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Book Review: Think Like a Programmer

MassDosage writes "After nearly 15 years or of writing code professionally it was refreshing to take a figurative step back and read a book aimed at people getting started with computer programming. As the title suggests, Think Like A Programmer tries to get to the core of the special way that good programmers think and how, when faced with large and complex problems, they successfully churn out software to solve these challenges in elegant and creative ways. The author has taught computer science for about as long as I've been programming and this shows in his writing. He has clearly seen a lot of different people progress from newbie programmers to craftsmen (and craftswomen) and has managed to distill a lot of what makes this possible in what is a clear, well-written and insightful book." Read below for the rest of Mass Dosage's review. Think Like A Programmer author V. Anton Spraul pages 256 publisher No Starch Press rating 8/10 reviewer Mass Dosage ISBN 978-1-59327-424-5 summary An Introduction to Creative Problem Solving Think Like A Programmer is probably best read by those with at least a year's experience with programming, such as first or second year computer science students or those picking up programming on their own. The code examples in the book are all written in C++ so a basic knowledge of C++ syntax is required but this should be easy to pick up by anyone with familiarity with related or similar languages. Experienced programmers looking to brush up on their fundamentals will most likely find something useful here too. They probably do a lot of what is suggested here already without being aware of it but it can be encouraging to see this formalized in a book. I found it gratifying to see that some of the techniques I use daily were covered here — it's good to know that I'm not the only one who scrawls down funny diagrams and sketches out a rough plan before actually typing any code.

Different types of problem solving are discussed in separate chapters which cover the use of data structures, pointers, recursion and code libraries before wrapping up with a final chapter that brings all the previous approaches together. The book is intended to be read in its entirety with later chapters making frequent references to topics covered earlier. Think Like A Programmer is not a cheat sheet or cook book with quick fixes but a more substantive book that rewards those who read it as thoroughly as it has been written. Each chapter contains a few examples which are used to explain the topic under discussion and these have been well chosen to illustrate the key concepts. A series of exercises are also included which build on and extend each chapter. The author stresses that if the reader really wants to learn something and improve their problem solving skills then these exercises should be considered even more important than the text. The best way to learn how to program is by doing and the exercises force one to put what one has just learned into practise. The first few exercises at the end of a chapter are relatively simple and are basically variations on the examples that help the reader build confidence before moving into more challenging and tricky exercises that push one to apply one's recently acquired knowledge to new limits.

Throughout the book everything is explained in a good level of detail and enough background information is provided so that the reader should never feel out of their depth. The pros and cons of the various presented solutions are clearly weighed up with logical backing. The author is obviously very knowledgeable and experienced with teaching hard concepts to new learners and this shows in his no-nonsense, down-to-earth but enjoyable writing style. The code samples are clear and well thought out as are the diagrams that accompany the various examples. The chapter on classes was the only one where I felt like focus was being lost due to too many C++ implementation details but perhaps that's just the nature of the language. I would have liked the example here to show more clearly how classes can turn a morass of functional code into something more logically grouped and easier to understand. To be fair, the exercises at the end of this chapter do ask one to do this by asking one to convert a collection of string utility functions into a more logically organized string class. This again shows the importance of actually doing the exercises and not just simply reading them.

The core idea of how programmers take a complex problem and then break this down into smaller, more manageable and solvable parts is well described. The importance of having a plan before jumping in and writing code without thinking is stressed and there are great suggestions for how to take stock of your own personal strengths and weaknesses and come up with a personal plan that works for you. The example is given of someone who likes jumping right into coding — for someone like this it probably makes sense for them to do early prototyping as a way to start solving a particular problem, as long as the longer term plan involves taking a step away from this and incorporating the lessons learned into a more thoroughly thought out solution later. In this, as in the rest of the book, the author shows his years of experience teaching a wide range of people with different skill sets and approaches to problem solving. There is no single way to think like a programmer, but rather a number of tried and tested strategies that can be employed in various ways. Think Like A Programmer captures this core idea in an satisfying, down to earth manner and I can highly recommend it to anyone wanting to improve their problem solving capabilities. I wish I had had this book when I started studying computer science — the fundamentals contained here would have been a valued addition to the text books teaching syntax and specific technologies.

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26 of 98 comments (clear)

  1. Silly Words by pubwvj · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "craftsmen (and craftswomen)"

    No need to do that. Women are included in human. Women programmers are included in programmers. Craftswomen are included in craftsmen. No need to complicate things.

    1. Re:Silly Words by pubwvj · · Score: 2

      But if the writer were truly egalitarian the 'subtle nod' would not be necessary because it is by default. If it must be mentioned that there might be women programmers out there then what about black, Jewish, Chinese, Mexican, Native American, French and Scottish programmers. Don't want to leave them feeling left out! The list becomes absurdly long. Just say craftsmen or programmers or what ever and leave it at that. No need to complicate communications. Simplify.

    2. Re:Silly Words by icebike · · Score: 3, Funny

      Just say craftsmen

      But Craftsmen has the word men in it, which might be viewed as exclusive.
      So perhaps it should be Craftspersons.
      But persons has the word son in it which implies a male child, which might be viewed as exclusive.
      So perhaps it should be Craftsperchild.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    3. Re:Silly Words by obarel · · Score: 2

      Hang on, the word "female" has the word "male" in it. Now I'm confused...

    4. Re:Silly Words by Fallingcow · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I just wish people would stop using "she" for the genderless singular pronoun. It makes me think they're talking about someone specific and that I missed who it is, so I need to scan up. Very disruptive to reading.

      At this point, I'd say using the plural pronoun "they" for double-duty as the singular-genderless is less jarring. Just give in and use it.

    5. Re:Silly Words by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Apparently that's where we are headed. The so-called professional newspaper in my town won't use the words 'fisherman', 'fireman', or 'policeman' beause those words "are not inclusive enough".

      If children are told to draw a policeman or fireman, they will almost always draw a man. If they are told to draw a police officer or a firefighter, they are more likely to draw a woman. The gender neutral terms are more inclusive, and are also more descriptive (does a fireman fight fires, or does he set them?), so why not use them?

      I'll get off your lawn now.

    6. Re:Silly Words by Nivag064 · · Score: 2

      I am sorry, but I must now sue you for intellectual property theft - as I had previously thought of replacing 'person' with 'perchild' for exactly the same reasoning...

    7. Re:Silly Words by Nivag064 · · Score: 2

      'he' is traditionally for both male & female, and is the greatest subset of 'he' & 'she' - but using 'their', 'them', and 'they' is more appropriate for referring to one or more people of potentially mixed, unknown, ambiguous, or non existent, gender.

    8. Re:Silly Words by Nivag064 · · Score: 2

      Apologies, I realized that! But I forgot to acknowledge it - me bad.

      //////////// The following is not for the humour impaired! /////////////

      Though I must strongly disagree with your sig!!! The neutrinos are not mutating, they simply can't decide which gender to settle on!

      As 'evidence' that neutrinos have gender...

      http://www.sciencemag.org/content/334/6054/304.short
      [...]
      Recently, however, the case for sterile neutrinos has grown stronger, bolstered by a new analysis of data from nuclear reactors. So last month 60 physicists from around the world gathered to hash out the arguments for and against the existence of sterile neutrinos and to try to decide whether it's worth staging a dedicated experiment to settle the matter.
      [...]


      [Smilies omitted, due to budget constraints!]

    9. Re:Silly Words by siride · · Score: 2

      That one is actually a bit sexist. The word was originally "femelle" (little woman). It was changed to "female" because it seemed to be a counterpart to "male". The words are otherwise not related to each other at all ("male" comes from Latin "masculus" and "femelle" from a dimunitive of the Latin "femina").

  2. Good read for interns? by preaction · · Score: 2

    I've had some self-taught programmer interns that seem to lack some of the critical problem solving skills that need to exist before the programming can begin. I've been looking for a book exactly like this: How to approach a programming problem. Is this a good gift to give to someone who really wants to be a programmer?

    1. Re:Good read for interns? by vurian · · Score: 2

      The review suggests it is... Maybe get a copy for yourself to make sure?

  3. Thanks, but I still prefer this reference book by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 5, Interesting
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    Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
  4. I always recommend "Code" by LordofEntropy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Charles Petzold's book, Code, is one I recommend to anyone who asks me about getting into programming. Actually I recommend it to anyone interested in computers in general. He uses flashlights, relays, and the like to "build" logical gates, accumulators, memory, and so on. A great read that really lays out how computers work.

    --
    Entropy just isn't what it used to be.
    1. Re:I always recommend "Code" by Radres · · Score: 3, Insightful

      s/obfuscated/abstracted/

      there *is* a slight difference in intent between those two words.

    2. Re:I always recommend "Code" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I for one approve of this idea!
      People who don't want to learn the nasty details of how computers work, and what's under the abstractions will always suffer from leaky abstractions (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leaky_abstraction). If you don't learn what the abstractions are meant to abstract, you don't really understand it. The abstractions are meant to make coding easier, not to replace understanding.

    3. Re:I always recommend "Code" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually, yes, very much. You *will* be a better programmer if you understand what your code runs on top of. I started out as an embedded systems programmer writing assembly code for hardware, and feel what I learned there still applies to what I do now as a web app dev.

    4. Re:I always recommend "Code" by LordofEntropy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      In my opinion, absolutely. He gets into programming later in the book as he describes how you give instructions to this 8-bit machine he has basically built in the book. Getting a basic understanding of memory, instructions, and the logical constructs used in computers, I think is critical to any programmer. Otherwise inheritance is just "oh I can use this stuff in my class magically" without understanding what is actually happening—which will make other concepts like pointers, multiple inheritance, and polymorphism very confusing.

      --
      Entropy just isn't what it used to be.
  5. Think like a programmer... by raftpeople · · Score: 3, Funny

    "Cheetos, coke, pizza, mmmmmmm"

  6. You already think like a programmer, or you don't by Tony+Isaac · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Back in the 80s when I was in college, everybody signed up for Computer Science because there was money to be made, it was the thing to do. I noticed that few people made C's...people either made straight A's or flunked out. They got it, or they didn't.

    Now, as a long-time programmer and hiring manager, I find the same trend: people are either naturally really good at programming, or they just don't get it. As with any art form, reading books and education can only go so far.

  7. Re:You already think like a programmer, or you don by ThorGod · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Well, somewhat. There is quite a lot to be said for reading material *while* working on problems relevant to the material. (It's far too easy to only *read* something, and feel that you "know it".)

    It's also pretty challenging to make that leap from reading to doing, no matter the subject. But, if you can do it...then you can *do* whatever you read including how to program.

    --
    PS: I don't reply to ACs.
  8. For great justice! by Trogre · · Score: 2

    Good to see No Starch Press still putting out good titles.

    --
    "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
  9. Some are just not into it ... by perpenso · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Back in the 80s when I was in college, everybody signed up for Computer Science because there was money to be made, it was the thing to do. I noticed that few people made C's...people either made straight A's or flunked out. They got it, or they didn't. Now, as a long-time programmer and hiring manager, I find the same trend: people are either naturally really good at programming, or they just don't get it. As with any art form, reading books and education can only go so far.

    Some get it enough to get that CS degree but they are just not into it. IMHO many grads seem to fall into this category, they even have good grades. They entered the CS program not because they had an inherent interest in programming but because someone told them it was a good career path. Its just a job to them.

    I found what may be a simple way to tell those who have an inherent interest from those who do not. In an interview I like to ask about projects a candidate did on their own, for their own amusement or to satisfy their own curiosity. Sometimes I have to drag it out of them, they think their projects to too small or too trivial or too silly to be mentioned. If a recent graduate has written nothing other than class projects then I get a bit suspicious. It seems that the people who "get it" and are "into it" always have little side projects they can talk about.

  10. Zen Monk Approach by Greyfox · · Score: 2

    I prefer to open vi and then whack my student with a bamboo stick until "Hello World" compiles and runs. Repeat with more complex examples, until they know how to program.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  11. 256 pages long by thenendo · · Score: 3, Funny

    Coincidence?

  12. As clocks tick, cows moo, programmers go WCPGW by Peter+(Professor)+Fo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    To *think* like a programmer you must have that sense that Murphy (of the law) is inside you [ie. Be humble no matter how clever you are] and in the real world [eg. A valid date might be 'June' which isn't 00:00 on 1st June]. An age ago when I wrote my book on the subject (text freely available at http://vulpeculox.net/ob/Programming.htm) I twigged that programming is not about splitting problems into bits but understanding the need then building the solution from bits. Of course there are well-known methods for doing this. Now to me a programmer is a mental athlete. I expect them to train, have good facilities and consistently run good races but why on earth would I expect a high performance person to be operating at their peak 7.5 hours a day? Resting, recuperating and reflecting goes with achievement. Enthusiasm and interest in the next challenge keep up the momentum. Constraints and management targets destroy it. Once you've got the mechanics you can graduate to the principles then the patterns then the practice and finally being able to communicate with people.