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Now that the Amazon Kindle is available internationally, I'm considering getting one. There are plenty of reviews around the net, but what I want to ask here is whether this device is suitable for reading programming reference books. I'd really appreciate the thoughts of anyone with experience of it.

  • Is the amount of text that can be shown on screen at once limiting?

  • Are source code listings a problem?

  • How easy is it to jump from place to place in a non-linear way as you do with a reference book?

  • Are the note taking and annotation features practical?

As far as my question goes:

I am interested in the standard Kindle currently being sold (the "Kindle 2") and not the "Kindle DX".

I would not use it for only programming books, but it would be a lot of money to spend on a device not suitable for them.

Assume that the books are available direct from Amazon, i.e. no messy file conversions needed.

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Putting "programming" in the question doesn't make it programming-related. Are you writing a kindle app? Are you preparing documents for a kindle? What programming are you doing? Where's the code? Where are the error messages? – S.Lott Oct 20 '09 at 1:37
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Have a day off, Mr Serious Robot. – f100 Oct 20 '09 at 1:41
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I think it's appropriate enough. Frou is very specifically talking about programming books (as opposed to ANY other sort of book). And specifically whether code examples are readble using the Kindle. – davewasthere Oct 20 '09 at 16:03
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I agree it is appropriate. I bought my Kindle DX Graphite specifically BECAUSE it can display PDFs clearly and at a size I can read - the only PDFs I read are programming related! – Ray Hayes Aug 6 '10 at 11:47
Agreed, legit question. Agree with f100, take a day off. – Bodman Jun 17 '11 at 20:41
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closed as off topic by casperOne Feb 17 at 18:01

Questions on Stack Overflow are expected to generally relate to programming or software development in some way, within the scope defined in the faq.

18 Answers

up vote 56 down vote accepted

I love my Kindle for non-technical books, but the programming books I've tried were hard to read. Code samples were sometimes poorly formatted. You couldn't see a diagram and the text at the same time. Personally I'm often flipping back and forth between pages to go back and look at a previous example and I found that hard to do.

I also don't read technical books cover to cover very often. They are usually more skim and then refer back kinds of books to me. Kindle has decent enough bookmarking but it isn't the same as post it notes and dog earing.

I have no tried a Kindle DX(larger screen), but I still think it would have issues. I just like the fast flip back and forth I can get with paper for technical books.

I travel a lot so the Kindle is fantastic for non-technical books. I can carry a bunch of books at a time in such a tiny package. The battery lasts a very long time if the wireless off. It keeps track of where I am in each book.

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Got it. I don't think I'll buy the Kindle, then, but I'll keep an eye on how the e-ink readers evolve. – f100 Oct 20 '09 at 23:09
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I have this exact same experience. Novels on the Kindle are amazing, but technical books just aren't the type of books to read end-to-end. And the points about diagrams and special formatting are absolutely correct too. – Ricket Jul 29 '10 at 16:29
+1 -- exactly my experience also (but with Cool-er reader rather than Kindle). – Dr Herbie Oct 7 '10 at 12:42
well put. My one experience matched what you described. I won't buy other tech books in this format. – dbasnett Oct 7 '10 at 12:44
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For me the biggest issue was trying to flip back and forth between pages. I wanted to get some ASP.net knowledge and was getting ready to go on vacation so what better way to spend 5 hours on a plane than with my Kindle 2 and computer open and learning.. For the first few introductory chapters it worked great. Much easier than flipping pages in an analog book on a plane... Even reading the coding samples wasn't that bad at all. I have the text on the smallest setting and it followed would I would assume to be the same formatting as the analog book. The issues came in later chapters when I wanted to reference something that was back a chapter and come back. Where I might stick a finger in the current page and fan back through the pages to find something only to flip the pages back in a quick second wasn't easy to do at all and definitely not as fast.

Now, when I want to use the book for reference, I can search through based on keyword and find something easier than browsing through. However, a good index would suffice in an analog book, though I think a digital book works better in this regard.

Overall, I'm really torn. While I like being able to flip back and forth in a book, I also like having it available on my Kindle or iPhone immediately and like the word search for later reference. It really comes down to the way you read books. I'll probably stick to analog books for programming topics for now because of the ability to flip back and forth quickly.

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I have a review of reading technical books on Kindle DX on my blog, for anybody interested:

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Nice job. Personally, I have found that an e-ink screen is not that beneficial to me, so the iPad wins rather conclusively. – f100 May 4 '11 at 18:30
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To offer a contrary opinion, I have read MANY technical books on my Kindle DX and love it. Get the latest firmware as it improves PDF rendering quite a bit. If you have the choice, grab the .mobi version of the book as it renders cleaner and will reflow when you change font size. (PDFs are fixed layout. So you can't change font size.) When a code sample hasn't rendered well (which is seldom), flip the Kindle DX 90 degrees and it will automatically layout the page in landscape mode. (You can only see part of the page, but code samples are easy enough to read.)

Overall it depends on how you read programming books. If you read them cover-to-cover, the Kindle DX is awesome. If you're more a flip and browse, eReaders are not for you. I love the fact that I can take dozens of books on a trip - including 600+ page monsters - in a form factor no larger than a single magazine.

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I have been looking for an answer to this question as well as like all of us I dont want to be taking 50lbs (exaggeration) of technical books when going on a trip.

I have placed a link at the bottom of a good review of the Kindle from a programmers perspective, but in short, it seems there are three main reasons that the kindle is not ideal for programming books. (i have seen it in action on a colleagues kindle)

  1. Whether you read them cover to cover or not, technical books tend to be flipped through quicker than reading a novel, and often have a need to refer back a few pages.

  2. The formatting of code, an important part of coding books, is far from ideal and not really practical.

  3. The screen real estate is just not enough, again the need to take a look at the whole picture, possibly a diagram, code and an explanation all at the same time is pretty much essential for a programming book, and it cant be done on the kindle.

So, if you are planning on reading newspapers, blogs and novels and want to occasioanlly be able to refer to a technical pdf, get a kindle, but if like me you only wanted a kindle to throw on a ton of 500 page technical books in pdf format, then sadly, in my opinion it is just not ready yet..

http://www.hanselman.com/blog/AYearWithAnAmazonKindleAndNewKindleCases.aspx

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If you get .prc format for the ebook then its very good. But .pdf and .txt files have their limitations. Text files have formatting issues and PDF files have zomming issues.

Best way is to convert your .chm/.pdf files to .prc files and then put into your kindle manually from PC.

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It can work even on the smaller Kindle if you use the landscape mode. It's not ideal. I'm finding that studying for the SCJP is doable because smallish code fragments are used.

The latest Kindle software does allow for PDF zooming, FYI

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The narrative text, as with any other book, is fine to read on the Kindle. When you get to source code sections, you run into serious problems. One particularly nasty one is that hyphens seem to get inserted in some places where line-wrapping must break up punctuated strings. Of course, that character is used as a minus sign in most languages. You come across things like

object.method()

turned into

    object.-
method()

which can make heavily delimited expressions pretty undreadable.

The free Kindle app for PCs and Macs makes code more legible and, oddly, even the free Kindle iPhone app seems to be better for source code than the $100+ dedicated device.

My suggestion to Amazon would be to publish code as images, rather than text. They could better maintain fidelity with the printed book and it would facilitate zooming if necessary.

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E-readers are useless for reading programming books, Source codes are messed up and it's almost impossible to understand anything. I'm never using E-reader for reading technical books.

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Have you actually tried one? – leonm Oct 20 '09 at 6:55
Yes, I've tried PRS-700, and friend of mine is claiming same problem for Kindle – rachvela Oct 20 '09 at 7:50
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I've just upgraded from the PRS-505 to a Kindle DX (with the recent PDF improvement - DX graphite). Sony's PDF support is OK (albeit hard to read on a 6" screen), it goes badly wrong when zoomed (e.g. anything other than fit-to-page). The Kindle DX is a joy for technical books (PDF), zooming keeps the structure (without reflowing) and changing the orientation to landscape gives a type of quick-zoom facility. Perfect for my technical book needs, I'm still keeping my PRS-505 for putting in my pocket and reading 'paperbacks'. – Ray Hayes Jul 22 '10 at 8:41
@Ray: Agreed; the DX is the perfect size for reading technical content / PDFs. Though it does not compare with paper books for quick flipping through and jumping between chapters. – Sridhar Ratnakumar Aug 5 '10 at 6:49
@Sridhar which is why I still buy paper books too. Although when on the road, the advantage of having a whole library for the weight of one reader is enough for me to offset the inconvenience of "flicking". The DX is way faster at changing pages than my old Sony, so actually, I do flick more than I used to (just a handful of pages though). The new DX software due soon (as in Kindle 3) will add better bookmarking and notes in PDFs! – Ray Hayes Aug 6 '10 at 11:45
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Most programming books are available as PDF from O'Reilly safari, Manning Early Access program and Apress. I don't know how many are available in Kindle format and the Kindle's handling of PDFs is limited. And if color catches on (as in SAMS unleashed WPF books) the Kindle is going to have a harder time.

I think I would get a netbook, if you are using this for programming books then you are probably going to be near power at least some of the time and the battery life of a SSD netbook should be good enough.

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Kindle just released an update that allows zooming in on pdfs. This a HUGE step forward. – jle Jul 29 '10 at 16:33
Kindle can read the .mobi format, which is available from Manning, PragPress, and others. Much better than PDFs on an eReader. PDF support on the Kindle DX is decent, though not ideal. – James Kovacs Dec 3 '10 at 20:01
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I have Kindle DX and I specifically bought it for reading programming books. I find that reading A4 size PDFs is little troublesome for eyes on Kindle DX screen. The font gets smaller and if you zoom in, you can not read the whole page!! But, if you find a book in a .MOBI format ( or a PDF which is specifically prepared for 9.7 inch screens like Kindle Dx or iPad 2), then it is actually easy to read any programming book on Kindle DX. I love reading "Hackers Monthly" magazine on my Kindle DX as it also comes in .MOBI format. Now a days, many publisher like O'reilly gives you .PDF and .MOBI format when you buy ebook edition from their website. I have bought few ebooks like "Regular Expression Cookbook", "High Performance JavaScript" and they look awesome on Kindle DX.

One other problem with Kindle DX is - I can not flip through pages faster as I would do with a hard cover book. This makes reading a book just for a reference difficult on Kindle DX. But if you love to read book from cover to cover, Kindle DX is perfect (given that you have .MOBI format edition). It is better to have a ebook prepared in .MOBI format for publisher. Because, when you convert .PDF or .EPUB to .MOBI using freely available converters, tables in book get messed up most of the time.

If you just want to browse an ebook for reference, it is better to do so on Desktop itself. Or you can also view it on iPad 2. iPad 2 works perfectly for reading PDFs. But is a matter of choice between eInk or LCD type screens.

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I guess I'm not a tree hugger. I like real computer books more. And no, I don't think Kindle is suitable for any complex technical books including most computer books I read.

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I don't care about trees used to make traditional books. Please elaborate :) – f100 Oct 20 '09 at 1:34
It's all about jumping(nothing beats a real book at this chapter), display size and resolution. – Marius Burz Oct 20 '09 at 1:38
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I don't think I'd be happy with the Kindle as the form factor is limiting. However, as soon as the Kindle software is made available for the Mac, I'll be trying a number of the available computer texts via free samples on my laptop and my desktop with a large screen.

If it worked, then the laptop would fulfill my portable requirements for technical documentation, and the desktop would help with denser diagrams. My only concern is that, as @rachvela indicates, formatting (such as for source code) gets ignored/scrambled. But that's what I'll find out!

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Not support PDF zoom in/out, not very suitable for programming book.

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The July 2010 update has added better zoom functionality (without resorting to Sony's reflow trick). – Ray Hayes Jul 22 '10 at 8:43
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Has anyone actually done a side by side comparison of the Kindle2 vs. the DX on a specific programming book? I do a lot of reading/coding during my lunch hour, away from my desk, so in most cases I'd have both the kindle and my laptop out, reading and copying code examples. Obviously the screen size of the DX is better, but I do non technical reading as well, and the whole ideal is to not have to carry something the size of a hardcover bestseller to the beach. Is the Kindle 2 that difficult to "study" from?

I absolutely get the reference point and flipping through pages, but to not have to carry ASP.Net 3.5 Unleashed would be awesome.

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Kindle 2 works fine for me for everything with PDF zoom it is MUCH MUCH more useful though – jle Jul 29 '10 at 16:35
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kindle latest edition support pdf well. It's not too comfortable to read pdf on 6" devices because you must zoom in and out repeatedly between pages, but with a dx device it's really good. My favorite device!

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You can read them in PDF format using latest Kindle(in landscape mode). In mobi some images are corrupted or trimmed, so PDF is better here. Tho its opened without zoom, so you'll have to read it in a bit small font (tho sure readable, cant say about same mode in Sony PRS-505. You almost cant read there). Still i prefer simple books for programming. They are more expensive, but, hey, thats your profession! I like to say to myself that every penny i spent on my learning helps me to earn another 10.

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I have a Kindle DX and I still find the PDF reading experience poor in portrait mode. In landscape it is better in terms of the font size but then I quickly lose context when I do a page down for technical books. I don't think there exists a good e-ink based pdf ebook reader in this world yet. Kindle DX is better but not good enough!!!

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