#1 | 2 | The implementation of the AlarmClock class described in Section 2.1. |
#2 [*] | 3 | The implementation of the course-scheduling system described in Section 3.3. The solution without controller classes is illustrated here. |
#3 | 3 | The implementation of the home heating system described in Section 3.4 (poor design with accessor methods ). |
#4 [*] | 3 | The implementation of the home heating system described in Section 3.4 (good design without accessor methods). |
#5 [*] | 4 | The implementation of the "car uses a gas station" example described in Section 4.3. The five methods for implementing the uses relationship are demonstrated. |
#6 | 4 | The implementation of the meal containment hierarchy as described in Section 4.6. |
#7 | 5 | The implementation of the fruit basket example described in Section 5.9. |
#8 | 5 | The implementation of the meal containment hierarchy with inheritance as described in Section 4.6. This is a more general solution of Example #6. |
#9 [*] | 5 | The implementation of the sorted linked list inheriting from the linked list example described in Section 5.10. |
#10 [*] | 5 | The implementation of the LinkedRing class added to the linked list hierarchy of Example #9. |
#11 | 5 | The first solution to the " core the apple in the fruit basket" problem discussed in Section 5.19. This solution uses a NOP method in the base class. |
#12 | 5 | The second solution to the "core the apple in the fruit basket" problem discussed in Section 5.19. This solution uses a bookkeeping mechanism in the containing class. |
#13 | 5 | The third solution to the "core the apple in the fruit basket" problem discussed in Section 5.19. This solution uses a generic message handler, which is overridden in each derived class. |
#14 | 6 | The implementation of the wooden door example described in Section 6.3. |
#15 [*] | 6 | The implementation of the graduate student example described in Section 6.7. It illustrates the use of virtual, multiple inheritance in C++. |
#16 | 8 | The implementation of the Invoice class described in Section 8.3. |
#17 [*] | 8 | The implementation of the weak type-checking solution for constructing linked lists of dogs, linked lists of meals, and linked lists of airplanes; as described in Section 8.4. |
#18 [*] | 8 | The implementation of the template solution for constructing linked lists of dogs, linked lists of meals, and linked lists of airplanes; as described in Section 8.4. |
#19 [*] | 9 | The implementation of a minimal public interface in C++ on a reference-counting String class. This minimal interface is described in Section 9.5. |
#20 [*] | 9 | An example implementation of garbage collection in C++. The example examines a node class that hoards memory, and the memory handler that frees the space on demand. |
#21 [*] | 11 | The implementation of the automatic teller machine/bank example as designed in Chapter 11. |