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Introduction to C++ for Financial Engineers: An Object-Oriented Approach [Repost]

Posted By: ChrisRedfield
Introduction to C++ for Financial Engineers: An Object-Oriented Approach [Repost]

Daniel J. Duffy - Introduction to C++ for Financial Engineers: An Object-Oriented Approach
Published: 2006-12-14 | ISBN: 0470015381 | PDF | 438 pages | 4 MB


The object-oriented programming language C++ is the de facto standard for developing real-life applications for Quantitative Finance and Financial Engineering. This language was designed by Dr. Bjarne Stroustup in the early 1990’s and it has become one of the most popular and robust languages for many important areas such as medical systems, computer graphics, telecommunications and in application areas where performance, accuracy and interoperability issues play a key role. The general expectation is that its importance will grow in the coming years.
C++ has also become the de facto standard for quant development and analysis. Knowledge of C++ is mandatory for many openings and job positions in Quantitative Finance. This book is the first book that discusses many of the issues that you need to know in order to be able to design and implement real-world applications. We focus on a number of critical topics:
Learning the essential syntax of C++ ('getting the fundamentals right')
Designing and implementing generic data structures using STL
Numerous applications (lattices, finite difference, Monte Carlo, etc)
Libraries, design patterns (GOF, POSA) and reusable software frameworks
Introduction to COM and C++ to Excel interoperability
Each chapter deals with one major topic. Furthermore, each chapter builds only on the results of the chapters preceding it, so that we keep the amount of forward referencing to a minimum. We discuss all the syntax that is discussed in the IT books and we apply it to QF applications. This book is self-contained and we advise its use in combination with the well-known standard reference work by Dr. Stroustrup.
Last, but not least, each chapter concludes with exercises and projects to test what you learned in that chapter. The exercises are based on the tactic: 'get it working, then get it right, then get it optimised'. Furthermore, these exercises will also hopefully prepare you for your job interviews!
Included with the book is a companion website with all source code, including working code for lattice, finite difference and Monte Carlo methods for one-factor and two-factor pricing models as well as an easy-to-use C++ visualization package to help you examine the output from these numerical methods.