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How to Write Code You're Proud of . . . Every Single Day ". . . [A] timely and humble reminder of the ever-increasing complexity of our programmatic world and how we owe it to the legacy of humankind--and to ourselves--to practice ethical development. Take your time reading Clean Craftsmanship. . . . Keep this book on your go-to bookshelf. Let this book be your old friend--your Uncle Bob, your guide--as you make your way through this world with curiosity and courage." --From the Foreword by Stacia Heimgartner Viscardi, CST & Agile Mentor In Clean Craftsmanship, the legendary Robert C. Martin ("Uncle Bob") has written the principles that define the profession--and the craft--of software development. Uncle Bob brings together the disciplines, standards, and ethics you need to deliver robust, effective code and to be proud of all the software you write. Robert Martin, the best-selling author of Clean Code, provides a pragmatic, technical, and prescriptive guide to the foundational disciplines of software craftsmanship. He discusses standards, showing how the world's expectations of developers often differ from their own and helping you bring the two in sync. Bob concludes with the ethics of the programming profession, describing the fundamental promises all developers should make to their colleagues, their users, and, above all, themselves. With Uncle Bob's insights, all programmers and their managers can consistently deliver code that builds trust instead of undermining it--trust among users and throughout societies that depend on software for their survival. Moving towards the "north star" of true software craftsmanship: the state of knowing how to program well Practical, specific guidance for applying five core disciplines: test-driven development, refactoring, simple design, collaborative programming, and acceptance tests How developers and teams can promote productivity, quality, and courage The true meaning of integrity and teamwork among programmers, and ten specific commitments every software professional should make Register your book for convenient access to the book's companion videos, updates, and/or corrections as they become available. See inside book for details.
With More C++ Gems, Robert Martin, Editor-in-Chief of C++ Report, presents the long-awaited follow-up to C++ Gems (1996). Since the publication of the first book, the C++ language has experienced many changes. The ISO has adopted a standard for the language and its library. The Unified Modeling Language has affected software development in C++, and Java has changed things as well. Through all of these developments, C++ Report has been the forum for developers and programmers to share their experience and discuss new directions for the industry. More C++ Gems picks up where the first book left off, presenting tips, tricks, proven strategies, easy-to-follow techniques, and usable source code by some of the most renowned experts in the field.
The award-winning book Agile Software Development: Principles, Patterns and Practices helped bring Agile principles from a practitioner's point of view to tens of thousands of Java and C++ programmers. Now, Robert C. Martin and Micah Martin have produced a completely updated volume for .NET programmers, Agile Principles, Patterns, and Practices in C#. This book presents a series of case studies illustrating Agile Development and Agile Design, and moves quickly from UML to real C# code. The introductory chapters lay out the basics of the agile movement, while the later chapters show these techniques in action. The book includes source code examples that are also available for download from the author's Web site. the fourteen practices of Extreme Programming; spiking, splitting, velocity, and planning iterations and releases; test driven development, test first design, and acceptance testing; refactoring with unit testing; pair programming; Agile design and design smells; the Single Responsibility Principle and the Open Closed Principle; the Liskov Substitution Principle and the Dependency Inversion Principle; the Interface Segregation Principle, and Separation through Delegation and Multiple Inheritance; the five types of UML diagrams and how to use them effectively; object-oriented package design and design patterns; and how to put all of this together for a real-world project. Whether you are a C# programmer, a Visual Basic or Java programmer learning C#, a software development manager, or a business analyst, Agile Principles, Patterns, and Practices in C# is the first book you should read to understand agile software and how it applies to programming the .NET Framework.
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