CS Why is a book that presents a straightforward, curiosity-based approach to filling in the blanks around common, introductory material taught in Computer Science classes. If you have ever wondered "why is that?" about a programming phenomenon, historical tidbit, or common terminology, this book may have an answer that explains it.
Questions include:
Why do computers have trouble with floating point numbers?
Why is it called Bluetooth? Why does it use that symbol?
Why is it called bootstrapping?
Why don't modifications to function parameters persist once the function returns?
Why do we use the QWERTY keyboard?
... and many more.
Perfect for both students and IT professionals, this book provides the clear "why" to answer so many unstated CS questions. Take any example in the book, from base 2 to timezones, and you will have an answer that cements your insight on the "why" of the topic, reinforcing your rote memorization with deeper understanding and insight.