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The Clean Coder: A Code of Conduct for Professional Programmers by
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Vlad Ardelean
is finished
Barely worth 3 stars.
That's subjective, and includes the amount of information that I personally got out of this, and the author's style of writing. His style I find to be extremely un-nuanced, and preachy.
With all due respect for his career and stuff he accomplished, I feel like this book is just him talking unrestricted for a short time, telling us things he hates, loves, and spreading propaganda.
— Nov 16, 2018 12:13AM
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That's subjective, and includes the amount of information that I personally got out of this, and the author's style of writing. His style I find to be extremely un-nuanced, and preachy.
With all due respect for his career and stuff he accomplished, I feel like this book is just him talking unrestricted for a short time, telling us things he hates, loves, and spreading propaganda.
Dan
is on page 57 of 210
Chapter 2: Saying No
Chapter 3: Saying Yes
— Nov 07, 2018 08:21PM
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Chapter 3: Saying Yes
Vlad Ardelean
is 55% done
Like the book "User Story Mapping", it feels like the anecdotes and bad examples were written at the beginning in the book. This might be a marketing strategy, so that if the best material is at the end, it will influence the review score. Good strategy, but I caught on to it, so I'm not forgiving the author.
Lots of good and common sense advice. Still very opinionated and non-nuanced, but getting slightly better
— Nov 02, 2018 03:37AM
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Lots of good and common sense advice. Still very opinionated and non-nuanced, but getting slightly better
Vlad Ardelean
is 30% done
30% done
Very biased, opinionated and un-nuanced book. The author is just providing anectodes and using them to encourage a certain type of attitude
While the attitude of "write quality code, and learn every day" is fine, it feels like the author doesn't acknowledge or understand how business is performed. He's too tied up in the code, and doesn't understand the business side. This is not agility, it's dogma
— Oct 30, 2018 02:20AM
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Very biased, opinionated and un-nuanced book. The author is just providing anectodes and using them to encourage a certain type of attitude
While the attitude of "write quality code, and learn every day" is fine, it feels like the author doesn't acknowledge or understand how business is performed. He's too tied up in the code, and doesn't understand the business side. This is not agility, it's dogma







