BIBLIO is the largest independent book marketplace in the world, with over 100 million books.

Skip to content

Code That Fits in Your Head : Heuristics for Software Engineering (Robert C. Martin Series)

Code That Fits in Your Head : Heuristics for Software Engineering (Robert C. Martin Series)

Code That Fits in Your Head : Heuristics for Software Engineering (Robert C.
Stock photo: cover may vary

Code That Fits in Your Head : Heuristics for Software Engineering (Robert C. Martin Series) Paperback - 2021

by Seemann, Mark

Add to wish list
  • New
New

Description

new.
Ask the seller a question Add to wish list
A$47.68
A$5.77 Delivery within USA
Standard delivery: 2 to 14 days
More delivery options
Ships from GreatBookPrices (Maryland, United States)

Details

About GreatBookPrices Maryland, United States

Biblio member since 2024

Since 1991, we have worked every day to serve our customers with state-of-the-art technology and world class service. We are dedicated to providing customers around the world with the widest selection of books, DVDs, and CDs at the absolute lowest price.

Terms of Sale: 30 day return guarantee, with full refund including original shipping costs for up to 30 days after delivery if an item arrives misdescribed or damaged.

Browse books from GreatBookPrices

Reader reviews for Code That Fits in Your Head : Heuristics for Software Engineering (Robert C. Martin Series)

From the publisher

How to Reduce Code Complexity and Develop Software More Sustainably
"Mark Seemann is well known for explaining complex concepts clearly and thoroughly. In this book he condenses his wide-ranging software development experience into a set of practical, pragmatic techniques for writing sustainable and human-friendly code. This book will be a must-read for every programmer."
-- Scott Wlaschin, author of Domain Modeling Made Functional Code That Fits in Your Head offers indispensable, practical advice for writing code at a sustainable pace and controlling the complexity that causes projects to spin out of control.

Reflecting decades of experience helping software teams succeed, Mark Seemann guides you from zero (no code) to deployed features and shows how to maintain a good cruising speed as you add functionality, address cross-cutting concerns, troubleshoot, and optimize. You'll find valuable ideas, practices, and processes for key issues ranging from checklists to teamwork, encapsulation to decomposition, API design to unit testing.

Seemann illuminates his insights with code examples drawn from a complete sample project. Written in C#, they're designed to be clear and useful to anyone who uses any object-oriented language including Java, C++, and Python. To facilitate deeper exploration, all code and extensive commit messages are available for download.

  • Choose mindsets and processes that work, and escape bad metaphors that don't
  • Use checklists to liberate yourself, improving outcomes with the skills you already have
  • Get past "analysis paralysis" by creating and deploying a vertical slice of your application
  • Counteract forces that lead to code rot and unnecessary complexity
  • Master better techniques for changing code behavior
  • Discover ways to solve code problems more quickly and effectively
  • Think more productively about performance and security
If you've ever suffered through bad projects or had to cope with unmaintainable legacy code, this guide will help you make things better next time and every time.

Register your book for convenient access to downloads, updates, and/or corrections as they become available. See inside book for details.

About the author

Mark Seemann, a former economist, found a second career as a programmer and has worked as a web and enterprise developer since the late 1990s. He is a Certified Rockstar Developer and has written a Jolt Award-winning book about Dependency Injection, given more than a hundred international conference talks, and authored video courses for both Pluralsight and Clean Coders. Mark has regularly published his blog ( blog.ploeh.dk) since 2006.
tracking-