On Wed, Aug 01, 2001 at 08:06:16AM +0100, Riley Williams wrote:
> Personally, I did "B.Sc. Computer Studies", but I suspect the actual
> course title is irrelevant, and it's the modules you do in the course
> that matter. Here's what I would regard as important:
>
> 1. A thorough knowledge of programming in C. Knowledge of C++
> will help.
>
> 2. Experience of programming hardware will definitely help.
>
> 3. The ability to think logically is a definite advantage, and
> tends to result in 90%+ of your programs working first time.
>
> Additions, anybody?
A couple of good books also helps:
- Brian Kernighan and Dennis Ritchie, "The C programming language"
(ANSI edition)
- Brian Kernighan and Rob Pike, "The practice of programming"
- Jon Bentley, "Programming Pearls"
And of course don't wait with kernel programming until after you finish
your studies. Do it right now. Subscribe to linux-kernel, and follow
the discussions. Test patches and improve them, get your hands dirty.
Erik
[who did "M.Sc. Electrical Engineering"]
-- J.A.K. (Erik) Mouw, Information and Communication Theory Group, Department of Electrical Engineering, Faculty of Information Technology and Systems, Delft University of Technology, PO BOX 5031, 2600 GA Delft, The Netherlands Phone: +31-15-2783635 Fax: +31-15-2781843 Email: J.A.K.Mouw@its.tudelft.nl WWW: http://www-ict.its.tudelft.nl/~erik/ - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
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