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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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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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Don't know if anyone mentioned it but I would recommend the book from Uncle Bob Martin.

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Since I'm a C# programmer and most generic books already has been mentioned I'd like to recommend Bill Wagner's book "More Effective C#.

I think most people that develop composite WPF-applications also should have a look at Microsoft's Composite Application Guidance (also known as Prism):

Composite Application Guidance

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Perfect Software: And Other Illusions about Testing

TITLE Cover

Perfect Software: And Other Illusions about Testing by Gerald M. Weinberg

ISBN-10: 0932633692

ISBN-13: 978-0932633699

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The Practice of Programming

The practice of programming. By Brian W. Kernighan, Rob Pike.

The style shown here is excellent - the code just speaks for itself, and the whole book follows the KISS principle. Personally not my languages of choice, but still influential to me.

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The C Programming Language by Brian Kernighan and Dennis Ritchie. It is sometimes referred to as K&R, or the white bible, or K&R2 for the second edition.

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Clean Code by Robert Martin.

This book completely changed the way I wrote code (for the better). The first couple of chapters are the best.

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The Productive programmer. its a natural extension of "the pragmatic programer" which gets a little more into the every day details.

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Various insights into software engineering in the real world.

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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?

JUnit in Action

Unit testing is one thing that I really wished I knew at the start of my programming career rather than the middle of it.

As to the general "what good books have you read" offshoot of this thread:

Mastering the Requirements Process

Writing requirements is one area where I suck, this book helped a lot.

Now off to order a book to two from Amazon... ;)

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"The Practice of programming" by Brian W.Kerninghan & Rob Pike.

The language is easy and also the subject matter is interesting.

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Programming Pearls by Jon Bentley.

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I'll second the Little Schemer and the Seasoned Schemer. Not necessarily because you want to write Scheme, but actually, reading and understanding these has changed the way I think even about my Java code at my day job.

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Hey, my favorite book, Alice in Wonderland, has been mentioned :D

Other than that... I was blown away when I read Javascript: The Definitive Guide, because at the time it was the only JS book I'd read that wasn't talking about crappy rollovers or things like that.

It may be the first time I learned the OO side of javascript, and the book was by far the most complete on the language (core, and browser-side).

I wish I'd read it before getting bad habits and a false image of JS.

Of course the situation is much different now, with many books by JS gurus who have written stylish and robust JS like jQuery and the like...

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  • Sedgewick's Algorithms in C++
  • Effective Java by Joshua Bloch
  • Java Performance Tuning by Shirazi
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Pro Spring is a superb introduction to the world of Inversion of Control and Dependency Injection. If you're not aware of these practices and their implications - the balance of topics and technical detail in Pro Spring is excellent. It builds a great case and consequent personal foundation.

Another book I'd suggest would be Robert Martin's Agile Software Development (ASD). Code smells, agile techniques, test driven dev, principles ... a well-written balance of many different programming facets.

More traditional classics would include the infamous GoF Design Patterns, Bertrand Meyer's Object Oriented Software Construction, Booch's Object Oriented Analysis and Design, Scott Meyer's "Effective C++'" series and a lesser known book I enjoyed by Gunderloy, Coder to Developer.

And while books are nice ... don't forget radio!

... let me add one more thing. If you haven't already discovered safari - take a look. It is more addictive than stack overflow :-) I've found that with my google type habits - I need the more expensive subscription so I can look at any book at any time - but I'd recommend the trial to anyone even remotely interested.

(ah yes, a little obj-C today, cocoa tomorrow, patterns? soa? what was that example in that cookbook? What did Steve say in the second edition? Should I buy this book? ... a subscription like this is great if you'd like some continuity and context to what you're googling ...)

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"Debugging the Development Process: Practical Strategies for Staying Focused, Hitting Ship Dates, and Building Solid Teams" by Steve Maguire.

No-non-sense, down-to-earth, entertaining, profound.

[ http://beta.stackoverflow.com/questions/559/what-books-would-you-recommend-for-a-beginning-software-developer#1150 ]

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Since you've asked for the single most influential book, I recommend Deitel's "C++ How to Program. This is the one I kept referencing throughout University.

I actually enjoyed reading Head First Design Patterns and Joel On Software more, but they came along after I'd learned the basics

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I found "The art of Prolog" a very good read.

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Code complete, domain driven design, and Dreaming in Code to show how it can work out in the end.

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Roger S. Pressman - Software Engineering (A Practitioners Approach). It has got a lot of usefull information.

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The Unix Programming Environment by Brian Kernighan and Rob Pike. After reading this I 'got' Unix. I understood the philosophy behind it and everything suddenly started making much more sense.

It's also a brilliant introduction to the Bourne shell and C programming.

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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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Great question!

After some consideration, I would have to say The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand. Not a programming book, but makes you think about what you want out of your work at a higher level.

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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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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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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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