#13 in Enterprise data computing books
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Reddit mentions of Release It!: Design and Deploy Production-Ready Software (Pragmatic Programmers)
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Reddit mentions: 3
We found 3 Reddit mentions of Release It!: Design and Deploy Production-Ready Software (Pragmatic Programmers). Here are the top ones.
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I've posted this before but I'll repost it here:
Now in terms of the question that you ask in the title - this is what I recommend:
Job Interview Prep
Junior Software Engineer Reading List
Read This First
Fundementals
Understanding Professional Software Environments
Mentality
History
Mid Level Software Engineer Reading List
Read This First
Fundementals
Software Design
Software Engineering Skill Sets
Databases
User Experience
Mentality
History
Specialist Skills
In spite of the fact that many of these won't apply to your specific job I still recommend reading them for the insight, they'll give you into programming language and technology design.
For more foundational stuff, I'd look at:
Getting familiar with these branching models will also expose you to many commonly-used Git features like branching, squash merging, rebasing, tagging, and history rewriting.
No one's really gonna ask you about this, but you should develop a habit of writing great, clear, and concise commit messages.
All the rage right now - having real/near-real time building/unit-testing/packaging/deployment of your software once you've made a code commit. Read the articles I linked, play with services like CircleCI or Travis-CI or CodeShip and integrate them with your projects in GitLab.
Probably the two most commonly used overarching test-based software development processes. I'm a strong proponent of TDD (when done right), and many teams you work on will probably employ TDD or BDD.
Beyond those links, some books that cover a lot of general material are:
Haha guess I saw the "tipsy" and checked out after that! My focus is functional programming, so most of my recommendations are around that.
LambdaCast and The REPL are good and worth listening through (full disclosure I was on the REPL).
Other casts that I cherry-pick through:
Some good books:
You should also check out hillelogram and his talks/podcasts/writing on TLA+ if you're not familiar.
Do you have any good recommendations?