Log In
Or create an account -> 
Imperial Library
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Upload
  • Forum
  • Help
  • Login/SignUp

Index
97 Things Every Programmer Should Know
Preface
Permissions How to Contact Us SafariĀ® Books Online Acknowledgments
1. Act with Prudence 2. Apply Functional Programming Principles 3. Ask, "What Would the User Do?" (You Are Not the User) 4. Automate Your Coding Standard 5. Beauty Is in Simplicity 6. Before You Refactor 7. Beware the Share 8. The Boy Scout Rule 9. Check Your Code First Before Looking to Blame Others 10. Choose Your Tools with Care 11. Code in the Language of the Domain 12. Code Is Design 13. Code Layout Matters 14. Code Reviews 15. Coding with Reason 16. A Comment on Comments 17. Comment Only What the Code Cannot Say 18. Continuous Learning 19. Convenience Is Not an -ility 20. Deploy Early and Often 21. Distinguish Business Exceptions from Technical 22. Do Lots of Deliberate Practice 23. Domain-Specific Languages 24. Don't Be Afraid to Break Things 25. Don't Be Cute with Your Test Data 26. Don't Ignore That Error! 27. Don't Just Learn the Language, Understand Its Culture 28. Don't Nail Your Program into the Upright Position 29. Don't Rely on "Magic Happens Here" 30. Don't Repeat Yourself 31. Don't Touch That Code! 32. Encapsulate Behavior, Not Just State 33. Floating-Point Numbers Aren't Real 34. Fulfill Your Ambitions with Open Source 35. The Golden Rule of API Design 36. The Guru Myth 37. Hard Work Does Not Pay Off 38. How to Use a Bug Tracker 39. Improve Code by Removing It 40. Install Me 41. Interprocess Communication Affects Application Response Time 42. Keep the Build Clean 43. Know How to Use Command-Line Tools 44. Know Well More Than Two Programming Languages 45. Know Your IDE 46. Know Your Limits 47. Know Your Next Commit 48. Large, Interconnected Data Belongs to a Database 49. Learn Foreign Languages 50. Learn to Estimate 51. Learn to Say, "Hello, World" 52. Let Your Project Speak for Itself 53. The Linker Is Not a Magical Program 54. The Longevity of Interim Solutions 55. Make Interfaces Easy to Use Correctly and Hard to Use Incorrectly 56. Make the Invisible More Visible 57. Message Passing Leads to Better Scalability in Parallel Systems 58. A Message to the Future 59. Missing Opportunities for Polymorphism 60. News of the Weird: Testers Are Your Friends 61. One Binary 62. Only the Code Tells the Truth 63. Own (and Refactor) the Build 64. Pair Program and Feel the Flow 65. Prefer Domain-Specific Types to Primitive Types 66. Prevent Errors 67. The Professional Programmer 68. Put Everything Under Version Control 69. Put the Mouse Down and Step Away from the Keyboard 70. Read Code 71. Read the Humanities 72. Reinvent the Wheel Often 73. Resist the Temptation of the Singleton Pattern 74. The Road to Performance Is Littered with Dirty Code Bombs 75. Simplicity Comes from Reduction 76. The Single Responsibility Principle 77. Start from Yes 78. Step Back and Automate, Automate, Automate 79. Take Advantage of Code Analysis Tools 80. Test for Required Behavior, Not Incidental Behavior 81. Test Precisely and Concretely 82. Test While You Sleep (and over Weekends) 83. Testing Is the Engineering Rigor of Software Development 84. Thinking in States 85. Two Heads Are Often Better Than One 86. Two Wrongs Can Make a Right (and Are Difficult to Fix) 87. Ubuntu Coding for Your Friends 88. The Unix Tools Are Your Friends 89. Use the Right Algorithm and Data Structure 90. Verbose Logging Will Disturb Your Sleep 91. WET Dilutes Performance Bottlenecks 92. When Programmers and Testers Collaborate 93. Write Code As If You Had to Support It for the Rest of Your Life 94. Write Small Functions Using Examples 95. Write Tests for People 96. You Gotta Care About the Code 97. Your Customers Do Not Mean What They Say A. Contributors Index Colophon
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →

Chief Librarian: Las Zenow <zenow@riseup.net>
Fork the source code from gitlab
.

This is a mirror of the Tor onion service:
http://kx5thpx2olielkihfyo4jgjqfb7zx7wxr3sd4xzt26ochei4m6f7tayd.onion