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Systems Programming with C# and .NET

You're reading from   Systems Programming with C# and .NET Building robust system solutions with C# 12 and .NET 8

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835082683
Length 474 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Dennis Vroegop Dennis Vroegop
Author Profile Icon Dennis Vroegop
Dennis Vroegop
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Overview of Systems Programming FREE CHAPTER 2. Chapter 1: The One with the Low-Level Secrets 3. Chapter 2: The One Where Speed Matters 4. Chapter 3: The One with the Memory Games 5. Chapter 4: The One with the Thread Tangles 6. Chapter 5: The One with the Filesystem Chronicles 7. Chapter 6: The One Where Processes Whisper 8. Chapter 7: The One with the Operating System Tango 9. Chapter 8: The One with the Network Navigation 10. Chapter 9: The One with the Hardware Handshakes 11. Chapter 10: The One with the Systems Check-Ups 12. Chapter 11: The One with the Debugging Dances 13. Chapter 12: The One with the Security Safeguards 14. Chapter 13: The One with the Deployment Dramas 15. Chapter 14: The One with the Linux Leaps 16. Index 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Strings

In the old days, strings used to be simple. You identified the length needed to store a sentence, allocated memory, and copied each character’s ASCII values in a single row. Then, you put a 0 (zero) at the end, and you were done. Easy. But then you realized you needed something more dynamic as you were unsure how long the string would be. So, you wrote code to change the buffer required to store it. You also realized that you needed to have some operations on those characters. For instance, you might have wanted to know how long the string was and not have to count the characters every time, or maybe you wanted to convert all characters into uppercase. So, you wrote code for that as well. At that point, you had some data in the form of characters (with the zero at the end) and some methods on that data. That is the definition of a class, so in C++, you write a String class.

Things got even more complicated when you realized that other cultures used other characters...

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