BTW: It is not âcodesâ as if they are things,
it is âcodeâ; it is stuff. (âThis code,â not âthese codes.â)
Of course, the code is printed in the book. You can type it into the Integrated Development Environment (IDE) yourself, which is
[u]ver</u>y good as an aid to learning
VB. Typographical errors will be revealed, as well as things you typed deliberately, but were mistaken about what should have been typed. Usually the examples in books are not too large, and chapters build on lessons in previous chapters, making it so you often don't even have to type the entire example.