What are the best programming books published in 2008?
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Hands down More Joel On Software. There's a fella who knows what he's talking about. He's a little obsessed with C, but I mean, who isn't?
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I'm going to have to plump for C# in Depth by the omnipotent one, Jon Skeet. It's compact yet incredibly indepth, and you feel compelled to reread it multiple times to fully grasp the knowledge Jon's imparting. Along with Fritz Onion's ASP.NET books I consider it an essential for .NET developers. |
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The best programming book of 2008, IMO, is The Ruby Programming Language, published by O'Reilly. Regardless of whether you're a fan of Ruby, this book is one of the finest pieces of technical writing that I have ever laid eyes on. |
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Framework Design Guidelines: Conventions, Idioms, and Patterns for Reusable .NET Libraries (2nd Edition) was just released during PDC2008 and its authors, architects on the .Net framework, had a nice session that you can view online. That book is a goldmine of best practice and real-world experience on the best practical ways to develop reusable software. |
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Clean Code by Robert C Martin |
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this has to be Concurrent Programming in Windows which is awesome, followed by Linq in Action |
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jQuery in Action - By Bear Bibeault, Yehuda Katz and Foreword by John Resig |
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Effective Java 2nd Edition - by Joshua Bloch |
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I enjoyed Linq in Action. |
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Javascript: The Good Parts was a hell of a book for people who, well, need to use Javascript. |
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As a person without a degree in Computer Science, I have enjoyed Algorithms in a Nutshell from O'Reilly. |
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Robert C. Martin's Clean Code and Neal Ford's The Productive Programmer |
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Easily, Real World Haskell would be the best programming book for 2008. It's not yet another "Learn how to use Spring + XML + Java to make Super Cool Websites" book. It's mind expanding, well written, and teaches you to do real world things in a way that proves that functional programming and Haskell in particular aren't just for academics. |
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I liked Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell a lot. I think it applies to coders with it's 10,000 hour theory based on how much time we spend behind the keyboard. This theory in a lot of ways it states the obvious. Spend a lot of time on something and you'll gradually build the experience and network to seize opportunities, and be able to see patterns that others can't. What I liked about it is it showed that perspiration really does overcome anything and that's never a bad reminder. |
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More Joel On Software June 24, 2008 |
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Jon Skeet's C# in Depth is quite good! |
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The Productive Programmer by Neal Ford. This is language agnostic - just like the Pragmatic Programmer. Description quote:
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This is probably going to get me marked down, but how about 2008 has been kind of a blah year as far as pure programming books go. There hasn't been anything that really has crossed the line yet of better than what has been. The really juicy stuff has more tended to be from the better blogs. Of course I have found myself reading much more into leadership, psychology, and statistics more than programming. |
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Ok, so this one is not from 2008, but if you haven't read it 2008 is the year to do it:
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Three awesome books from Manning: LINQ in Action (Feb '08) | jQuery in Action (Feb '08) | C# In Depth (Apr '08)
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