Hi guys, I realise this is the "PIC" list, but I suspect at least a few of you are C++ programmers, so I'm asking this here. And, after all, [EE] is "Everything Engineering", right? (and I'd just get flamed into oblivion by asking this question on comp.lang.c++) I'm after one or two *really* good C++ reference books. Basically, I've been using C++ for a couple of years, and my O'Reilly C++ and STL Pocket References are starting to show their limits (and age). For instance, neither of the two makes any significant mention of file I/O streams. cin and cout are (briefly) mentioned in the C++ reference, but neither of them cover the C++ Standard Library. Unfortunately for me, it's the function names (and parameters) I keep forgetting! Obviously Stroustrup's book is on the shortlist as a "hard reference", and "C++ In A Nutshell" by Lischner looks interesting on three fronts: good content, low price, un-DRMed EPUB format ebook (that I can put on my Sony Reader) available. Can anyone suggest some other good C++ books? Cheers, -- Phil. piclist@philpem.me.uk http://www.philpem.me.uk/ -- http://www.piclist.com PIC/SX FAQ & list archive View/change your membership options at http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist