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Computer Programming for Absolute Beginners

You're reading from   Computer Programming for Absolute Beginners Learn essential computer science concepts and coding techniques to kick-start your programming career

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839216862
Length 430 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Joakim Wassberg Joakim Wassberg
Author Profile Icon Joakim Wassberg
Joakim Wassberg
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Toc

Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Introduction to Computer Programs and Computer Programming
2. Chapter 1: Introduction to Computer Programs FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Introduction to Programming Languages 4. Chapter 3: Types of Applications 5. Chapter 4: Software Projects and How We Organize Our Code 6. Section 2: Constructs of a Programming Language
7. Chapter 5: Sequence – The Basic Building Block of a Computer Program 8. Chapter 6: Working with Data – Variables 9. Chapter 7: Program Control Structures 10. Chapter 8: Understanding Functions 11. Chapter 9: When Things Go Wrong – Bugs and Exceptions 12. Chapter 10: Programming Paradigms 13. Chapter 11: Programming Tools and Methodologies 14. Section 3: Best Practices for Writing High-Quality Code
15. Chapter 12: Code Quality 16. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix A: How to Translate the Pseudocode into Real Code 1. Appendix B: Dictionary

Summary

In this chapter, we covered one of the two main pillars that programming rests on—how we can store, retrieve, and change data in the computer's memory using variables.

We learned that a variable has a name and a data type and that the type of the variable dictates what can be stored in it and how much memory it will use. We also learned how we could concisely name our variables and that there are naming conventions that we can use for guidance.

With that covered, we then talked about primary or primitive data types and saw that numbers are handled either as integers or floating-point numbers, which are further divided into different sizes, so we can pick a type that suits our needs and make sure we don't waste memory space.

Some data naturally comes in a sequence or in natural groups. For this data, we used a composite data type, and we saw that this type lets us work with groups of data.

We then talked about what operators are and how we can perform...

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