Best unix programming books according to redditors
We found 11 Reddit comments discussing the best unix programming books. We ranked the 5 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.
We found 11 Reddit comments discussing the best unix programming books. We ranked the 5 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.
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.
Was it this? https://www.amazon.com/Programming-Unix-System-Calls-Svr/dp/0130176745
Something like this, probably.
> pure le istruzioni della carta igienica
Nah, un vero ingegnere 10x al bagno legge questo.
Books that I find very useful:
Beginning Portable Shell Scripting: From Novice to Professional
From Bash to Z Shell: Conquering the Command Line
Unix Power Tools, Third Edition
The UNIX Programming Environment
Running Linux (mine is old, but still useful)
I have bought lots of other useful books from O'Reilly.
Anything written by Michael W Lucas.
There is a book about that
http://www.amazon.com/Enough-Rope-Shoot-Yourself-Foot/dp/0070296898
Allan Holub, "Enough Rope to Shoot Yourself in the Foot", 1995
http://www.amazon.com/Enough-Rope-Shoot-Yourself-Foot/dp/0070296898
A good thing for removing some "bad behavior" from your coding practice.
Huh. TIL. For the record, I'm older than the average Redditor, and I learned make about 20 years ago, from the 1994 2nd edition of "Mastering Make". Fortunately, SUFFIXES still works for
backwards compatibilityold farts like me.Edit: This one.
System Programming Concepts for ECE 222. The book is this.