I keep reading in news and blogs that programmers do not read books, that the book industry is 'in decline' and that writing a book isn't worth the effort as the money is pathetic. My question: is it true? Should we just bury the book industry and stick to Googling and MSDN and the like?
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I'd like to challenge one of the implications in the question:
That suggests the principal (or sole) reason for writing a book is the money. I've contributed to three books now:
Clearly in the first case it wasn't worth the effort in terms of the money. However, I found it very rewarding to carefully go through the standard (all of it that I had time for) and reflect on it. Groovy in Action has possibly been the most rewarding terms of an "hourly rate" - although that's potentially as it's later in its sales cycle that C# in Depth. Helping out with Groovy in Action, I learned a lot about Groovy, and even more about publishing and writing. It made writing about C# a much smoother experience. It also helped as a "foot in the door" to write about C# in the first place. C# in Depth was immensely rewarding to write, for many different reasons:
As you can tell, money certainly isn't the principal reason for writing in my particular case, and I suspect that's true of most technical writers. I doubt that many people really earn a living through writing these days (although I expect the royalty cheques going to Josh Bloch and Jeff Richter are pretty substantial) - that doesn't seem to be stopping people writing though, does it? EDIT: As for whether programmers read books or not - it's very hard to generalise. I don't actually read that many books for the sake of learning (rather than reviewing) but a few have been extraordinarily useful (Effective Java, Java Persistence with Hibernate for example). The fact that publishers are still willing to put out hard copies suggests there's still a market though. Look at how many C# 3 and .NET 3.5 books are out there - huge numbers, including multiple books from some publishers. Yes, ebooks could become the future, but personally for end-to-end reading (rather than reference) I still far prefer hard copy. |
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I have about 2000 technical books saved on my Amazon wishlist (and I plan to buy about 50% of them). Even if every engineer on this planet stops reading / buying books, I will still be that dude buying / reading books. I LOVE READING BOOKS! |
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I like books because I absolutely hate reading from a monitor. |
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There's nothing like a good book, notes in the margins, folded corner earmarks to the good stuff. Early in my career, I bought 2 or 3 books a month. I found that I've wasted a lot of money on a crappy product, books that are really just a verbatim regurgitation of the documentation with useless examples. There are exceptionally useful books out there that have already been mentioned (Heads-up, some O'Rielly series books, some WROX books), they use a readable writing style with real world, useful examples that you can refer to and relate to. Much like the RIAA the book publishing industry needs to improve it's product and change with the times. Why not use a book as a gateway to a site that provides up to date information changes and reader contributions. For instance, the Rocky Lhadkas books that are the ticket of admission to CSLA developer framework world. |
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I love reading a physical book, but many of the software books I've picked up are so poorly written that they can't be enjoyed. I'll buy them as references, but not to read. Joel Spolksy's writing is actually enjoyable to read, and many of the more timeless books are as well. Those are nice to find. But a book on a specific language? The last time I read one that was enjoyable, was "Oh, Pascal" back in the 80s. |
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I try and read programming books to pick up the fundamental concepts. I am not sure why programming book sales have dropped, but one of the reasons might be that you can get a bunch of stuff pirated on torrents for free. I don't condone piracy, but its the web and there is probably nothing much one can do about it. |
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I find that reading books often share information with you you weren't looking for. I have more "oh wow, that's cool!" moments by reading some of the WROX libraries than I do searching online. There are a tremendous number of great resources out there but when I want to dig deep into something, I can only stare at the screen for so long. |
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There are many, many good books to buy and to enjoy when you are not programming, that is, when you need to think or to enjoy learning concepts and abstractions. The examples are many, as said on this thread: Design Patterns, Code Complete, Thinking in C++ Vol 1 & 2, Thinking in Java, Windows Internals, Modern Operating Systems, etc. The good programming books differ from the bad in the point that you can enjoy them without the need to resolve something related strictly to coding. Thinking in C++ is an example. It's enjoyable in a train, for example, even if you aren't in a proper environment to study the code sections because the concepts are explained exceptionally well. So yes, good programmers hunt for good books, in digital or printed form. The problem does not reside in the format, but instead in the fact that ANYONE can type code nowadays (this is good, i'm not an elitist). But anyone can throw a software product of doubtful quality. The task is to enforce discipline in programming. A programmer can and must convert to an engineer who evaluates costs, risks, tradeoffs, etc. |
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I love reading books and I'm glad that at least some publishers make them available in PDF format, the best ones being Apress and O'Reilly in that regard. I'd rather buy a book in PDF, print only what I need condensed in 2 pages per side and still have the electronic file as a reference for when I travel, Books are mightily important although their relevance span is a lot shorter than they used to be, with the technology moving so fast and all. |
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If I want to learn the theory behind something new to me I pick up a book. Books are great for learning new material and concepts en mass. If I want to learn how to actually do something with the new thing I learned, I use the Internet. If I have to, I will look it up in the book. To summarize if I want to learn New Theory -> Read a book Put the theory in practice (lab) -> Internet and/or book |
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The books on Ruby on Rails seem to be pretty good, like Simply Rails and Agile Web development. I like to learn a new language by using printed books, so it's easier to look (basic) things up. Though screencasts are very helpful as well. Though not as 'interactive'. |
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Good programmers read good books. I think the biggest problem with the book industry is that the population of programmers has grown and it is huge, however the population of good programmers did not explode the same way. |
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Do programmers read book? Maybe... Do good programmers read books? Absolutely... |
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I buy them....I just don't read them. |
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You don't need books anymore, of course. Everything is on Google and Google Groups. Google Groups has 18 years of archives, with answers for 100% of questions and better than hundreds of books reunified... |
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engineers certainly read books. many programmers might just skim through books or articles to get their problem fixed. |
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I've heard that the majority of programmers keep the books they got in college but don't read new ones, just do their job and don't learn anything new. This may be entirely true, but of course those aren't the programmers I interact with at conferences. Or the ones who read my books. Or who listen to podcasts or participate in discussions on sites like these. For that matter, a larger percentage of the computing folk I hang around with have written books. And the people I find interesting and want to hang around with are ones who want to explore new ideas. "To a worm in a radish the world is a radish." So we say "of course everyone reads books and learns new things." But (apparently) the majority of programmers don't. Those just aren't the ones you and I interact with very much. |
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I find myself reading quite a number of technical books, sometimes I just need to read a section or a chapter sometimes more. Generally the best books I've found are ones that are about concepts and not a specifc technology.
These are books that I have gotten a tremendous value from and will go back to again and again because I've leveled up and am ready for concepts I wasn't previously ready for. There are good books on specific technologies and these are most commonly good for aquainting youself with a technology. More often than not, I find myself going to Google for that sort of thing. You get a wider variety of opinions and as many have mentioned it's more up to date. |
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As stesch has pointed out, this is a self-selecting survey, so our personal experiences are not a guide to anything. I personally have bought about four programming-related books in the last month or so. (And shortly before that I bought THE UNCANNY SKEET's book, which I recommend). But for the low-down on what has happened, you have to ask someone who has been writing very popular mainstream programming books for a long time. And that person is Petzold, and you can hear what he has to say in this episode of the podcast '.NET Rocks'. Summary: the bottom has fallen out of the market, and he has branched out into consulting. |
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Good programmers read good books. O'Reilly's "In a Nutshell" series sells very well, as do their "Learning XXXXX" series and the "Head First" books. Geared more towards beginners, Sams' "Teach Yourself XXXXX" sells briskly, as does the much maligned but very handy "XXXXX for Dummies." And of course, library references do very well. What hasn't done well are the independents or one-offs that don't stand out from the crowd. Taking on O'Reilly head-to-head isn't paying off. What is selling well is catching the gaps created, like Mark Summerfield's "Programming in Python 3" or Hans Petter Langtangen's "Python Scripting for Computational Science." In short, what isn't selling well anymore is "buy and learn" books. The ones that do sell tend towards "buy, learn, and keep for reference" or just straight reference books. And a massive promotion promotion budget tied into a pre-built distribution chain centered on a brand-name with several product lines doesn't hurt at all. :) |
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I like reading programming books. I prefer to get them as ebooks (usually PDF), so that:
In terms of content, it's a little hard to characterize the books I read, but I'll try:
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I read books all the time... but they are usually digital in format. Having a hardcopy of something does little for me. I'd rather have it be searchable. The best way for me is to have a .chm based file.... basically an html based book, with click-able links! |
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I certainly do, but I kind of have to (student).. I find books great of foundation and big-picture stuff, and web is a far better resource for "how do I".. types of questions. So, if I wanted to know how a DB optimizer works, I would find a book. If I wanted to know what indexes I need on a table for something, and was too lazy to experiment, I'd look online (possibly ask here). As far as actual numbers of programmers reading books, this may be of interest: "Programmers don't own books, part II" : http://valhenson.livejournal.com/26848.html |
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I like reading books, although over the years have switched to web or pdf versions. The biggest challenge with programming books is change. In some cases by the time you really get into the book, it's somewhat obselete. That makes the whole PDF/get a new one when a new edition is released model a little more appealing |
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The last computer book I bought was in 2006. I've decided that if I'm going to waste paper on the dead tree version it has to meet these 2 criteria:
I like to store my books on Microsoft's Live Mesh (I don't like to waste my DropBox space on things that don't benefit from versioning). Index the folders and you can now search on anything in those books faster than searching through the physical index in the back of the book. Blogs, articles, and videos are better for information that's temporal or less formalized. Thoughts and findings fit better on the web than in a book and it's easier to share and update example code. |
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Definitely!I thing that serious software development is impossible without some reference books for your area and having read some general books on software development. A funny observation is that all good programmers seem to read science fiction and fantasy novels. Do you agree, did you make the same observation? |
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If you ask my wife, I read too many books about software development / architecture, in general. The thing is that there are more than one way to read a book. I still prefer a traditional paper-bound book, although I have a fairly decent ebook library. Ebooks have taken off like wildfire - but not in the way that the book industry has expected when it comes to the type of books we are talking about. It seems that most people I talk to about a book say something to the effect of "Hey, I have that book. I'll email you a copy." I would still rather check it out of a library or just by my own, legal copy. I can expense it, and I actually like to think that the library that people keep on their desks or in their office give you some insight into what they are interested in. |
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I spend as much or more money on books now as I have ever done. Even though I have a Sony PRS-505 I just doesn't measure up to a physical book. |
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My preference has always been to read books off-line, away from a computer, specially on train journeys. The best thinking happens when you are not working on a computer, particularly if it requires abstract thought. The worst thing you can do to solve a problem is to log on to your machine. The best ideas and solutions will just appear in your brain when you're in the shower or out jogging, and one quick way of getting your brain into that abstract frame of mind is to read a book. I have been grappling all weekend with CSS issues, with any luck reading the CSS Definitive Guide (excellent title from O'Reilly) on the train in to work tomorrow morning will help me to solve the issue, otherwise it will appear here as a question before the week is out. |
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Books are the only way to get in-detail and in-depth information about obscure or not-too-common subjects. For example, you can't expect to learn about and fully understand how security works in .NET/Windows/ActiveDirectory without reading a book. |
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