*Result*: Review of 'The Elements of C++ Style by Trevor Misfeldt, Gregory Bumgardner, and Andrew Gray'; Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, ©2004, 0-521-89308-9

Title:
Review of 'The Elements of C++ Style by Trevor Misfeldt, Gregory Bumgardner, and Andrew Gray'; Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, ©2004, 0-521-89308-9
Authors:
Source:
ACM SIGSOFT Software Engineering Notes ; volume 30, issue 2, page 29-29 ; ISSN 0163-5948
Publisher Information:
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Publication Year:
2005
Document Type:
*Academic Journal* article in journal/newspaper
Language:
English
DOI:
10.1145/1050849.1050869
Accession Number:
edsbas.F92B9575
Database:
BASE

*Further Information*

*When we first write an article, generally speaking, we may not pay a lot of attention to the style. However, after a few more pieces, we will gradually find that these articles need polishing not only in the contents, but also in the styles, so we turn to Struck and White's The Elements of Style for help. Similarly, in the field of computer languages, there have many books ( The Elements of Java Style, The Elements of C++ Style, The Elements of UML Style ) furnishing a set of rules for writing in a certain language like C++ or Java. To some extent, conforming to style is a symbol of specialty. Consistent style facilitates communication and will be honored by other members in the same team.*