From journeyman to master is a book about computer programming and software engineering, written by andrew hunt and david thomas and published in october 1999 The third edition was also released as an electronic book, [6] eventually made available on the web for free (with nags) or by paid or institutional subscription (with faster, full access and no nags) [1][2][3] it is used as a textbook in related university courses
[4] it was the first in a series of books under the label the pragmatic bookshelf It is also a compendium of software construction techniques, which include techniques from naming variables to deciding when to write a subroutine. A second edition, the pragmatic programmer
Essentials of programming languages (eopl) is a textbook on programming languages by daniel p Friedman, mitchell wand, and christopher t Eopl surveys the principles of programming languages from an operational perspective. The first edition included a section on lisp programming
Preface the second edition removed the lisp section, and added chapters on logic, and learning Preface implementation details for the second edition were provide by the companion book, lisp second edition (winston and horn) Preface the third edition was significantly. Both the softcover third edition and the hardcover “special edition” have since undergone several reprintings, with corrections