vote up 100 vote down star
216

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.

flag
1  
Just about to start one myself.. before SO related questions showed me this one. Thanks for being a visionary! – Gishu Apr 22 at 5:03
1  
Related question: 'Favorite Essay about Programming', stackoverflow.com/questions/194696/… – Jonik Jun 20 at 8:27

68 Answers

vote up 3 vote down

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

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 2 vote down

A programmer's view of the Universe, part 1: The fish by Steve Yegge

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

Execution in the Kingdom of Nouns by Steve Yegge.

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

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

Why numbering should start at zero by E.W. Dijkstra

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Secrets of the Little Blue Box by Ron Rosenbaum

link|flag
vote up 6 vote down

What Every Programmer Should Know About Memory [pdf] by Ulrich Drepper

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 1 vote down

The Pinocchio Problem by Steve Yegge

link|flag
vote up 9 vote down

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!

link|flag
vote up 8 vote down

What to do when you're screwed by Rands

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

"Being a Software Engineer in the Software Century" By: Barry Boehm Truly Inspirational

link|flag
show 3 more comments
vote up 1 vote down

This is a good article on getting your first job offers.

Exploding Offer Season by Joel Spolsky.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Characterizing people as non-linear, first-order components in software development by Alistair Cockburn

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

This is very specific to Java development, but an excellent overview of memory management issues by Attila Szegedi. Makes me want to buy him a beer :)

A day in the life of a memory leak hunter

Yet another day in the life of a memory leak hunter

Memory leak hunting still doesn't end, or: Serialization also requires a bit of manually imposed amnesia

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Anything in Hanselminutes, or Scott's Blog. Saved my ass ongoing quite a few times.

link|flag
vote up 13 vote down

The Law of Leaky Abstractions by Joel Spolsky.

link|flag
1  
Wow, that guy is good. Made me rethink a few things from just one article. – sdellysse Dec 25 '08 at 14:20
vote up 1 vote down

10 Useful Techniques To Improve Your User Interface Designs by Dmitry Fadeyev.

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

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

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Practice To Perfect: The Quality First Model by Bertrand Meyer.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Effective Unit Testing by Tim Burns.

Careful programmers test early and test often.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

How to be a Programmer: A Short, Comprehensive, and Personal Summary by Robert L. Read

«To be a good programmer is difficult and noble. The hardest part of making real a collective vision of a software project is dealing with one's coworkers and customers. Writing computer programs is important and takes great intelligence and skill. But it is really child's play compared to everything else that a good programmer must do to make a software system that succeeds for both the customer and myriad colleagues for whom she is partially responsible. In this essay I attempt to summarize as concisely as possible those things that I wish someone had explained to me when I was twenty-one.»

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

This blog post by a Google employee named Ben Sussman talks about how, due to the anonymous nature of the Internet, we programmers will accept nothing but perfection from ourselves and eachother. This is very different from other professions, where mistakes are expected to happen and people are expected to learn from them.

http://blog.red-bean.com/sussman/?p=96

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

An insightful article about good software development practices - not strictly about programming as in writing code.

Continuous Integration by Martin Fowler

I remember this was somewhat eye-opening when first reading it a few years ago, and have later come to consider this stuff quite essential.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

The Hundred-Year Language by Paul Graham.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

XP Software Programming Paradigm by Guy Lecky-Thompson.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Architectural Styles and the Design of Network-based Software Architectures

At least chapter 5 and 6 should be read by anyone in doing anything web related.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

STEPS Toward The Reinvention of Programming

"The STEPS project is setting out to create “Moore’s Law Software”: a high-risk high-reward exploratory research effort to create a large-scope-and-range software system in 3-4 orders of magnitude less code than current practice."

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Here's another article about good development practices, namely version control:

Version Control for Multiple Agile Teams by Henrik Kniberg, posted at InfoQ

From the introduction:

If we have several agile development teams working on the same codebase, how do we minimize the risk of stumbling over each other? How do we ensure that there always is a clean, releasable version at the end of each iteration? This paper describes an example of how to handle version control in an agile environment with multiple teams - it is the scheme that we migrated to at the company described in "Scrum and XP from the Trenches".

The article talks about using short-lived devel branches to achieve stable trunk, into which goes only stuff that is done. At my work, we've generally had good experiences of applying these ideas, with two scrum teams working on one codebase. There's some overhead about the extra branching and merging (some of which can be automated away), but having stable trunk, from where a release could be made at any time, is a big plus.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Evidence Based Scheduling by Joel Spolsky.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

How to become a hacker by Eric Steven Raymond.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.