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AudibleInk - Implementation Patterns (Addison-Wesley Signature Series)

Implementation Patterns (Addison-Wesley Signature Series)
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Manufacturer: Addison-Wesley Professional

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Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5


Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 005.1
EAN: 9780321413093
ISBN: 0321413091
Label: Addison-Wesley Professional
Manufacturer: Addison-Wesley Professional
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 176
Publication Date: 2007-11-02
Publisher: Addison-Wesley Professional
Studio: Addison-Wesley Professional

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Editorial Reviews:

“Kent is a master at creating code that communicates well, is easy to understand, and is a pleasure to read. Every chapter of this book contains excellent explanations and insights into the smaller but important decisions we continuously have to make when creating quality code and classes.”

Erich Gamma, IBM Distinguished Engineer

 

“Many teams have a master developer who makes a rapid stream of good decisions all day long. Their code is easy to understand, quick to modify, and feels safe and comfortable to work with. If you ask how they thought to write something the way they did, they always have a good reason. This book will help you become the master developer on your team. The breadth and depth of topics will engage veteran programmers, who will pick up new tricks and improve on old habits, while the clarity makes it accessible to even novice developers.”

Russ Rufer, Silicon Valley Patterns Group

 

“Many people don’t realize how readable code can be and how valuable that readability is. Kent has taught me so much, I’m glad this book gives everyone the chance to learn from him.”

Martin Fowler, chief scientist, ThoughtWorks

 

“Code should be worth reading, not just by the compiler, but by humans. Kent Beck distilled his experience into a cohesive collection of implementation patterns. These nuggets of advice will make your code truly worth reading.”

Gregor Hohpe, author of Enterprise Integration Patterns

 

“In this book Kent Beck shows how writing clear and readable code follows from the application of simple principles. Implementation Patterns will help developers write intention revealing code that is both easy to understand and flexible towards future extensions. A must read for developers who are serious about their code.”

Sven Gorts

 

Implementation Patterns bridges the gap between design and coding. Beck introduces a new way of thinking about programming by basing his discussion on values and principles.”

Diomidis Spinellis, author of Code Reading and Code Quality

 

Software Expert Kent Beck Presents a Catalog of Patterns Infinitely Useful for Everyday Programming

 

Great code doesn’t just function: it clearly and consistently communicates your intentions, allowing other programmers to understand your code, rely on it, and modify it with confidence. But great code doesn’t just happen. It is the outcome of hundreds of small but critical decisions programmers make every single day. Now, legendary software innovator Kent Beck–known worldwide for creating Extreme Programming and pioneering software patterns and test-driven development–focuses on these critical decisions, unearthing powerful “implementation patterns” for writing programs that are simpler, clearer, better organized, and more cost effective.

 

Beck collects 77 patterns for handling everyday programming tasks and writing more readable code. This new collection of patterns addresses many aspects of development, including class, state, behavior, method, collections, frameworks, and more. He uses diagrams, stories, examples, and essays to engage the reader as he illuminates the patterns. You’ll find proven solutions for handling everything from naming variables to checking exceptions.

 

This book covers

  • The value of communicating through code and the philosophy behind patterns
  • How and when to create classes, and how classes encode logic
  • Best practices for storing and retrieving state
  • Behavior: patterns for representing logic, including alternative paths
  • Writing, naming, and decomposing methods
  • Choosing and using collections
  • Implementation pattern variations for use in building frameworks

Implementation Patterns will help programmers at all experience levels, especially those who have benefited from software patterns or agile methods. It will also be an indispensable resource for development teams seeking to work together more efficiently and build more maintainable software. No other programming book will touch your day-to-day work more often.




Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: A mandatory reading for all software developer
Comment: Most of the patterns are just common sense but in this case you will also get a practical explanation of its importance. The content's structure is very appropriate; each pattern is explained in concise way, with real world examples and some code snippets.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5
Summary: Terse and lack clarity
Comment: This book is too terse and the flow of thought is disorganized and lack clarity; at time too vague to know what he is thinking. Also lacking is subsections that branch off from main section. This book is about some implementation practices at code level.
I hope the author can revised this book.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5
Summary: this topic from this author deserves a better book
Comment: The book is about writing readeable/maintanable code. It's an interesting/important subject.

The first few (1-3) pharagraph is good , they clearly explain the values/principles of the topic.
Then the book tries to apply these pricnciples in a structured way - classes, state, behaviour, methods. This is ok, but there's too much repetition going on. And the examples are very small/specific, some more complex/longer examples would be much better.

Then there's 2 whole paragraph about the performance characteristics of various collections (map,hash,etc.), and the description of the framework used to benchmark them. I don't think it has to do anyhting with the topic of the book, and it was probably included to increase the number of pages (by 30 to 150).

Finally, there's also a chapter "Evlolving Frameworks" which is mostly about JUnit 3->4 improvements done by the author. It's an interesting chapter focusing mainly on compatibility issues related to framworks.

So i think this topic from this author would deserve a much better book.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: This time Beck talks about patterns "in the small"
Comment: I typically enjoy reading pattern's books and this is going to be one of my all-time favorites. This time Beck talks about patterns "in the small", not the traditional kind of architectural patterns we are used to know. This book it's about those small decisions we make every time we write even a small piece of code. Somebody could think the word "patterns" is misused here, but I tend to disagree and, in the end, I don't even care that much. What really matters to me is that I found valuable advice inside this book and I really enjoyed reading it. In the past Beck's books were always worth reading for me, this one benefit from a more fluid and pleasant writing style too.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: Needs More Meat
Comment: Well written and organized, with a lot of short code fragments to illustrate the main points. However I have agree with the reviewer who suggested that this book should have been titled "Kent Beck on writing readable code". I'd add to this that the book is quite Java specific. Fine with me, but this needs to be pointed out. The book would have been more interesting to me if it documented the different approaches in use (along with their advantages and drawbacks) e.g. for choosing between checked and unchecked exceptions. Instead we get a few general statements about what exceptions are, and some suggestions along the lines of "low-level exceptions should be wrapped with high-level exceptions". The level of detail is often not enough to be interesting for somewhat experienced developers, but the book may be too abstract for beginners. Given the compact size of the book you'll still get good value for your time from reading it. Just don't set your expectations too high -- or expect to get good value for your money...




 
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