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4.0 out of 5 stars
Uneven composite. Not bad, not great. Gotta have it anyway., 9 Aug 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Charlie Calvert's Borland C++ Builder 4 Unleashed: The Comprehensive Solution (Paperback)
First of all, if you are hoping for the Calvert touch, it's diluted. The main author is Kent Reisdorph, not Calvert - the Amazon description is wrong. Those of you who have enjoyed Calvert's great teaching skills in other volumes won't be delighted. The CD does NOT include old versions, as advertised, which is very unfortunate, as Calvert's previous BCB writing was very useful.
This book is a hacked composite of some of Calvert's BCB3 text, with additional stuff by several bright authors whose pedagogical talent is less polished.
This is a Borland VCL book, not a C++ book. The problem is this: audience. If you are a Delphi user looking for C++ skills (because you fear that Object Pascal is a lame duck), you won't get enough, because you already know the VCL and the C++ fundamentals are missing. For example, the template inheritance example on page 135 is syntactically complex, and nothing is done to clarify it. Add to that the authors' tendency to do C++ code as if it were Object Pascal, with VCL style and naming conventions, and you aren't exactly getting ready for the mainstream.
Conversely, if you are a Microsoft VC++ user, looking for a more productive RAD environment, which BCB4 certainly is, you will find that the Pascal VCL conventions are a bit mysterious and irritating. You will pick up enough to be productive, but in the end the whole VCL is written in Delphi, so you'll probably have to get more comfortable with the Object Pascal world than you'd like. This is not a major problem, but C++ is more than an OP clone, it deserves a little more tender loving. The sections on the allegedly vital STL, part of the ANSI standard stuff that Borland claims makes BCB4 a much purer C++ than VC++, are minimal.
The Reisdorph "Teach yourself BCB4" books are probably great for the Delphi emigrants, filling in the gaps, but for the VC++ refugees, they are too basic, so this book is IT. Amazingly, you will still have to figure out a lot all by yourself. For instance neither the product manuals nor Unleashed cover things like how you select which .lib files to link to.
Is this to suggest that BCB4 does not stand alone as a pure C++ environment? No, it's just that it's not well documented by anyone. So here we are. Making the best of an outstanding tool (BCB4) that is underpromoted, even in the book department. Even the examples on the CD seem rushed, their numbers for instance don't match up with numbers they have in the text.
All of that does nothing to diminish the value of what is here, a wealth of material on a highly productive tool that you won't find anywhere else. At least all of the material is in print, not only in .PDF format on the CD like with some previous Unleashed volumes. You have 1200 pages dealing with a lot of topics pretty well. This is one of the very few books on BCB4, so you have little choice, and it's fortunately worth buying.
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3.0 out of 5 stars
Nice idea, shame about the implementation..., 22 Sep 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Charlie Calvert's Borland C++ Builder 4 Unleashed: The Comprehensive Solution (Paperback)
You know, you get the feeling that Borland have at last done what we've all been waiting for, produced the ultimate development tool and what happens, the problem you want to solve, just doesn't seem to be covered by the help. So you look for the literature... whey heh! Borland C++Builder 4 unleashed. Thats gotta have the answer, ... hasn't it???
I have to say I am very disappointed. I have bought Delphi 2 unleashed and Builder 3 Unleashed and expected great things from 4. First the confusion over who actually gets their name on the cover and then the obsession with Internet tools when there is just SO MUCH in builder that a book 3 times the size probably wouldnt do it justice.
The examples are often not good enough means of eplaining the issues, the question we have is ... how do I do x, y and z. (Which the Builder How To is actually quite good for), and then the important points are lost in the jungle of irrelevancy - and that first chapter???
However, some of it (as with all in the genre) is useful, little bits, that perhaps lead you on elsewhere, but Value-For-Money is not what this book can pride itself on.
Charlie, come back. Kent, remember not all of us are Windows freaks, we just need to do a job and get the product out. Rehashing 3 and calling it 4 and then charging us is a bit much.
Perhaps a couple of volumes (where you could pick/choose the bits you really want) might be a better solution...???
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