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For me, Head First Design Patterns was a book that made Design Patterns click for me. Once I had read it, I found I could return to GoF and take more away from it and it really helped my move on as a developer.

What book really made an impact of how you work as a developer?

Note: One book per answer; upvote any you agree with ;o)

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Duplicate of stackoverflow.com/questions/1711 – Huppie Sep 16 '08 at 14:24
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This question should really be closed ... as it is a duplicate. – mattruma Sep 16 '08 at 15:23
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223 Answers

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Modern c++ Design.

by Andrei Alexandrescu

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Programming Perl by Larry Wall

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Many of the books already mentioned opened my eyes and influenced me, but a book every programmer should read is Test-Driven Development by Example. It really showed me the importance of unit tests and TDD and got me started very quick.

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The Pragmatic Programmer

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Mine is Test Driven Development by Example

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Effective C++ by Scott Meyers. It's an oldie, but by far the best book on coding I've ever read.

Effective C++ by Scott Meyers

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Looking for a real development book, I think Design Patterns (the Gang of four book) opened my eyes most. I started to get interested in TDD, reading about XP and Unit Testing. This changed my focus and interest in Software Development forever.

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vote up 31 vote down

Godel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid (A Metaphorical Fugue on Minds and Machines in the Spirit of Lewis Carroll) by Douglas Hofstadter.

OK, this isn't a programming book, but it was a big influence on me in my career as a software engineer. When I first read it way back when it got me excited about math, algorithms, and abstract thinking. Before reading this I had been toying with going back to school to finish my degree. By chance I stumbled upon this book while browsing in a book store. After reading this I knew I wanted to learn more and enrolled, finished my degree, and have been gainfully employed writing various kinds of code ever since.

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Professional Excel Development This book showed how to make high quality applications within one of the most ubiquitous programming platforms available.

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Thinking in Java (Patterns) , Bruce Eckel

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The Mythical Man-Month here as well. Despite being an old book, a lot of the stuff in there is still true and only new development methods like agile, xp, tdd may change some of this finally. It explains in detail why adding new developers to a late project will make the project even later. It will not improve your coding skills, but after being a developer for a few years, this will open your eyes for sure and explain a lot of the problems you have faced before.

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Another vote here for Head First Design Patterns

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Close call: Extreme Programming Explained, Kent Beck, or Refactoring, Martin Fowler.

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Object-Oriented Software Construction by Bertrand Meyer

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Programming in C - K & R

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Effective Java by Joshua Bloch

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Amen. By far the best Java book I know of. This, "The Pragmatic Programmer" and "Refactoring" are the top 3 books with most impact on me professionally. – Jonik Jan 25 at 17:03
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The Mythical Man-Month is a great book; "no silver bullet", "second-system effect", "surgical teams", etc. all helped my development on a meta level. Sure, I couldn't code quick sort any better after reading, but I definitely made better programs.

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Comments by David Berger:
Having started programming in the era of online tutorials, there weren't so many books per se that I would consider indispensable. But I also dropped into software development from the middle of nowhere in a company where all the developers were experienced and minded their own business, so I kind of missed a lot of the acculturation that people get with an academic program or a cohort of junior developers at a first job learning about team projects. The book is aimed rather abstractly at answering the questions "Why is large-scale software development so hard?" and "What can we do to make it more efficient?" I say rather abstractly, but truth be told there's a lot of history involved: it was a bit challenging for me to imagine what development was like in the '70s and '80s when the essays in this book were written.

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The Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs by s Harold Abelson and Gerald Jay Sussman, with Julie Sussman. It's available online for free, and there are even video lectures to go along with it.

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Just as a note - many people (myself included) find those oft-linked-to videos too big to download. As it turns out, MIT's OpenCourseWare website has re-encoded the videos to ~300MB MP4s. ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/… – Lucas Jones Jul 27 at 19:22
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Refactoring by Martin Fowler

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Great book, it really helped me understand how to write proper object-oriented code instead of procedural code. – Rick Sep 17 '08 at 11:20
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Agreed, it's a superb book. I think it does help if you have a certain amount of coding experience in order to get the best out of it. It rewards re-reading too. – Jonathan Webb Sep 17 '08 at 22:53
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The eye-opener was the idea of working in small continuous steps to achieve radical restructuring while you keep the program working all the time. – Marius Gedminas Jul 27 at 18:18
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Programming Perl (O'Reilly)

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The Interpretation of Object-Oriented Programming Languages by Ian Craig

Because it showed me how much more there was to OO than standard C++/Java idioms

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"Object-Oriented Analysis and Design with Applications" by Grady Booch. I read this a long time ago and it showed me that there could be a methodology to developing Object Oriented Software. Since then many other books have had an impact on me but this one got me started.

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This is very similar to this question.

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Writing Solid Code, by Steve Maguire. Code Complete is a close runner-up.

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Programming Pearls b Jon Benley (both books)

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There are similar questions here and here.

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Patterns of Enterprise Application Architecture

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Writing Solid Code by Steve Maguire.

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Code Complete followed closely by Head First Design Patterns

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Working Effectively with Legacy Code by Michael C. Feathers.

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The title doesn't do justice to how useful this book is in learning how to better structure software.

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