Ask HN: What's a programming book that you wish you read earlier in your career?
8 comments
The Pragmatic Programmer. It feels like a textbook introduction to the software engineering field. Not the code part, but more the engineering parts.
Python Notes for Professionals book would have been perfect five years ago when I started my programming career
Link: https://books.goalkicker.com/PythonBook
Link: https://books.goalkicker.com/PythonBook
As disaffected as it is, i think Neal Stepheson's "Diamond Age" has programming book "backstory" that carries weight many years later...sort of a 3rd decade insight class of wisdom...
Could you elaborate on what kind of wisdom you gleaned from it?
I've read it and enjoyed it, but wondering what insights you got from it.
I've read it and enjoyed it, but wondering what insights you got from it.
The Stevens Unix and networking books.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/W._Richard_Stevens
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/W._Richard_Stevens
Clean Code
SICP and the Stevens and Tanenbaum books.
I didn't find a way to earn money for these books, and eventually lacked the knowledge to pursuit the dream of making video games.
Now i am over 30 years old, and regret I didn't read these books than.
However, if it comes to my dev career, i wished I have read earlier books about these topics:
- effective communication - leadership - getting things done, the book - design - user experience - psychological books
It does not mean classical, technical and craft books are not important. I have red just a lot of these when I was young.
But these above would help me shape my career in a better way, enjoy it more and focus on the important stuff.