Kevlin Henney, editor/author of 97 Things Every Programmer Should Know, discusses the book and the programming process. He talks about how he compiled the essays for the book and lists some of the items he found most surprising and thought provoking. He also assesses the issues related to programmer training, including some of the things not taught in school.
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Things Every Programmer Should Know
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Things Every Programmer Should Know
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Things Every Programmer Should Know
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Things Every Programmer Should Know
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Things Every Programmer Should Know
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Things Every Programmer Should Know
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Things Every Programmer Should Know
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Things Every Programmer Should Know
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Things Every Programmer Should Know
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Things Every Programmer Should Know
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Things Every Programmer Should Know
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Things Every Programmer Should Know
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Things Every Programmer Should Know
Possibly related…
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Things Every Programmer Should Know
Kevlin Henney, editor/author of 97 Things Every Programmer Should Know, discusses the book and the programming process. He talks about how he compiled the essays for the book and lists some of the items he found most surprising and thought provoking. He also assesses the issues related to programmer training, including some of the things not taught in school.
Tagged with software programming code kevlin henney interview podcast itconversations
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Rob Pike | Public Static Void
If you remember programming in C, you'll remember that it felt like music, or wine, or philosophy. Programming languages back then were laconic; they said all in just a few words. Today's mainstream programming languages, in contrast, are heavy, intricate and verbose. How did we get here and what comes next? Rob Pike, the co-creator of the Go programming language and a Distinguished Engineer at Google, thinks the solution is a language that gives us the best from both worlds.
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Three things every programmer should know
Kevin Henney and Roy Osherove
