Thanks a lot for all the other replys (I won't waste bandwidth by replying individually) -- the ideas have been all taken on board :) Martijn Klingens wrote: > Without C++ knowledge that book might be too heavy. You can work through it > and understand most, but it isn't impossible that you encounter details that > you don't understand but that are still important. OK, good idea :) I did start reading a C++ book a while ago, but stopped due to a lack of time. I got a bit of a way though it, but I think I will have forgotten most of that now. I only got to the first chapter, so I don't know much more than a couple of "cin"s and "cout"s ;) > I think you'll have better luck trying to work through Qt's tutorials, > because those are more basic. If you can understand what those do, try the > Development Book. Otherwise, take a step back and learn basic C++. Yeah, from everybody's comments, I think taking a look at plain C++ would be the best route. I might not finish the book, although I think I need to learn loads more about classes, inheritance, pointers, oop, and that kind of thing. > Good luck! I'll need it! Thanks :) -- Cheers, Chris Howells -- chris@chrishowells.co.uk, chrish@gmx.co.uk Web: http://chrishowells.co.uk PGP Key: http://chrishowells.co.uk/files/pgp.txt >> Visit http://master.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde-devel#unsub to unsubscribe <<