vote up 568 vote down star
830

If you could go back in time and tell yourself to read a specific book at the beginning of your career as a developer, which book would it be?

I expect this list to be varied and to cover a wide range of things. For me, the book would be Code Complete. After reading that book, I was able to get out of the immediate task mindset and begin to think about the bigger picture, quality and maintainability.

Suggest your programming books

flag
28  
One of the most important question ever asked on stackoverflow :) – Sylvain Jun 9 at 19:30
3  
Browsing this thread make me release how ugly most programming related books are. Very good thread thou! – Carl Bergquist Aug 5 at 12:09
show 3 more comments

277 Answers

prev 1 6 7 8 9 10
vote up 607 vote down

The Pragmatic Programmer; it's more about your trade, and how to apply it than the code per se, but it's still very good.

  • "This is a great book for programmers who have learned the mechanics of programming, maybe in college, but don't quite feel secure deciding what to do. It's like the difference between drafting and architecture. What you learned in that class in college was drafting, and you can draw beautifully, but if you still feel like you wouldn't quite know where to begin if someone told you to write a P2P music-swapping network all by yourself, this is the book for you." --Joel

The Pragmatic Programmer

link|flag
32  
I personally rate this over Code Complete because it's at a higher level conceptually and is concise - easy to read and start benefiting from (Code Complete's dense detail is great when you want it). Due to this however, the book is aging a lot quicker - hopefully a new edition is on the way? – Gordon Hartley Oct 24 '08 at 18:12
2  
Well Harriyott, it'd have better be good, I've just ordered it on your recommendation! :D – Spedge Oct 29 '08 at 14:34
1  
I really like the 'Pragmatic Programmer' too but I like 'Code Complete' too. I don't think these two books are mutually exclusive, as they cover different topics. – Danielb Mar 18 at 15:41
2  
Very overrated! – Jahanzeb Farooq Oct 8 at 11:09
show 9 more comments
vote up 6 vote down

@John, NotMyself

+1 for Brooks' MMM

Its a classic book with many lessons regarding software projects that, though written over 30 years ago, are still relevant today. Brooks' writing style is easy to read and very friendly, and though there are parts where I find myself rolling my eyes at the datedness, there are many more times when I find my self nodding in agreement to the fact that what he is saying is still very relevant.

link|flag
vote up 165 vote down

The Art of Computer Programming if only for the effort Knuth put into it.

alt text

link|flag
15  
Are there any people who read this? I guess this is what you call a book to use, not to read... – nojevive May 22 at 21:51
2  
Upvoted just to get it above the silly zen book. Knuth's book is one I'll actually read and keep on my shelf. – Dietrich Epp Jun 2 at 5:22
6  
Jesus Christ, having "Zen..." on top of this is a crime against humanity. – mquander Jun 2 at 5:31
2  
Computer programming is not art. – sakra Sep 16 at 13:09
11  
@sakra: Trolling is an art. And if you read this book programming might become an art for you too. – Peter Coulton Sep 16 at 16:29
show 8 more comments
vote up 108 vote down

I recommend CODE by Charles Petzold. In this age of tools and IDEs that abstract a lot of complexity away from the programmers, this one is an eye opener.

alt text

link|flag
1  
The book every engeneer should read, not only programmer! – AnSGri Dec 14 '08 at 11:56
1  
I find it's useful for both managers (who aren't programmers) and increasingly new graduate programmers who don't seem to know whats under the hood. – mgb Feb 3 at 17:32
14  
I masturbate to this book frequently – Janie Jul 23 at 22:37
show 6 more comments
vote up -2 vote down

John,

I am curious, why do you feel every developer should read The Mythical Man-Month? It is on my reading list but I have yet to read it.

link|flag
show 2 more comments
vote up 160 vote down

In podcast 12, Jeff and Joel list a myriad of recommended books. Personally though I highly recommend The Mythical Man-Month.

image

link|flag
4  
I found this book interesting, but a little single minded. Make sure to get the "anniversary" edition, the author corrects many of the outdated principals in the additional chapters. – alumb Sep 16 '08 at 16:33
2  
I found it good but overrated too. – Jahanzeb Farooq Oct 8 at 11:07
show 2 more comments
vote up 3 vote down

+1 for Code Complete

Also: What books would you recommend for a beginning Software Developer?

link|flag
prev 1 6 7 8 9 10

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.