This question has already been answered:

What book on C # to read after the book of Shildt C #. Complete guide?

Reported as a duplicate by Athari , Timofei Bondarev , fori1ton , null , PashaPash 5 May '15 at 15:45 .

A similar question was asked earlier and an answer has already been received. If the answers provided are not exhaustive, please ask a new question .

  • one
    IMHO, you need to focus on writing working applications, and not on reading over9000 books. - Olter
  • if you write working applications without reading books, they will work poorly, be accompanied even worse, and will not expand at all! and the code in them will be a living hell for outsiders, and after a while for the author too. - Specter
  • I did not write that you need to make applications without reading books. I wanted to say that practice should not be divorced from theory. - Olter
  • and who told you that my practice is divorced from theory? - ArniLand
  • one
    offtopic / Dear @ArniLand you have a very small percentage of accepted answers, can you still mark the correct answers or close them? - Merlin

2 answers 2

Classic books on programming .

  • What kind of book on C # to read after Shildt? Troelsen? The question is off topic for a bit. Shildt with Buch parallel you can read? - ArniLand
  • one
    no book will prevent you from reading another. - Specter
  • Can you consult on the literature outside the forum so as not to produce a bunch of topics? - ArniLand
  • so what's there to consult, read Richter and Albahari, to study C #, Gang Chetyrh - Design Patterns, MacConhel and Fowler, not to write govnokod, the rest of the link in the answer. - Specter

My opinion is that Shield is a good base. After it, you can already take on something real. For example, take courses in any company or connect to open-source development.