You will hear discording opinions about design patterns, in the programming community at large.
In my opinion, it is sure that there are abstractions that patterns encapsulate that are really useful (factory, singleton, delegate, etc.). I use patterns a lot, but I myself am sometime puzzled by the apparent lack of depth or level of insight that you get by reading a pattern description. This is also in tune with the proliferation of design patterns that specialize for any kind of things.
When the design hey are useful, they are a very good means of communication and certainly they guide you through the process of designing or defining the architecture of your app. They are useful both for small project and for large ones, and they can be applied at different granularity levels.
Patters are a generic concept and all programming languages support them. Anyway, if you work in C++, a book focusing on it is best, because you will get the pattern adapted to the characteristics of the language.
In my opinion, the really fundamental book about design patterns are:
GoF, Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software
VV.AA., Pattern-Oriented Software Architecture Volume 1: A System of Patterns
VV.AA., Pattern-Oriented Software Architecture Volume 2: Patterns for Concurrent and Networked Objects
design pattern
can be very specific or general. General design patterns are language/platform independent, but more specific ones may require a different definition per language. Migrating from one language to another can cause a major rewrite. – beatgammit May 31 '11 at 7:24