I rate this book based on its content and not on the inaccurate synopsis on the web site. There is no chapter on PDA operating systems of PalmOSO, nor are there 520 pages (499 pages including the index). However, the book does go into some detail on subjects that are not normally covered such as Exception handling and Multithreading. In all, this book is a good follow on from "LabVIEW for Everyone" by Jeffrey Travis and Jim Kring, which focusses on the practical skills needed to create good all round programs.
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I rate this book based on its content and not on the inaccurate synopsis on the web site. There is no chapter on PDA operating systems of PalmOSO, nor are there 520 pages (499 pages including the index). However, the book does go into some detail on subjects that are not normally covered such as Exception handling and Multithreading. In all, this book is a good follow on from "LabVIEW for Everyone" by Jeffrey Travis and Jim Kring, which focusses on the practical skills needed to create good all round programs.
>>More Details
I rate this book based on its content and not on the inaccurate synopsis on the web site. There is no chapter on PDA operating systems of PalmOSO, nor are there 520 pages (499 pages including the index). However, the book does go into some detail on subjects that are not normally covered such as Exception handling and Multithreading. In all, this book is a good follow on from "LabVIEW for Everyone" by Jeffrey Travis and Jim Kring, which focusses on the practical skills needed to create good all round programs.
>>More Details
I rate this book based on its content and not on the inaccurate synopsis on the web site. There is no chapter on PDA operating systems of PalmOSO, nor are there 520 pages (499 pages including the index). However, the book does go into some detail on subjects that are not normally covered such as Exception handling and Multithreading. In all, this book is a good follow on from "LabVIEW for Everyone" by Jeffrey Travis and Jim Kring, which focusses on the practical skills needed to create good all round programs.
>>More Details
I rate this book based on its content and not on the inaccurate synopsis on the web site. There is no chapter on PDA operating systems of PalmOSO, nor are there 520 pages (499 pages including the index). However, the book does go into some detail on subjects that are not normally covered such as Exception handling and Multithreading. In all, this book is a good follow on from "LabVIEW for Everyone" by Jeffrey Travis and Jim Kring, which focusses on the practical skills needed to create good all round programs.
>>More Details
I rate this book based on its content and not on the inaccurate synopsis on the web site. There is no chapter on PDA operating systems of PalmOSO, nor are there 520 pages (499 pages including the index). However, the book does go into some detail on subjects that are not normally covered such as Exception handling and Multithreading. In all, this book is a good follow on from "LabVIEW for Everyone" by Jeffrey Travis and Jim Kring, which focusses on the practical skills needed to create good all round programs.
>>More Details
I rate this book based on its content and not on the inaccurate synopsis on the web site. There is no chapter on PDA operating systems of PalmOSO, nor are there 520 pages (499 pages including the index). However, the book does go into some detail on subjects that are not normally covered such as Exception handling and Multithreading. In all, this book is a good follow on from "LabVIEW for Everyone" by Jeffrey Travis and Jim Kring, which focusses on the practical skills needed to create good all round programs.
>>More Details
My baby (10 months old) loves Lois Ehlert's vivid collages. He really enjoyed Red Leaf, Yellow Leaf with its crumpled tissue leaves and real tree tags along with charming representations of people, trucks, etc. For the adult reader, there is subtle humor in the inclusion of what look like real tags from trees, and the attribution of homesickness to the tree (just when it was getting settled in, they dug it up and took it to the garden center...). Older children just learning to read will probably get a kick out of the inclusion of "hidden words"... tiny scraps of text set right into the pictures, saying things like "bird treat" and "squirrel"... There's even a recipe for the bird treat in the back of the dust ... Read More:
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My baby (10 months old) loves Lois Ehlert's vivid collages. He really enjoyed Red Leaf, Yellow Leaf with its crumpled tissue leaves and real tree tags along with charming representations of people, trucks, etc. For the adult reader, there is subtle humor in the inclusion of what look like real tags from trees, and the attribution of homesickness to the tree (just when it was getting settled in, they dug it up and took it to the garden center...). Older children just learning to read will probably get a kick out of the inclusion of "hidden words"... tiny scraps of text set right into the pictures, saying things like "bird treat" and "squirrel"... There's even a recipe for the bird treat in the back of the dust ... Read More:
>>More Details
My baby (10 months old) loves Lois Ehlert's vivid collages. He really enjoyed Red Leaf, Yellow Leaf with its crumpled tissue leaves and real tree tags along with charming representations of people, trucks, etc. For the adult reader, there is subtle humor in the inclusion of what look like real tags from trees, and the attribution of homesickness to the tree (just when it was getting settled in, they dug it up and took it to the garden center...). Older children just learning to read will probably get a kick out of the inclusion of "hidden words"... tiny scraps of text set right into the pictures, saying things like "bird treat" and "squirrel"... There's even a recipe for the bird treat in the back of the dust ... Read More:
>>More Details