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Realbasic: The Definitive Guide. Create Your Own MAC OS X Applications

Realbasic: The Definitive Guide. Create Your Own MAC OS X Applications

Realbasic: The Definitive Guide. Create Your Own MAC OS X Applications
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Realbasic: The Definitive Guide. Create Your Own MAC OS X Applications Paperback - 2001

by Neuburg, Matt

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Brand: O'Reilly Media, 2001-09-01. Subsequent. paperback. Used: Good. 7.05x1.38x9.21. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy.
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Details

  • Title Realbasic: The Definitive Guide. Create Your Own MAC OS X Applications
  • Author Neuburg, Matt
  • Binding Paperback
  • Edition Subsequent
  • Condition Used: Good
  • Pages 752
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Brand: O'Reilly Media, Cambridge, MA, U.S.A
  • Publication date 2001-09-01
  • Illustrated Yes
  • Bookseller's Inventory # SONG0596001770
  • ISBN 9780596001773 / 0596001770
  • Weight 2.3 lbs (1.04 kg)
  • Dimensions 9.2 x 7.04 x 1.4 in (23.37 x 17.88 x 3.56 cm)
  • Size 7.05x1.38x9.21
  • Category Computers - Languages / Programming
  • Library of Congress subjects Macintosh (Computer) - Programming, Object-oriented programming (Computer
  • Library of Congress Catalogue Number 2001036171
  • Dewey Decimal Code 005.265
  • Quantity available 1

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Reader reviews for Realbasic: The Definitive Guide. Create Your Own MAC OS X Applications

From the publisher

REALbasic is a programming language in the best Macintosh tradition: visual, intuitive, and easy to learn. It allows you to create interfaces in minutes and entire, compiled applications without having to learn a complicated language; the strong object orientation makes it very easy even for beginners to develop, maintain, and alter projects. Best of all, an REALbasic 3, a single button click generates your project as a Mac OS 8/9 application, a Mac OS X native ("Carbon") application, or a Windows executable. No other application framework lets you compile for users on so many platforms so quickly and easily."REALbasic: The Definitive Guide" not only gives you a firm grasp of the program's essential concepts, but also tells you things you won't learn from the official documentation alone. If you've never programmed before, the book offers both a primer in REALbasic and an intuitive approach to the concepts of programming itself, as you quickly reach the ability to program every aspect of REALbasic. You start out drawing the interface much as you would do in a drawing program: by selecting buttons, menus, dialog boxes, and the like from a tools menu. Then you use the code editor to fill in the code that tells these pieces what to do.The widely hailed first edition of "REALbasic: The Definitive Guide" has been completely rewritten to encompass reader suggestions and the many improvements of REALbasic 3--like its ability to compile and run under OS X.The book is divided into three sections: Fundamentals: a detailed summary of the language that quickly shows you how to think about programming and accomplish your goals in less timeUser Interface: how to create a complete application using the rich classes and pre-defined tools that make life so much easier for the REALbasic programmer.Reaching Out: Internet communications, databases, multimedia, game programming and more!

About the author

Matt Neuburg started programming computers in 1968, when he was 14 years old, as a member of a literally underground high school club, which met once a week to do timesharing on a bank of PDP-10s by way of primitive teletype machines. He also occasionally used Princeton University's IBM-360/67, but gave it up in frustration when one day he dropped his punch cards. He majored in Greek at Swarthmore College, and received his Ph.D. from Cornell University in 1981, writing his doctoral dissertation (about Aeschylus) on a mainframe. He proceeded to teach Classical languages, literature, and culture at many well-known institutions of higher learning, most of which now disavow knowledge of his existence, and to publish numerous scholarly articles unlikely to interest anyone. Meanwhile he obtained an Apple IIc and became hopelessly hooked on computers again, migrating to a Macintosh in 1990. He wrote some educational and utility freeware, became an early regular contributor to the online journal TidBITS, and in 1995 left academe to edit MacTech Magazine. He is also the author of Frontier: The Definitive Guide and REALbasic: The Definitive Guide. In August 1996 he became a freelancer, which means he has been looking for work ever since. He is the author of Frontier: The Definitive Guide and REALbasic: The Definitive Guide, both for O'Reilly & Associates.

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