applications, game applications, and graphics applications with animation and music. As this review is being written, forty-six years have passed since BASIC was given life. Its direct descendant, True BASIC, is still in use in spite of its usurpers and detractors. At True BASIC's internet site [...] you will find web pages devoted to Free Demos, Products, Support, FAQ, Schools, Books, Polls, and What's New.
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