pragmatic_bookshelf

Pragmatic Bookshelf

About the Pragmatic Bookshelf

About the Pragmatic Bookshelf

The Pragmatic Bookshelf is an agile publishing company. We’re here because we want to improve the lives of developers. We do this by creating timely, practical titles, written by programmers for programmers.

Our Pragmatic courses, workshops, and other products can help you and your team create better software and have more fun. For more information, as well as the latest Pragmatic titles, please visit us at http://pragprog.com.

Our ebooks do not contain any Digital Restrictions Management (DRM), and have always been DRM-free. We pioneered the beta book concept, where you can purchase and read a book while it’s still being written, and provide feedback to the author to help make a better book for everyone. Free resources for all purchasers include source code downloads (if applicable), errata and discussion forums, all available on the book's home page at pragprog.com. We’re here to make your life easier.

New Book Announcements

Want to keep up on our latest titles and announcements, and occasional special offers? Just create an account on pragprog.com (an email address and a password is all it takes) and select the checkbox to receive newsletters. You can also follow us on twitter as @pragprog.

About Ebook Formats

About Ebook Formats

If you buy directly from pragprog.com, you get ebooks in all available formats for one price. You can synch your ebooks amongst all your devices (including iPhone/iPad, Android, laptops, etc.) via Dropbox. You get free updates for the life of the edition. And, of course, you can always come back and re-download your books when needed. Ebooks bought from the Amazon Kindle store are subject to Amazon's polices. Limitations in Amazon's file format may cause ebooks to display differently on different devices.

For more information, please see our FAQ at pragprog.com/#about-ebooks

Thanks for your continued support,

Andy Hunt

The Pragmatic Programmers

Snippet from Wikipedia: The Pragmatic Programmer

The Pragmatic Programmer: From Journeyman to Master is a book about computer programming and software engineering, written by Andrew Hunt and David Thomas and published in October 1999. It is used as a textbook in related university courses. It was the first in a series of books under the label The Pragmatic Bookshelf. A second edition, The Pragmatic Programmer: Your Journey to Mastery was released in 2019 for the book's 20th anniversary, with major revisions and new material which reflects new technology and other changes in the software engineering industry over the last twenty years.

The book does not present a systematic theory, but rather a collection of tips to improve the development process in a pragmatic way. The main qualities of what the authors refer to as a pragmatic programmer are being an early adopter, to have fast adaptation, inquisitiveness and critical thinking, realism, and being a jack-of-all-trades.

The book uses analogies and short stories to present development methodologies and caveats, for example the broken windows theory, the story of the stone soup, or the boiling frog. Some concepts were named or popularized in the book, such as DRY (or Don't Repeat Yourself) and rubber duck debugging, a method of debugging whose name is a reference to a story in the book.

Bibliography: Books, De-DRM (Calibre and Anna's Archive Shadow Library), Publishers and Publications, WorldCat.org (ISBN), Amazon (ASIN), Apple Books-Kindle-eBooks. (navbar_bibliography - see also navbar_shadow_library, navbar_propaganda)


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pragmatic_bookshelf.txt · Last modified: 2022/08/21 20:22 by 127.0.0.1