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Comm Wiki this pls... its a poll. – Gishu May 25 at 3:45

closed as exact duplicate by John T, Jonathan Leffler, Bill the Lizard May 25 at 4:17

6 Answers

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Knuth's books are awesome - so awesome that you don't really have to read them, you can generate luster and up-votes just by talking about them ;-)

I like Sedgewick's algorithms book, personally, for the obvious and common reason that it is the only one I ever read.

In reality, google is your friend and wikipedia is your counselor.

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Even though I'm closing this question as a duplicate, I have to upvote you for estimable honesty and common sense. – Bill the Lizard May 25 at 4:16
@[Bill the Lizard]: Thanks! Those are my trademarks. That and humility! ;-) – Steven A. Lowe May 25 at 13:37
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G'day I always found the list on Wikipedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_algorithms to be a pretty good starting point for learning different algorithms. Each article usually has a few good external links as well.

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For practical application of common algorithms I like Programming Classics: Implementing the World's Best Algorithms. It's out of print I believe, but can still be found used. It uses a great pseudo-code style that is easy to understand and covers a broad range of topics.

If you want in-depth and highly academic coverage then the Art of Computer Programming volumes are a fantastic albeit expensive resource.

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There's also The Algorithm Design Manual, by Skiena

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That would be one. Another one would be the CLR book.

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Seconded, this book should be on every programmers shelf. – Chas. Owens May 25 at 3:58
Thirded. A huge aid to my study towards the ACM Programming contest in my Uni days. Great explanation of algorithms with all the fundimentals well explained. – Tom Leys May 25 at 4:08
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Here are some:

Data Structures Using C
Introduction to Algorithms

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