The Inner Chapters, Volume 1


Lu par Thomas Gideon

(4.5 étoiles; 1 critique)

The Inner Chapters journal my own quest to improve in the craft of programming. Each chapter reflects on a specific practice or principle through the lens of my own experiences both as a professional and an enthusiast. The name refers to the Chinese classic of philosophy, the Chuang Tzu. Divided into two sections, the Inner Chapters make up the first part attributed to the philosopher Chuang Tzu himself. The commentaries on the first section, written by his students and others, are known as the Outer Chapters. I hope you will contribute to my Outer Chapters by sharing your own thoughts and experiences on growing as a programmer.


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Chapitres

Chapter 01 - Functional Decomposition Lu par Thomas Gideon
Chapter 02 - Testing Lu par Thomas Gideon
Chapter 03 - Design Lu par Thomas Gideon
Chapter 04 - Refactoring Lu par Thomas Gideon
Chapter 05 - Debugging Lu par Thomas Gideon
Chapter 06 - Conversation Lu par Thomas Gideon
Chapter 07 - Continuous, Incremental Improvement Lu par Thomas Gideon
Chapter 08 - Downtime Lu par Thomas Gideon
Chapter 09 - Crunch Mode Lu par Thomas Gideon
Chapter 10 - Deep Hack Mode Lu par Thomas Gideon
Chapter 11 - Mentoring Lu par Thomas Gideon
Chapter 12 - Creativity Lu par Thomas Gideon

Critiques


I fuond only the first 2 MP3s to be about programming (being an [trained] amateur programmer, I already knew - and applied- everything) so it contained nothing new for me, only the obvious; the rest was mostly about project management. This was slightly disappointing, I was hoping for more about ...


Marco, The essays are about programming, but focused more on personal process and professional development. My intent was never to just teach coding as there are tons of resources for any given programming language. I haven't heard as much discussion about the non-coding activities that I think are still very ...