Hello to all! On holidays I decided to buy books on programming. In the search for "Perfect Code" I found the book "The Perfect Code" by Andy Orama (editor of the O'Reilly series) and Gregory Wilson. How do you like this book compared to "Perfect Code"?

Closed due to the fact that it is necessary to reformulate the question so that it was possible to give an objectively correct answer to the participants of Oceinic , Visman , Aries , PashaPash , ThisMan October 11 '15 at 8:55 .

The question gives rise to endless debates and discussions based not on knowledge, but on opinions. To get an answer, rephrase your question so that it can be given an unambiguously correct answer, or delete the question altogether. If the question can be reformulated according to the rules set out in the certificate , edit it .

  • Read the perfect code book. Honestly, I did not remember much about it, maybe something was wrong with me. but he fucks some words there. I would read Andy Orama - vkovalchuk88

2 answers 2

Even judging by the table of contents, "The Perfect Code" is a simple collection of articles (examples) from magazines. I myself recently read the "Perfect Code", I highly recommend reading it first.

  • five
    another good book "Clean Code" by Robert Martin - rasmisha
  • Thank. Today I started reading it :) - Kyulix

I read both "Perfect Code" and "Clean Code". Both books are VERY good, after them you start writing more clearly and easier. Recommend. The “Ideal Code” is more like “Programming Pearls” (“Programming Pearls”). Showing examples of how people solved their problems and what ideas they came to mind