Part of being a good software developer is keeping current with what people are saying in the community. There are many good articles out there on the Internet about the wide subject of computer programming. What articles have you found worth your time?

Please provide the article's title, author and a link if possible.

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Just about to start one myself.. before SO related questions showed me this one. Thanks for being a visionary! – Gishu Apr 22 '09 at 5:03
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Related question: 'Favorite Essay about Programming', stackoverflow.com/questions/194696/… – Jonik Jun 20 '09 at 8:27
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72 Answers

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up vote 89 down vote accepted

Teach Yourself Programming in Ten Years by Peter Norvig.

A good article on what it takes to become a great programer and Peter Norvig's recipe for programming success.

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Only 10 years? I started university about 9 years ago, and only did minimal programming before that. However, I'm still nowhere near where I would like to be in terms of knowing what I should about programmings. I'm not a bad programmer, but there is much more to learn. – Kibbee Nov 25 '08 at 17:08
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Nice - I like this idea. People need to understand that learning something is like playing Othello. It might take you a minute to learn the syntax, but the nuances and implications of various paradigms and patterns take a lifetime to master. There is always more to learn! – BenAlabaster Dec 3 '08 at 4:20
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The Programmer Competency Matrix is an excellent reference to gauge your development skills.

It's a reminder that everyone has areas they can improve.

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Excellent resource for gap identification – msvcyc Aug 6 '09 at 17:18
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Painless Functional Specifications, by Joel Spolsky. It's in four parts and all are good.

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I really liked Coding Without Comments, from Jeff Atwood

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The Law of Leaky Abstractions by Joel Spolsky.

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Wow, that guy is good. Made me rethink a few things from just one article. – sdellysse Dec 25 '08 at 14:20
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The Free Lunch Is Over: A Fundamental Turn Toward Concurrency in Software by Herb Sutter.

The biggest sea change in software development since the OO revolution is knocking at the door, and its name is Concurrency.

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Big Ball of Mud by Brian Foote and Joseph Yoder

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Making Wrong Code Look Wrong by Joel Spolsky on Hungarian Notation.

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What Every Computer Scientist Should Know About Floating-Point Arithmetic by Goldberg.

There is a PDF around

Personally, everyone should know about this one and What Every Programmer Should Know About Memory. They should make a yellow cover series with those!

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Being the Averagest by Steve Yegge on competition in programming

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Its very surprising nobody posted this article from steve-yegge...
this inspired me to learn mathematics as a programmer...

http://steve-yegge.blogspot.com/2006/03/math-for-programmers.html

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He is part of the reason I'm pursuing a math and not a CS degree :) – maayank Oct 3 '10 at 9:23
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That's the top answer at stackoverflow.com/questions/11743/useful-math-for-programmers. – Ether Oct 3 '10 at 23:54
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"How to Write a Spelling Corrector" in Python by Peter Norvig

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Execution in the Kingdom of Nouns by Steve Yegge.

An essay that made me re-think my attitude towards OOP.

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The Cathedral and the Bazaar has several fun articles about the pioneering of Linux in the 90's.

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Jan Mikovsky on the fractal nature of UI design problems. I spent a while writing code to deal with this :-)

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They Write The Right Stuff, a timeless article by Charles Fishman published in FastCompany 1996.

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You have a really a bunch of very good ones here

Notably some of the already cited here ones, but also:

  • The lambda papers (difficult but profound)
  • The kingdom of Nouns (more distracting)
  • ...

Looking back at them now, they're mostly oriented on functional programming, but I don't see Why functional programming matters. If I remember other ones on another topic, I'll put them in another post.

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protected by Conrad Frix Sep 15 '11 at 15:30

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