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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Free and Legal books link on reddit |
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This came to me in an email from RedGate software's .Net Simple-Talk reflector newsletter. There is no specific license and I guess it should qualify as a free ebook O'Reilly, "C# 3.0 Poket Reference", by Joseph and Ben Albahari. Also coming in top google search result for the book I am not posting the direct link. |
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http://search-pdf-books.com/ is a free search engine for all kinds of PDFs |
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Dean Wampler (Object Mentor, Inc.) and Alex Payne (Twitter, Inc), also released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial.
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E-Books for free online viewing and/or download @ Free Programming Books The books cover all major programming languages: Ada, Assembly, Basic, C, C#, C++, CGI, JavaScript, Perl, Delphi, Pascal, Haskell, Java, Lisp, PHP, Prolog, Python, Ruby, as well as some other languages, game programming, and software engineering. |
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THANKS! This has been a very valuable resource considering the economic situation we're all faced with these days. Savings, of any amount, is wonderfully welcomed! |
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I haven't used it yet, but Why's (Poignant) Guide to Ruby is great. It'll definitely be first on my list when I learn Ruby. |
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Here's a list of the free e-books referred to in Code Complete with their descriptions from the book. StackOverflow votes Code Complete as the single most influential book every programmer should read, so this is a good recommendation for these books, right?
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Check out GNY Has free e-books for:
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Lisp related:
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http://www.flazx.com/ lots of e-books on stack. |
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Heres a list of some off CodePlex: http://blogs.msdn.com/wriju/archive/2009/01/07/free-ebooks-at-codeplex.aspx |
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I found this book on C, however I'm as yet undecided as to whether or not it is "good": The C Book, second edition by Mike Banahan, Declan Brady and Mark Doran |
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Free hard copy of Best Kept Secrets of Peer Code Review from Smart Bear. |
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Lots of books are free with a paid safari subscription. http://safari.oreilly.com/ |
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I think WikiBooks is hands-down one of the best free resources out there. It also looks like Scribd has some programming books available, though I'm not sure if they're meant to be free or not... :) |
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How to Design Programs An Introduction to Computing and Programming It uses scheme as SCIP, but it takes a lighter aproach. |
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NVidia has some free literature on graphics programming: |
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Free and useful Cheat sheets, mostly in the Java world. |
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I'm not sure if it qualifies as a book, but WikiBooks has plenty of stuff on programming. http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Category:Programming |
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Extreme Perl, it's basically extreme programming with perl. So if you're just into learning the basic of extreme programming principles you can use this as well. I use it mainly for the part on TDD :P |
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Why's (Poignant) Guide to Ruby is a good choice if you want to learn Ruby and laugh at the same time. |
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ProgrammingGroundUp - nice programming introduction in assembler |
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