Refactoring: Improving the Design of Existing Code. Don Roberts, John Brant, Kent Beck, Martin Fowler, William Opdyke

Refactoring: Improving the Design of Existing Code


Refactoring.Improving.the.Design.of.Existing.Code.pdf
ISBN: 0201485672,9780201485677 | 468 pages | 12 Mb


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Refactoring: Improving the Design of Existing Code Don Roberts, John Brant, Kent Beck, Martin Fowler, William Opdyke
Publisher: Addison-Wesley Professional




Over the past few months, I've been working with an Agile Team in two-week sprints improving an existing and quite complicated planning environment that my company has been developing over the past few years. El título me pareció sugerente. By far the most important programming book I ever read was Martin Fowler's "Refactoring: Improving the Design of Existing Code". Michael Wooten replied on Mon, 2011/10/31 - 12:29pm. The first place prize will be a copy of Refactoring: Improving The Design Of Existing Code, an Ubuntu Mug, an Ubuntu 10.04 LTS install disc, and a Mun pen. Refactoring: improving the design of existing code. Martin Fowler, Kent Beck, John Brant, William Opdyke, Don Roberts. And you can be right saying that :) I've just read Refactoring: Improving. After refactoring some code, make sure your test cases still pass and write new test cases where necessary. I've long been told that this book is one of the must-reads for developers. Image by seizethedave via Flickr You may say I've been reading a lot recently. Being part of this Don't use design patterns for the sake of design patterns: Good developers love writing crafty, intelligent code. Here are a few I like: 1) Code Complete 2nd edition by Steve McConnell. After picking it up a few months ago, it took me a while to finish reading it.