Striving to become a master Go/Cloud developer; Father ๐จโ๐งโ๐ฆ; ๐ค/((Full Stack Web|Unity3D) + Developer)/g; Science supporter ๐ฉโ๐ฌ; https://coder.today
I would rather have cheatsheets around, not books, especially not hard cover ones, they do not have a good search algorithm, so they cannot be "handy at need".
Experienced ASP.NET developer passionate about learning Software Engineering, being an effective team member, and carving out my own little niche in the world.
I enjoy working with jQuery, Angul...
I would rather have cheatsheets around, not books, especially not hard cover ones, they do not have a good search algorithm, so they cannot be "handy at need".
Also I learn more new (relevant for nowdays) techniques and solutions from conferences, as example see my Advanced JavaScript 2017 talks playlist
Books are great for building a solid knowledge base, but in my fields (servers and web development) things are changing too fast to wait/read books
Dev.io topis on books
all the first 10-15 google search results on "top software books" are ok
Agreed. I read books more for learning concepts and use articles, talks, and documentation for learning technologies.
That makes sense.
Thank you. :)