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Buy A Programmer's Guide to Computer Science: A virtual degree for the self-taught developer on desertcart.com โ FREE SHIPPING on qualified orders Review: A light textbook - A Programmer's Guide to Computer Science distills a huge portion of the theoretical side of a comp sci degree into about 200 pages. It is very much a textbook, with some (very light!) math, and theory that you won't be using in your day-to-day unless you're in research, quantum computing, etc. That said, a lot of the information *is* useful to have as a background. I picked this one up as a refresher since it's been over a decade (*ulp*) since I went to school. A lot of the material was very familiar, and some stuff that I struggled with back then was made clearer in this book. A Programmer's Guide to Computer Science isn't a particularly compelling read. It's very dry, delivering facts, diagrams, bits of math, and a little pseudocode to get the point across. But the information is very good and I would recommend you suffer through this one. It's only about 200 pages. 10 pages a day and you'll be done in a month-ish. Review: A very thorough overview! - The author very clearly states in the beginning that covering all of the topics mentioned in the book cannot be covered completely by the book, both in the beginning and at the end. This is a much appreciated note! Do no expect to get everything you need from a single book, ever. It's a very complete overview of topics that I'd: 1.) heard of but did not genuinely understand, or 2.) never known about. I really appreciate the way these things were introduced to me. I will be buying the second volume!
| Best Sellers Rank | #617,105 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #11 in Data Structure and Algorithms #35 in Computer Algorithms #37 in Graph Theory (Books) |
| Book 1 of 2 | A Programmer's Guide to Computer Science |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (340) |
| Dimensions | 6 x 0.43 x 9 inches |
| Edition | Illustrated |
| ISBN-10 | 195120400X |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1951204006 |
| Item Weight | 9.3 ounces |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 188 pages |
| Publication date | July 28, 2019 |
| Publisher | Jaxson Media |
M**N
A light textbook
A Programmer's Guide to Computer Science distills a huge portion of the theoretical side of a comp sci degree into about 200 pages. It is very much a textbook, with some (very light!) math, and theory that you won't be using in your day-to-day unless you're in research, quantum computing, etc. That said, a lot of the information *is* useful to have as a background. I picked this one up as a refresher since it's been over a decade (*ulp*) since I went to school. A lot of the material was very familiar, and some stuff that I struggled with back then was made clearer in this book. A Programmer's Guide to Computer Science isn't a particularly compelling read. It's very dry, delivering facts, diagrams, bits of math, and a little pseudocode to get the point across. But the information is very good and I would recommend you suffer through this one. It's only about 200 pages. 10 pages a day and you'll be done in a month-ish.
D**I
A very thorough overview!
The author very clearly states in the beginning that covering all of the topics mentioned in the book cannot be covered completely by the book, both in the beginning and at the end. This is a much appreciated note! Do no expect to get everything you need from a single book, ever. It's a very complete overview of topics that I'd: 1.) heard of but did not genuinely understand, or 2.) never known about. I really appreciate the way these things were introduced to me. I will be buying the second volume!
S**S
Great book
I wish it had more code samples but itโs a great small book while Iโm learning DS&A
N**K
EXACTLY what I needed.
As a self-taught programmer, this book is exactly what I was looking for. It gives you a run down of the important stuff that you'll need for interviews, and to be a *good* programmer. It isn't comprehensive, and as other reviewers said, it's not supposed to be. However, it is comprehensive enough to guide you on your journey, and nice to have while you dig into other resources (and to serve as a reference/reinforce materials). If you're a self-taught programmer, a bootcamp grad, or even if you have a degree, this book is a must. A note to the author: I would personally love to see this as an entire series, and I would definitely buy all of them. I'm aware of volume 2 coming out, and can't wait for that, but I'd also love to see different volumes for different areas. "A Programmer's Guide to X" series would definitely make a killing and help many people!
M**N
Great as Introduction and Refresher
I really enjoyed reading this book and found it really useful as a refresher for topics I already know and as a quick and useful introduction to topics that I didn't know well. It's also really good for people who would like read introductions about theoretical computer science where rigid mathematics doesn't show. This volume examine (1) the basics of computer science such as Algorithms and Data Structures and (2) the basics of theoretical computer science: Complexity Theory and the well-known computation model Turing Machine.
H**N
Meh. Good try...?
Not very well written imo. Not easy to understand. Probably just could have used some proof reading before publishing. I like the authors attempt, but just abbreviates complex topics. It's a good topic list that you could take and do your own research to understand.
J**N
Soft Intro
Having no background in computer science, but in wanting to become a professional programmer, I initially took a Coursera course on algorithms and data structures and after a week became overwhelmed. This book, however, was exactly the approach I needed. Dr. Springer's examples and explanation of the problems, to me, show that he must have really listened to what his audience was going through and provides in this book a conversational approach to learning complex topics.
J**N
An excellent starting point for the working programmer
This is a useful mathematical discussion of key ideas in computer science. It is not comprehensive and it is not meant to be. But it does accomplish its mission well and serves as a nice introduction to a variety of useful topics. It's a good starting point and offers the reader the big picture before he proceeds into deeper treatments of these topics.
Y**F
A well detailed read ๐๐ฝ. Would recommend for students studying computing.
K**N
Itโs short and doesnโt have enough information from the price. All the other reviews feel the same, Iโm not going to waste too much energy writing a review since Iโve wasted enough money on it already
C**Y
I did not read this book. The binding is terrible. Many, many pages are loose and have fallen out. "Printed by Amazon in France". They need to sort this out as it's unusable.
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K**N
Excellent
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