Matlab Coder Book by Jonathan Hetherington [Amazon eBook for OS x8 – ISBN 1-87765-17-6] For many years Coder Book was intended to be the leading source of code for computer graphics and programming within Computer Graphics by George P. Scott, co-author of a wonderful collection of graphics programming languages such as C++ for work-groups, or LaTeX for hard-to-find large documents. A collection of nearly 50 new programming languages was based on the collection. It became a book for students, professors, and programmers whose primary goal was general, rather than technical, distribution. Many others received letters, email, and articles on C++ as well as early, written on-line discussions. This book, especially the short section entitled “How Can I Use Macros Without C++,” illustrates that it is not an exact science. It is, quite literally, complete. It is thorough, self-contained, and easy to find. Macros and problems are described in the description of each program, written in such a way as to allow easy and efficient control of the system. This is especially useful for programs written by others. Macros (programming languages) are used to complete major tasks and not to perform minor ones. (In one example, the “code for” word count has to be changed to 11, then the text should have 4 times the characters ‘p’). Some people only use Macros and C++ or C++11 to construct complicated programs