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Christian Vasquez
Christian Vasquez

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Do you consider reading books a must?

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sandordargo profile image
Sandor Dargo

Yes. To me, it's a must. Reading is one of the best ways to use my free time. So I don't just mean technical books, but any kind.

When I got stressed more easily, it was always reading that could calm me down.

Reading became almost as important for me as eating. One is food for the body, the other is for the mind.

You might be interested in this article, about why and how to read more.

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douglasmakey profile image
Douglas Makey Mendez Molero

Absolutely yes, We need to read more books, articles, guides whatever you want or you prefer, I think this helps us to improve on different ways.

In my case my English is not fluent, so every night I try to read one article about something that is my interest also I try to write little articles and shared with the community for improving my English.

But yes I am sure that is necessary to read more.

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georgeoffley profile image
George Offley

Yes

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thomaswdmelville profile image
Thomas Melville

For me it is a must.

  1. I just plain enjoy reading, I could be called a voracious reader. Software, psychology, biography and science fiction are my main genres.
  2. For me it is a good way to learn new things, which we all need to do in this profession. It can be tech or non-tech. I mix it with online courses, mainly pluralsight and the linux foundation.

One thing I will say is it has to be active reading, for lack of a better word.
I make notes all over my books, reviewing what I have written after every reading session and chapter, making notes of further reading and how i can apply it to work.

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shanalikhan profile image
Shan Khan

YES !

In case you are struggling in building a habit for book reading. Check out the article here.

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equiman profile image
Camilo Martinez • Edited

I don't like see much TV. So I need keep a book near to me and not only tech/programming books.

I like read SciFi, Fantasy, Mystery, Mythology and Terror books because give me another vision about the world (or other Worlds) and afford problems in a different way than usual.

One little book that change my mind was Nightfall (Asimov).

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rhymes profile image
rhymes

If we're talking about books in general yes, I couldn't live without them, on paper or in electronic form, I read quite a bit.

I love being transported for hundreds of pages in a well written fictional story. The character building, the mastery of the language, the clear OCD great writers have... if you combine it with the fact that most great fiction is just a metaphor on the real world (of the past, present or possible future)... well books are amazing!

If we're talking about tech books, I don't read that many anymore. I still value books about fundamentals but in general the size, the hefty price, the short span life and the impracticality of reading them in PDF makes me shy away from tech books favoring articles, tutorials, documentation and in-depth essays, or even reading source code. And to be honest, some tech writers who write books aren't good at writing books and this is a no-no for me as you might have guessed :-D I still have books bought in a frenzy that are basically the online documentation of the technology with some comments here and there. No thanks.

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fyodorio profile image
Fyodor

There is too much garbage on the Internet. The only way to get accurate verified non-opinionated information today is to take a good old book.

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tedhagos profile image
Ted Hagos

Yes. Reading books, the kind with no hyperlinks or any mechanism that allows you to jump from thought to thought, promotes deep thought and concentration which we need for learning. Learning happens in the space where the brain can concentrate and can operate uninterrupted. There are many books about this, a few that comes to mind are;

  • Focus, by D. Goleman
  • The Shallows, by N. Carr
  • Deep Work, by C. Newport
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thomaswdmelville profile image
Thomas Melville

+1 Deep Work

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kspeakman profile image
Kasey Speakman • Edited

No, I suppose I don't consider reading books a must... since I almost never read them myself. Outside of what was required for school, I can probably count on my hands the number of books I have read. However, I read ridiculous amounts of technical articles online, on all kinds of subjects.

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juanfrank77 profile image
Juan F Gonzalez

In this career in computer science (and other tech-related areas) not only reading is a must but being very selective with the books being read and also any other sources of learning.

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chrisvasqm profile image
Christian Vasquez

Which books would you recommend for anyone?

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juanfrank77 profile image
Juan F Gonzalez

@subbramanil reply is spot on, 'cause I feel that in development books there are as many as programming languages. I'd recommend more books that can help anyone become better regardless of their tech-stack. For instance, some titles that come to my mind right now are 'Start with Why' by Simon Sinek, 'The power of habit' by Charles Duhigg, the 80/20 principle of Richard Koch and my personal favorite 'The 4-hour Chef' by Tim Ferriss

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subbramanil profile image
Subbu Lakshmanan • Edited

Thank you πŸ‘. I recently finished, 'Start with Why' and if you apply properly it really changes how you view things from a different perspective. I have the 'Power of Habit' in my library and haven't started yet. Will check it out the other books that you mentioned.

Solid recommendationsπŸ‘

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subbramanil profile image
Subbu Lakshmanan

I am not sure if this helps.

dev.to/search?q=Books

There has been multiple posts on books in dev.to. I hope you find something that you are looking for.

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dance2die profile image
Sung M. Kim

TL;DR

Yes. It's a must.

The majority of books I read are non-tech books as I can learn better from videos and actually doing what I learned.

From what I've learned/read, creativity stems from connecting dots in your brain. One of the books I read talks about how words we use are grouped together in our brain (words you use for programming, such as JavaScript, Web, coffee are stored near each other while words like truck, sky, fan, etc are stored far from where tech words are stored).

I believe reading books would help you bridge gaps between words/ideas you normally don't use together. (another way is to use analogies daily by using words/ideas that are not related. As a simple/contrived example, "Her eyes are as blue as sky". Eyes & Sky are not related and rarely associated together. And your brain would try to create an association between those two words).

While reading books, if you might run into situations you've never considered before, thus brain creates association between gap of what you know & just read/learned.

So the gist is, reading should be a must IMO.
(Sorry I didn't have time to edit it to make the reply shorter).

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alvarocavalcanti profile image
Alvaro Cavalcanti

+1 on all of this. Pretty much all I would have said. 😊

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dance2die profile image
Sung M. Kim

Thank you, Alvaro ☺

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chrisvasqm profile image
Christian Vasquez • Edited

Thanks for sharing your thoughts Sung!

"One of the books I read talks about how words we use are grouped together in our brain"

That book sounds really interesting, would you mind sharing it's name/link to it?

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dance2die profile image
Sung M. Kim • Edited

Ah, it's a Korean book (,which doesn't have English translation...😒) titled 열두 발자ꡭ (Literal translation: Twelve Steps) written by a renowned/well-known Korean physicist who studies how brain 🧠works.
(That's right. He's a physicist/doctor but not a MD πŸ˜€).

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sublimegeek profile image
Jonathan Irvin

Never stop learning.

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theoutlander profile image
Nick Karnik

I feel that reading, in general, is important. How and what type of information you consume is up to you. I mostly read tech/startup/science/math related books, but I've started to pick up slightly non-technical books over the years. With my limited time, I can't get myself to read outside of those areas (other than news). What about you? Would you recommend reading something outside of tech?

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chrisvasqm profile image
Christian Vasquez

I've always struggle to read actually. Other than being forced to read a book during school/college, I have only read Clean Code and The Clean Coder by Uncle Bob to be honest.

My father reads a lot, part of being a lawyer I suppose, and he's been recommending me these:

  • How to Win Friends and Influence People.
  • The 48 Rules of Power.
  • The Art of Loving.

Some others (Design related):

  • Don't Make Me Think: A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability.
  • The Design of Everyday Things.
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theoutlander profile image
Nick Karnik

I guess I need to order How to Win Friends and Influence People :)

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theoutlander profile image
Nick Karnik

Has anyone read How to Win Friends and Influence People in the Digital Age? Is this considered a revision of the previously suggested book? Can't decide which one to read.

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shanalikhan profile image
Shan Khan

How to Win Friends and Influence People.

Is the best I have found in self-help.

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subbramanil profile image
Subbu Lakshmanan • Edited

Definitely reading 'How to Win Friends and Influence People' helps a lot no matter what kind of work you do. Absolutely a great book and easy read. Each chapter has multiple short real life events and one moral/guide line.