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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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283 Answers

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Software Tools by by Brian W. Kernighan and P. J. Plauger

It had a profound influence on how I write software.

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Paradigms of Artificial Intelligence Programming: Case studies in Common Lisp

http://norvig.com/paip.html

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Depends on where the programmer is in terms of his understanding of the craft :) But yeah Code Complete is definitely the first one for me.

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For me, The Mythical Man-Month was an eye opener. Maybe not strictly a programming book, but it did make me think about how to organize a project and thus come up with a better result.

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Tracy Kidder's The Soul of a New Machine. Not the most influential but certainly one of my most enjoyed industry reads.

Tracy Kidder's The Soul of a New Machine

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to get advanced in prolog i like these two books:

The Art of Prolog

The Craft of Prolog

really opens the mind for logic programming and recursion schemes.

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My favorite books are already covered here, but if you need to learn Java, I enjoyed Bruce Eckel's book, Thinking in Java.

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Here are two I haven't seen mentioned:
I wish I had read "Ruminations on C++" by Koenig and Moo much sooner. That was the book that made OO concepts really click for me.
And I recommend Michael Abrash's "Zen of Code Optimization" for anyone else planning on starting a programming career in the mid 90s.

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"The World is Flat" by Thomas Friedman.

Excellence in programming demands an investment of mental energy and a dedication to continued learning comparable to the professions of medicine or law. It pays a fraction of what those professions pay, much less the wages paid to the mathematically savvy who head into the finance sector. And wages for constructing code are eroding because it's a profession that is relatively easy for the intelligent and self-disciplined in most economies to enter.

Programming has already eroded to the point of paying less than, say, plumbing. Plumbing can't be "offshored." You don't need to pay $2395 to attend the Professional Plumber's Conference every other year for the privilege of receiving an entirely new set of plumbing technologies that will take you a year to learn.

If you live in North America or Europe, are young, and are smart, programming is not a rational career choice. Businesses that involve programming, absolutely. Study business, know enough about programming to refine your BS detector: brilliant. But dedicating the lion's share of your mental energy to the mastery of libraries, data structures, and algorithms? That only makes sense if programming is something more to you than an economic choice.

If you love programming and for that reason intend to make it your career, then it behooves you to develop a cold-eyed understanding of the forces that are, and will continue, to make it a harder and harder profession in which to make a living. "The World is Flat" won't teach you what to name your variables, but it will immerse you for 6 or 8 hours in economic realities that have already arrived. If you can read it, and not get scared, then go out and buy "Code Complete."

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Programing Pearl, J.Bentley Pragamtic programmer. Mythical man month

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Lean Software Development by Mary and Tom Poppendieck is definitely one for every developers bookshelf

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Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations - Clay Shirky alt text

This is an incredible book about the social effects of the internet. A must read for anyone in the tech industry, doubly so for programmers.

Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations is a book about what happens when people are given the tools to do things together, without needing traditional organizational structures.

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I'd suggest "Modern C++ Design" by Andrei Alexandrescu, a really astonishing book about the awesome tricks and patterns you can achieve with C++, preprocessor directives and templates.

Modern C++ Design

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ok, this is a slightly off-center answer, but believe it or not, it was on the reading list for a compsci course way back in the day. An excellent role model and a good book about curiosity.

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The Art of Computer Programming without any doubt

First Volume Hardcover

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Maybe because it is already mentioned? stackoverflow.com/questions/1711/… – Vanuan May 9 at 12:45
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for low level entertainment i would suggest Michael Abrash's
i) -Zen of Code Optimization- and
ii) -Graphics Programming Black Book-
even if you dont do any graphics programming.

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If you are doing anything in Unix/Linux/MacOS etc, you must read Advanced Programming in the Unix Environment (also known by the acronym APUE), by the late W Richard Stevens. If you don't know how file descriptors work or what sessions are, or all the things you should do when you daemonize yourself (admit it, you don't), then this book will tell you.

You'll feel amatuerish for a bit afterwards, but if you want to consider yourself a professional programmer (in any language) in the Unix environment you need to read this.

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There isn't a single book I can pinpoint as more influential than the rest. A lot of the books that I would consider as influential to my current knowledge also wouldn't have made sense to me when I started programming.

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I would say that "Beyond Code - Learn to Distinguish Yourself in 9 Simple Steps" is quite a good and motivational book. I doesn't cover technical issues, but it describes ways of working with people, being professional, ... For me, this is a book you can read again and again if you are in need of some pep talk. Besides that, it is cheap and very easy and enjoyable to read in 3 to 4 hours.

There is a little review over at my blog: http://www.herrodius.com/blog/54

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Whether you are coding in Smalltalk or not Smalltalk Best Practice Patterns is a great read. Full of small observations that will change the way you code; for the better.

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Agile Software Development, Principles, Patterns, and Practices by Robert C. Martin

Agile Software Development

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Design Patterns, of course. And the UML User's Guide.

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If you're involved with Enterprise Applications at all, Martin Fowler's Patterns of Enterprise Application Architecture is a must-have.

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Code Complete is the most influential by far, if I had the money I would buy copies and hand them out to every programmer I know.

Since programmers are well known for their social skills :P

How to Win Friends and Influence People

Not that all programmers have problems dealing with people, anyone can benefit from reading this book.

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"Code Complete" taught me some fundamental ways of thinking about programming.

"Object Thinking" by David West.

"The pleasure of finding things out" taken from various interviews with Richard Feynman - everyone should read this - programmer or not.

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"The Fortran Coloring Book" by Dr. Roger Kaufman (1978, ISBN:0262610264)

What a silly concept - more basic than even a "Dummies" book! But it works for any language (with a few fortran specific examples of course), explaining the basic concepts of logic, variables, i/o, etc. in a very understandable and "Painfully Funny" way.

It's enough to get a ten year old interested in programming...

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(Found cover photo on a Flickr user account)

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recommended for Windows Programmer, Programming Windows

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C++ How to Program It is good for beginner.This is excellent book that full complete with 1500 pages.

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The dinosaur book about Operating Systems

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