Clean Craftsmanship: Disciplines, Standards, and Ethics Contributor(s): Martin, Robert C. (Author) |
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ISBN: 013691571X ISBN-13: 9780136915713 Publisher: Addison-Wesley Professional OUR PRICE: $42.74 Product Type: Paperback Published: November 2021 |
Additional Information |
BISAC Categories: - Computers | Software Development & Engineering - Quality Assurance & Testing - Computers | Programming - General |
Dewey: 005.1 |
LCCN: 2021942499 |
Physical Information: 1" H x 6.9" W x 9" (1.40 lbs) 416 pages |
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc. |
Publisher Description: 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. -- Stacia Heimgartner Viscardi, CST & Agile Mentor In Clean Craftmanship, the legendary Robert C. Martin (Uncle Bob) has written every programmer's definitive guide to working well. Martin brings together the disciplines, standards, and ethics you need to deliver robust, effective code and to be proud of all the software you write. Martin, the best-selling author of The Clean Coder, first provides a pragmatic, technical, and prescriptive guide to the foundational disciplines of software craftsmanship. Then, he moves on to standards, showing how the world's expectations of developers often differ from their own and helping you bring the two in sync. Finally, he turns to the ethics of the programming profession, describing the fundamental promises all developers should make to their colleagues, their users, and, above all, themselves. With Martin'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.
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