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I know of a couple, but I would like to build a list up for some nice holiday reading.

(If there is a book on here you read for free, and really liked, make sure to support the author and buy a hard copy!)

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Near-duplicate of this question at stackoverflow.com/questions/22873 and at stackoverflow.com/questions/194812. – Peter Mortensen Aug 2 at 14:15
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96 Answers

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List of Free Programming books (compiled):

Meta-List

Graphics Programming

Language Agnostic:

ASP.NET MVC:

Assembly Language:

C/C++

C#

  • See .NET below

Django

Forth

Haskell

Java

JavaScript

Linux

Lisp

.NET (C#)

Objective-C

Perl

PHP

PowerShell

Python

Ruby

Scala

SmallTalk

Subversion

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Outstanding work! - Thank you! – duncan Dec 29 at 5:43
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Thank you for posting this great resource! – John W Jul 24 at 19:01
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dive into python

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At the risk of being downvoted, all books are free at the library, and you can find any of the books listed on other threads where people have already asked this question. I know you can't keep them, but if they're really great, you can buy a copy then, and save yourself the cost of buying the books that you'll only read once anyway.

Though they'll likely not carry the latest programming books, there are plenty of books that will lay the foundation for being a great programmer, like "The Mythical Man Month", among others.

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Hmmm...many of the computer books I need are not available at the library. I long ago concluded that what I need in a timely manner, I have to buy; I'll wait a long time for the library to have the funds to buy them. – Jonathan Leffler Dec 24 at 14:55
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Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs is one of the "classic" computer science texts, and is free at MIT's web site.

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You can check out my free ebook, Foundations of Programming. (Karl Seguin)

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37 Signals' book "Getting Real" is free to read online.

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This link was listed on digg: http://programmingebooks.tk/

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It's not an ebook, but every programmer should probably watch it.

MIT's - Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs, Video Lectures
http://www.swiss.ai.mit.edu/classes/6.001/abelson-sussman-lectures/

Also, Berkley have their lectures posted online
http://webcast.berkeley.edu/courses.php

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MIT has their open course ware for computer science.

http://ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/Electrical-Engineering-and-Computer-Science/index.htm

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This may sound silly, but have you tried your local library? I work in a college library and we have access to a lot of ebooks through the Safari service (O'Reilly, Prentice Hall, Addison-Wesley, Microsoft Press, Sams and Que just to name a few). Many college libraries especially community colleges allow members of the community to become patrons, whether or not they allow off-campus access to online resources for these patrons varies school to school.

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Bruce Eckel offers several books including Thinking in Java

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Bruce Eckel has free books on several topics here.

Dive Into Python is a nice free Python book. Check out Thinking in Java and Thinking in C++ as well.

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Practical Common Lisp is a very good book for Lisp beginnners.

On Lisp covers advanced Lisp techniques.

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You can find a number of links at FreeTechBooks

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Threading In C# - been pretty invaluable to me

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This is a great read. Quick and choc full of great ideas.

Foundations of Programming by Karl Seguin of CodeBetter.com

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Higher Order Perl is now available for free

also Perl the hard way.

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http://knowfree.net/

That is an amazing resource, not all of the links work, but about 95% which is still awesome

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As long as we're on the subject of Lisp, Practical Common Lisp by Peter Seibel is available for free online.

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AddedBytes.com has a pretty useful collection of Cheat Sheets:

http://www.addedbytes.com/cheat-sheets/

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The Foundations of Programming E-Book from CodeBetter.com is a worthwhile read for beginners.

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Digital Signal Processing: A Practical Guide for Engineers and Scientists.

Actually, a practical guide for a programmer looking to get into DSP in general. It's a fun read if you're already interested in the field, and completely free to download!

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Charles Petzold's .Net Book 0 is available on his website for free.

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If you're a UNIX/Linux geek, like me, you might enjoy Eric S. Raymond's "The Art of UNIX Programming", available free on Eric's website.

http://catb.org/esr/writings/taoup/html/

alt text

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If you haven't read it yet, I recommend the free PDF download Think Python. It is a great book.

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Here is a PDF of the book On Lisp by Paul Graham that I've been reading lately.

http://www.paulgraham.com/onlisp.html

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I'm going to start a list of tutorial/books here:

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