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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

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

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For me it was Design Patterns Explained it provided an 'Oh that's how it works' moment for me in regards to design patterns and has been very useful when teaching design patterns to others.

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Definitively Software Craftsmanship alt text this book explains a lot of things about software engineering, system development. It's also extremly useful to understand the difference between different kind of product developement: web VS shrinkwrap VS IBM framework. What people had in mind when they conceived waterfall model? Read this and all we'll become clear (hopefully)

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Advanced Programming in the Unix Environment by Stevens and Rago (2005 Addison-Wesley Professional)

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Neuromancer by Gibson

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Etudes for Programmers by Charles Wetherell, More Programming Pearls (Jon Bently),

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I am still waiting for my copy of LiSP.

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Programming is a creative task, and there are a lot of great books about creative tasks in general. Here's one:

Whatever you think, think the opposite.

By Paul Arden.

This is a small book that helps you generate big ideas. Arden came from an advertising background, but he wrote for a general audience of creative individuals. If you don't think that's you, you should think some more.

Yes, there are great domain-specific books for programmers. But programmers, as creative professionals, should make more of an effort to tap into the broader world of books for "creatives."

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The Soul of a New Machine

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Soul_of_a_New_Machine

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As I started out developing in Java (and am still doing so to this very day) I'd have to recommend the outstanding work in the field: Mr Bunny's Big Cup o' Java.

From the author's blurb:

There is simply no better way to learn Java than to have the pineal gland of an expert Java programmer surgically implanted in your brain. Sadly, most HMOs refuse to pay for this career saving procedure, deeming Java to be too experimental. At last there is an alternative treatment for those of us who cannot wait for sweeping health care reforms.

Mr. Bunny’s Big Cup O’ Java is recommended by n out of ten doctors, where n is any integer you wish to make up to impress an astoundingly gullible public. The book begins with an overview of the book, and quickly expands into the book itself. Just look at the topics covered:

  • Java

In short, MBBCOJ will teach you all you need to know for a successful career in today’s rabbit development environments.

MBBCOJ

The insight into pixels alone would have cut years off my software developing life.

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Writing Solid Code by Steve Maguire

Code Complete by Steve McConnell

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After K&R, I'll second that vote for Programming Pearls.

Why is the Brooklyn Bridge still standing while Galloping Gertie self-destructed in weeks? Every engineer should be fluent in the skill of making "back of the envelope" calculations and mentally keeping an eye on both the "forest and the trees" of their projects. The author Bently emphasizes their importance in every essay. Standing in line at a restaurant? Estimate your wait using the same math used in data queue analysis. How much water flows out of the mouth of the Mississippi river? Four different people use four unrelated methods to estimate an answer, all applicable to CPU processing speed calculations. And so on.

These are vital, fundamental skills that, sadly, are going the way of the slide rule.

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Clean Code

Clean Code has a lot in common with Code Complete but it's more concise and practical with lots of clear examples.

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I'm judging thibook strictly by the cover: It's awesome! – GordonG Jul 31 at 6:07
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+1: An excellent book! – TrueWill Sep 18 at 3:15
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Systemantics: How Systems Work and Especially How They Fail. Get it used cheap. But you might not get the humor until you've worked on a few failed projects.

The beauty of the book is the copyright year.

Probably the most profound takeaway "law" presented in the book:

The Fundamental Failure-Mode Theorem (F.F.T.): Complex systems usually operate in failure mode.

The idea being that there are failing parts in any given piece of software that are masked by failures in other parts or by validations in other parts. See a real-world example at the Therac-25 radiation machine, whose software flaws were masked by hardware failsafes. When the hardware failsafes were removed, the software race condition that had gone undetected all those years resulted in the machine killing 3 people.

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Graphics Programming in Windows is difficult to fault.

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Applying UML and Patterns by Craig Larman.

The title of the book is slightly misleading; it does deal with UML and patterns, but it covers so much more. The subtitle of the book tells you a bit more: An Introduction to Object-Oriented Analysis and Design and Iterative Development.

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It's an oldie, but still worth reading:

alt text

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Tao Te Ching - it transcends programming and will also help you deal with your own existence. Anyone unfamiliar with this text should find a copy and read through- as well as learn about the Tao. One easy way to learn is to read 'The Tao of poo' which walks through the main concepts of the Tao using Winnie the poo characters (not a childrens book).

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Nobody seems to have mentioned Stroustup's The C++ Programming Language which is a great book that every C++ programmer should read.

I also think that Extreme Programming Explained: Embrace Change should be read by every programmer and manager. Many of the ideas in the book are common knowledge now but the book gives an intelligent and inspiring account of the pursuit of quality in software engineering.

I would second the recommendations for Knuth and Gang of Four which are classics.

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The books I suggest everbody to read are: Code complete Radpid development Head first software development Web engineering

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Masters of doom. As far as motivation and love for your profession go: it won't get any better than what's been described in this book, truthfully inspiring story!

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You may take a look at

http://gleichmann.wordpress.com/2008/09/19/yet-another-book-recommendation-list-software-development/

I found thise books very valuable in the field of general software development.

Greetings

Mario

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Mythical man month ++ Code Complete 2 ++

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It should be Paulo Coelho - The Alchemist, because many programmers have low self-worth, narcissism disorders and are approval seeking. This means that they do what others tell them to do. And that they think that being programmer is worse than being a manager. Reading The Alchemist may discover them the truth: being engineer is a reason to be proud.

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If you write code in C then Expert C Programming is an eye opener. It has answers to all the things you wondered why it works this way. Peter Van Der Linden has a great writing style and makes arcane concepts very readable. A must read for all C developers

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OK, so the question is not "what's the best programming book", but "if you could tell yourself what to read in the beginning of your career"...

Probably one of "On Lisp" and SICP, plus one of CLRS or "Algorithms: a creative approach" by Udi Manber.

The first two will teach lots of programming techniques, patterns, and really open up one's mind to his/her own creativity; the other two are different. They're more theoretical, but also very important, focusing on design of correct and efficient algorithms (and requiring substantially more math).

I see lots of people recommending the three first books when the subject of "good programming books" pops up, but the last one (by Manber) is a great book, and few people know it. It's a shame! Manber focuses on the incremental development of algorithms through theorem proving using induction.

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Dijkstra's "A Discipline of Programming"

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it was neat to see some people mention books i'd never heard of before, particularly SICP. i also think that little schemer is an awesome awesome book. i haven't seen anyone list this one yet. the art of unix programming.

the art of unix programming

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