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What would be a recommended book for Software Engineering?

The book should be covering the various stages involved in software development process, covering topics such as:

  • requirement gathering
  • use cases
  • domain model
  • functional specifications
  • architecture design
  • testing
  • deployment

It should be a book that would help someone to understand the various processes, include examples of good documentation of use cases, domain modeling, architecture design etc., explain about how the various steps help in the development of the software.

Not so much on the code writing or the people-management aspect, more on the documentation, design stages, planning prior to actual coding.

Targeted audience should be a technical lead/architect/manager.

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15 Answers

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I would recommended all of these (and probably in that reading order):

I maintain a list over at my blog.

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"Code Complete" and "Clouds to Code" are both excellent!

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More of historical interest, although still somtimes surprisingly actual: The Mythical Man-Month (Frederick P. Brooks)

The classic book on the human elements of software engineering. Software tools and development environments may have changed in the 21 years since the first edition of this book, but the peculiarly nonlinear economies of scale in collaborative work and the nature of individuals and groups has not changed an epsilon. If you write code or depend upon those who do, get this book as soon as possible.

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Steve McConnell's Software Project Survival Guide is an oldie but goodie. It hits the main topics in a very approachable way.

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http://joelonsoftware.com is a good start. Read all of it, think about it and dare to disagree (he's wrong about a lot of things).

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For such a broad overview I'd recommend either of these two classics:

But I do agree with some of the previous recommendations:

  • The Pragmatic Programmer
  • Mythical Man Month - Fred Brooks
  • Code Complete - Steve McConnel

Some good, but OO specific:

  • Object Oriented Software Engineering - Ivar Jacobson
  • Design Patterns - Gamma et al.
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Hi njsf! If you agree with previous answers, the correct way to indicate that is to vote them up so they appear on top of the list. That's also why it's better to post one book per post, so people can vote individually on the books. – Carl Seleborg Sep 25 '08 at 7:42
+1 I think you're the only person who's actually recommended one single book that covers the material asked for in the question. In fact a choice of two books, either one of which covers the material! BTW I don't have my copy here, but I believe Code Complete 2 also recommends these exact two books as overviews of Software Engineering - and says every programmer should own such a book. – MarkJ May 7 at 16:39
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Facts and Fallacies of Software Development (Robert L. Glass)

This guide identifies many of the key problems hampering success in this field. Covers management, all stages of the software lifecycle, quality, research, and more. Author presents ten common fallacies that help support the fifty-five facts.

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"Robert L. Glass" actually. – Brian Ensink Oct 8 '08 at 20:35
Oops! Philip Glass is the composer. Thanks. – Carl Seleborg Oct 10 '08 at 15:10
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I'd completely reccomend Scott Amblers "The Object Primer" and Ivar's Classic "Object Oriented Software Engineering"

http://www.amazon.com/Object-Oriented-Software-Engineering-Approach/dp/0201544350

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More Programming Pearls: Confessions of a Coder by Jon Bentley

http://www.amazon.com/More-Programming-Pearls-Confessions-Coder/dp/0201118890/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1222320145&sr=1-1

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Great book - but not for the issues raised by the question. – Jonathan Leffler Sep 25 '08 at 6:08
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The excellent Patterns of Enterprise Application Architecture by Martin Fowler.

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A book that I liked a lot, and it had the manuscript available online (but not anymore) was: Reliable and Flexible Software Explained, by Henrik Bærbak Christensen

For my viewpoint, far from be renowned is a very good reference indeed.

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How about Making Things Happen ?

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  • Peopleware by Tom DeMarco and Timothy Lister.
    • excellent book about the people side of developing software. It explores principles of organisation, motivation, environment and other stuff which is applicable well beyond programming.
  • Don't Make Me Think by Steve Krug.
    • A short, readable, entertaining book about web interfaces, but it touches on more general interface principles.
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Despite the misleading title, a great book:

"Applying UML and Patterns. Introduction to OOAD & Iterative Development" by Craig Larman

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