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If you could go back in time and tell yourself to read a specific book at the beginning of your career as a developer, which book would it be?

I expect this list to be varied and to cover a wide range of things.

To search: Use the search box in the upper-right corner. To search the answers of the current question, use inquestion:this. For example:

inquestion:this "Code Complete"
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    Browsing this thread make me realize how ugly most programming related books are. Very good thread though! Aug 5, 2009 at 12:09
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    Interesting this is, while the title reads "What is the single most influential book every programmer should read?", there are quite a few books suggested that deal with language specific topics. By definition, and by question as it was put, the books suggested here should deal with language agnostic topics, which proves most programmers have yet to learn how to read.
    – Rook
    Oct 2, 2009 at 19:54
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    If I could go back in time and tell myself to read something, it better be a newspaper or sports fact book that I carried with me. Anything else is a waste of good time travel. :-) Nov 8, 2009 at 9:38
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    You know, if I wasn't worried about getting down voted a WHOLE lot I would trollishly go and suggest Twilight. "Its ALSO about people who are pale and avoid the sun!" Feb 12, 2010 at 0:20
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    Can someone cleanup answers by deleting repeated entries on books? Most of them area already down voted.
    – rao
    Mar 16, 2010 at 5:44

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Read Head First Design Patterns for a much more accessible introduction than the GoF book. I remember feeling like I'd leveled up after each chapter.

Kent Beck's Test Driven Development by Example for TDD.

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I'm a big fan of most titles by Robert C. Martin, especially Agile Software Development, Principles, and Practices and Clean Code: A Handbook of Agile Software Craftsmanship.

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I found "The art of Prolog" a very good read.

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I think I grew up in a different generation than most here....

One of the most influential books I read, was APUE.

Or pretty much anything by W. Richard Stevens.

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Roger S. Pressman - Software Engineering (A Practitioners Approach). It has got a lot of usefull information.

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It's a toss up between Head First Design Patterns, for many of the reasons cited above, and Perl Testing: A Developer's Notebook, which should be one of the bibles for any Perl programmer wanting to write maintainable code.

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Win32 Programming by Charles Petzold

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I suppose we could ask the same top rated question every couple of weeks and upmod all those who mention code complete or The Pragmatic Programmer.

Not that there is anythng wrong with it :-)

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"The Design and Evolution of C++" by Bjarne Stroustrup

Besides giving much background on C++, it is also a lengthy study on the trade-offs and design concerns involved in a large scale program.

BN.com

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While not strictly a software development book, I would highly recommend that Don't Make me Think! be considered in this list.

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Expert C Programming: Deep C Secrets by Peter Van Der Linden

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  • By far the best book on programming ever written. If only other technical authors could master the ability to present deeply technical information in a way that is conversational but not patronizing. Sep 12, 2011 at 17:48
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The question is, "What book really made an impact of how you work as a developer?" Without any doubt, Programming Windows with MFC, by Jeff Prosise, is the book that had the greatest impact on HOW I work as a developer. It did not teach me the fundamentals of "programming" but it opened the world of Windows platform development to me and many thousands of other developers.

I had written a little Windows code previously in the "Petzold style" before MFC was developed. I quickly decided the Windows platform we just not worth the trouble as a developer. When Prosise came out with his MFC book, I realized (along with thousands of other non-Windows programmers) that I could create an easy to use interface that users would not just understand, but actually enjoy using. I devoured the book, making so many notes in it and turning down so many corners, I eventually bought a second copy.

Prosise, Jeff. Programming Windows with MFC 2nd Ed. Microsoft Press 1999 ISBN: 1-57231-695-0

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Domain Driven Design by Eric Evans

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Amiga ROM Kernel Manuals :)

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This might not count as a "development book" but I have to throw it in anyway: Hackers by Stephen Levy. I found that it spoke to the emotional side of programming.

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Separately, I'd mention The Third Manifesto by Hugh Darwen and CJ Date. If you're interested in understanding data (which seems uncommon among programmers) this book is a must-read. It will also make you sad when you realize just how badly broken SQL is, but it'll also help you cope with that brokenness. Knowing how a tool is broken lets you design with those deficits in mind.

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Another book that has not been mentioned yet, and SHOULD be required reading for EVERY programmer, newbies on up to gurus, in ANY programming language, is Michael Howard's Writing Secure Code (2nd Edition) from MSPress.

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As so many people have listed Head First Design Patterns, which I agree is a very good book, I would like to see if so many people aware of a title called Design Patterns Explained: A New Perspective on Object-Oriented Design.

This title deals with design patterns excellently. The first half of the book is very accessible and the remaining chapters require only a firm grasp of the content already covered The reason I feel the second half of the book is less accessible is that it covers patterns that I, as a young developer admittedly lacking in experience, have not used much.

This title also introduces the concept behind design patterns, covering Christopher Alexander's initial work in architecture to the GoF first implementing documenting patterns in SmallTalk.

I think that anyone who enjoyed Head First Design Patterns but still finds the GoF very dry, should look into Design Patterns Explained as a much more readable (although not quite as comprehensive) alternative.

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Craig Larman's Applying UML and Patterns. While the Gang of Four book Design Patterns is very instructive, I found that I didn't "get" how to use design patterns until I ran across Larman's book in a programming class.

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Advanced MS-DOS by Ray Duncan.

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for low level entertainment i would suggest Michael Abrash's
i) -Zen of Code Optimization- and
ii) -Graphics Programming Black Book-
even if you dont do any graphics programming.

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I saw a review of Software Factories: Assembling Applications with Patterns, Models, Frameworks, and Tools on a blog talking also about XI-Factory, I read it and I must say this book is a must read. Altough not specifically targetted to programmers, it explains very clearly what is happening in the programming world right now with Model-Driven Architecture and so on..

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  • Is it still happening? Is it the best MDA boook/info on the planet? Apr 1, 2010 at 21:51
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I'm reading now Agile Software Development, Principles, Patterns and Practices. For those interested in XP and Object-Oriented Design, this is a classic reading.

alt text http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/519J3P8ANML._SL500_AA240_.jpg

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  • I've heard good things about it too, but it's been mentioned earlier, see: stackoverflow.com/questions/1711/… (Vote that up instead - ah, well, when you have the reputation to do it :)
    – Jonik
    Mar 12, 2009 at 20:20
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Solid Code Optimizing the Software Development Life Cycle

Although the book is only 300 pages and favors Microsoft technologies it still offers some good language agnostic tidbits.

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  • -1 Duplicate of higher rated, sorry Mar 27, 2010 at 13:54
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Domain Driven Design By Eric Evans is a wonderful book!

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What happened to 'Expert C Programming - Deep C Secrets' by Peter Van Der Linden - a classical and enjoyable read. Should have read that immediately after learning C years ago but got it about after 3 years into learning C! A recommended book which answers the most common SO questions on pointers (a favourite subject of mine). Live it, eat it, breathe it! 10/10!

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What Every Programmer Should Know About Memory

by Ulrich Drepper - explains the structure of modern memory subsystems and suggests how to utilize them efficiently.

PS: Sorry If I am double posting.

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97 Things Every Programmer Should Know

alt text http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51F134Q8TrL._BO2,204,203,200_PIsitb-sticker-arrow-click,TopRight,35,-76_AA240_SH20_OU01_.jpg

This book pools together the collective experiences of some of the world's best programmers. It is a must read.

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In the beginning was the command line. Neal Stephenson.

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