Thank you so much for this awesome book review. I've read Clean Code and The Pragmatic Programmer from this list. They are both very useful especially Clean Code I think it's a must read regardless of the language you code in. It'd be cool if you made a book review on software architecture as well.
I would add to the list Alexander Shvets - Dive Into Design Patterns . Our senior university lector recommended this when we were studying. Nice books. I will definately get into them more closely.
i JUST watched your top 7 books. i’m so happy that you’re doing these videos. reading is so underrated. i’ll definitely be picking up a couple of these.
I would also like to point out Designing Data Intensive Applications by Martin Klepmann, which is a great book to start with, if you're a back-end dev.
@@hiimunranked8663 The problem is the ROI from reading these books is incredibly small towards getting a job. They're really only useful as a reference once you're ON the job. But these channels prey on the hopes of looking for a job in programming.
Hi Sir now I am pursuing integrated mtech 5 years course specialization in data science now I completed 3rd can you please say how to and how much I need to prepare to get decent job as fresher in data science sector because there are vast number of topics I am very confused like upto how many concepts I need to cover as a fresher to get decent job in data science sector
Hello, I’m 47 years old. I want to switch careers from customer support to software engineering. I plan to attend a CODING BOOTCAMP. What are my chances of getting hired after the BOOTCAMP? Are there companies hiring people my age (47) for entry level positions? Will this be a good move for me? Please help. Thanks
Obviously it's a huge risk. If you had a lot of financial obligations I wouldn't entirely quit your job to go down this path unless you are financially stable. Nonetheless, do what you want to do in life. It's too short to be afraid. I personally career changed into software development. After a coding bootcamp and a short stint at a startup with unpaid position, I am now employed as a developer making decent money. It's not easy but nothing in life worth doing ever is.
Clean Code is really good, particularly about naming and writing code that don't need comments. I like his idea of merciless refactoring. Its object oriented but there are take aways for non OOP as well.
Great books! Really good video and description of each book and who it is best suited for. Thanks for this video! Really good stuff. Will check out more of your videos!!
Yes i the books we shoul read are coming from single publishing company. If someone believes in this, they are probably not capable of being agood software engineering
I've never had great experience learning code from reading a book, any other topic yes but instructor led training is the way to go to learn programming and I imagine there are others who would agree. Usually instructor led training , reading whitepapers or help for specific learning, then open up your IDE and try it yourself.
Do you know any book similar to “Code that fits in your head” which is one code based and buidling upon it with one big project but with Python not C# ? any one can recommend a book for me please?
Love the book recommendation videos! Will start with Clean Code! Also your review of how the Python book was more from intermediate to advance level was helpful to get an idea where it stands. Helpful vid!
Love your humble and positive attitude! As a beginner and college CS student you make me feel welcome and don't overwhelm with too much jargon. My favorite coding channel :)
Have you read any of these books already? Which one looks the most interesting to you?
I haven't read any though
But the most interesting one for me was clean code
rip got rejected from fanng
Currently reading The Pragmatic Programmer.
Modern Software Engineering, Pragmatic Programmer, Clean Code and Python Distilled definitely look the most interesting to me
I'm currently working on react JS. Can you suggest me some book?
Thank you so much for this awesome book review. I've read Clean Code and The Pragmatic Programmer from this list. They are both very useful especially Clean Code I think it's a must read regardless of the language you code in.
It'd be cool if you made a book review on software architecture as well.
I would add to the list Alexander Shvets - Dive Into Design Patterns . Our senior university lector recommended this when we were studying. Nice books. I will definately get into them more closely.
i JUST watched your top 7 books. i’m so happy that you’re doing these videos. reading is so underrated.
i’ll definitely be picking up a couple of these.
Thanks for the recommendations! gonna read at least 4 of them for sure.
I would also like to point out Designing Data Intensive Applications by Martin Klepmann, which is a great book to start with, if you're a back-end dev.
The shame is that none of these books will help you GET a job, they will only help you AT your job. Just keep that in mind.
any useful info will definetly help indirectly with getting a job
@@hiimunranked8663 The problem is the ROI from reading these books is incredibly small towards getting a job. They're really only useful as a reference once you're ON the job. But these channels prey on the hopes of looking for a job in programming.
Hi Sir now I am pursuing integrated mtech 5 years course specialization in data science now I completed 3rd can you please say how to and how much I need to prepare to get decent job as fresher in data science sector because there are vast number of topics I am very confused like upto how many concepts I need to cover as a fresher to get decent job in data science sector
Was that a Reading Rainbow reference at the end?
Loved the info
Can u suggest book
Which u fully read and loved?
I have one doubt, I want to start my career as programmer and data science Which type of subject should we take in inter first year
Do you recommend any of these as audio books?
Thank you .. that was informative 😊
i need eBook of python distilled book wher should i get
the kick drum in that outro song tho 🌚
"outro", a word used by sheep.
@@atlantic_love explain? lmao
love it, a lot of new books to add in my queue 😒
Hello, I’m 47 years old. I want to switch careers from customer support to software engineering. I plan to attend a CODING BOOTCAMP. What are my chances of getting hired after the BOOTCAMP? Are there companies hiring people my age (47) for entry level positions? Will this be a good move for me? Please help. Thanks
It's possible but your chances are slim most online examples are exagerrated.
@@mushqazi2444 ok thanks
Obviously it's a huge risk. If you had a lot of financial obligations I wouldn't entirely quit your job to go down this path unless you are financially stable. Nonetheless, do what you want to do in life. It's too short to be afraid. I personally career changed into software development. After a coding bootcamp and a short stint at a startup with unpaid position, I am now employed as a developer making decent money. It's not easy but nothing in life worth doing ever is.
@@CS-bz2vk Thank you!
Nice vid!
Sir i learn softwaring help me please
I ordered all 6 books , did read them all ; send them back ; asked for refund;
Y
@Kaly N I think you meant W
@@jos2074 S
Clean Code is really good, particularly about naming and writing code that don't need comments. I like his idea of merciless refactoring. Its object oriented but there are take aways for non OOP as well.
I am actually going to attend a conference where uncle bob is going to give a speech
@@lucapredoi3876 Did anyone yell "Uncle Tom!!!!!"?
I remember someone recommending me "Gang of Four Design Patterns", I though I was in for a thriller about Musketeers... boy was I wrong.
haven't really read any but I own most of these. HAHAHA
seriously tho, uncle bob's lectures on clean code is a must if you have time to spare.
🤣🤣🤣
@@hechuan5075 share the link
@@bmujeeb th-cam.com/video/7EmboKQH8lM/w-d-xo.html
Those books are designed to give you tons of filler to make money. Those books are made more costly as the worth goes up per word.
Useful information, do more videos
Great books!
Really good video and description of each book and who it is best suited for.
Thanks for this video! Really good stuff. Will check out more of your videos!!
Yes i the books we shoul read are coming from single publishing company. If someone believes in this, they are probably not capable of being agood software engineering
The Pragmattic Programmer and Clean Code are good books. The rest are not.
And Mark Semen?
Trust me.. you don’t need to read any of these
Heads first: Design Patterns should be here.
I've never had great experience learning code from reading a book, any other topic yes but instructor led training is the way to go to learn programming and I imagine there are others who would agree. Usually instructor led training , reading whitepapers or help for specific learning, then open up your IDE and try it yourself.
Clean Code is HORRIBLE! It leads to inflexible and bad performing software!
Do you know any book similar to “Code that fits in your head” which is one code based and buidling upon it with one big project but with Python not C# ? any one can recommend a book for me please?
If you CAN understand a code in 3 minutes? Or if you CAN'T understand? Someone tell me pls
Iam new to programming I don't know where to start can u please guide mee 🙂🙂
Thank you so much for the reviews of all these books, they are in my list now!
How can I get these books
How to deal with pressure working in Sprints
Love the book recommendation videos! Will start with Clean Code! Also your review of how the Python book was more from intermediate to advance level was helpful to get an idea where it stands. Helpful vid!
Good morning. 😁❤👽
Might be a weird question but do you actually read these books or do you skim them?
Thanks!
You think he reads them? Clout, baby!
Good tips! I'll check them out!
Great job 🤘
Love your humble and positive attitude! As a beginner and college CS student you make me feel welcome and don't overwhelm with too much jargon. My favorite coding channel :)