Pragmatic Programmers on Medium
Good news! The Pragmatic Programmers are on Medium. They publish there their back catalogue. The books can be quite old, but some are still very useful.
The books are mainly aimed to programmers (hence their name 🙂 ), but some can interest non programming people. The full book list can be found here.
A quick selection for non-programmers:
- Technical Blogging, Second Edition by Antonio Cangiano
- Software Estimation Without Guessing by George Dinwiddie
- Ship It! by Jared R. Richardson and William A. Gwaltney Jr.
- Release It! Second Edition by Michael T. Nygard
- Pomodoro Technique Illustrated by Staffan Nöteberg
- Manage It! by Johanna Rothman
- Learn to Program by Chris Pine
- Lean from the Trenches by Henrik Kniberg
- Behind Closed Doors by Johanna Rothman and Esther Derby
- Become an Effective Software Engineering Manager by James Stanier
- Creating Great Teams by Sandy Mamoli and David Mole
Another selection for programmers:
- A Common-Sense Guide to Data Structures and Algorithms, Second Edition by Jay Wengrow
- Design It! by Michael Keeling
- Exercises for Programmers by Brian P. Hogan
- Explore It! by Elisabeth Hendrickson
- Functional Programming in Java by Venkat Subramaniam
- Java by Comparison by Simon Harrer, Jörg Lenhard, Linus Dietz
- Language Implementation Patterns by Terence Parr
- Learn Functional Programming with Elixir by Ulisses Almeida
- Mazes for Programmers by Jamis Buck
- Modern Vim by Drew Neil
- Practical Microservices by Ethan Garofolo
- Practical Programming, Third Edition by Paul Gries, Jennifer Campbell, and Jason Montojo
- Practical Vim, Second Edition by Drew Neil
- Pragmatic Scala by Venkat Subramaniam
- Pragmatic Version Control by Travis Swicegood
- Programming Groovy 2 by Venkat Subramaniam
- Programming Kotlin by Venkat Subramaniam
- Rediscovering JavaScript by Venkat Subramaniam
- Remote Pairing by Joe Kutner
- Seven Concurrency Models in Seven Weeks by Paul Butcher
- Seven Databases in Seven Weeks, Second Edition by Luc Perkins, with Eric Redmond, and Jim R. Wilson
- Seven Languages in Seven Weeks by Bruce A. Tate
- Seven More Languages in Seven Weeks by Bruce A. Tate, Fred Daoud, Ian Dees, and Jack Moffitt
- Seven Mobile Apps in Seven Weeks by Tony Hillerson
- Software Estimation Without Guessing by George Dinwiddie
- The Developer’s Code by Ka Wai Cheung
- The Healthy Programmer by Joe Kutner
- The Passionate Programmer by Chad Fowler
- Your Code as a Crime Scene by Adam Tornhill
I think I’ll start with The Healthy Programmer, it should be a good read during these time of global pandemic.
What about you? Did you read one of these books? Was it good? Which one will you read next? Please tell me in the comments.
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