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Building a Career in Software: A Comprehensive Guide to Success in the Software Industry 1st ed. [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 243 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x155 mm, kaal: 454 g, 5 Illustrations, black and white; XII, 243 p. 5 illus., 1 Paperback / softback
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Sep-2020
  • Kirjastus: APress
  • ISBN-10: 1484261461
  • ISBN-13: 9781484261460
  • Pehme köide
  • Hind: 44,06 €*
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 243 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x155 mm, kaal: 454 g, 5 Illustrations, black and white; XII, 243 p. 5 illus., 1 Paperback / softback
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Sep-2020
  • Kirjastus: APress
  • ISBN-10: 1484261461
  • ISBN-13: 9781484261460

Software engineering education has a problem: universities and bootcamps teach aspiring engineers to write code, but they leave graduates to teach themselves the countless supporting tools required to thrive in real software companies. Building a Career in Software is the solution, a comprehensive guide to the essential skills that instructors don't need and professionals never think to teach: landing jobs, choosing teams and projects, asking good questions, running meetings, going on-call, debugging production problems, technical writing, making the most of a mentor, and much more.

In over a decade building software at companies such as Apple and Uber, Daniel Heller has mentored and managed tens of engineers from a variety of training backgrounds, and those engineers inspired this book with their hundreds of questions about career issues and day-to-day problems. Designed for either random access or cover-to-cover reading, it offers concise treatments of virtually every non-technical challenge you will face in the first five years of your career—as well as a selection of industry-focused technical topics rarely covered in training. Whatever your education or technical specialty, Building a Career in Software can save you years of trial and error and help you succeed as a real-world software professional.


What You Will Learn
  • Discover every important nontechnical facet of professional programming as well as several key technical practices essential to the transition from student to professional
  • Build relationships with your employer
  • Improve your communication, including technical writing, asking good questions, and public speaking

Who This Book is For
Software engineers either early in their careers or about to transition to the professional world; that is, all graduates of computer science or software engineering university programs and all software engineering boot camp participants.


About the Author vii
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction xi
Part I Career
1(50)
Chapter 1 The Big Picture
3(6)
Chapter 2 Landing jobs
9(20)
Chapter 3 Learning and Growing
29(10)
Chapter 4 Changes
39(12)
Part II Day to Day at the Office
51(100)
Chapter 5 Professional Skills
53(36)
Chapter 6 Working with Humans
89(22)
Chapter 7 Shining in an Engineering Organization
111(12)
Chapter 8 Leading Others
123(14)
Chapter 9 Adversity
137(8)
Chapter 10 Professional Conduct
145(6)
Part III Communication
151(42)
Chapter 11 A Holistic Look at Engineering Communication
153(8)
Chapter 12 Technical Writing
161(8)
Chapter 13 Effective Email
169(16)
Chapter 14 Describing Problems and Asking Questions
185(6)
Chapter 15 Public Speaking
191(2)
Part IV Technical Skills
193(48)
Chapter 16 Professional-Grade Code
195(12)
Chapter 17 Debugging
207(8)
Chapter 18 Building for Reliability
215(8)
Chapter 19 Mastering the Command Line
223(6)
Chapter 20 Operating Real Software
229(12)
Index 241
Dan Heller is a Staff Software Engineer in Infrastructure at Uber. In earlier lives, he has led reliability efforts on Uber Eats, built monitoring systems at AppDynamics, helped port iOS to the ARM64 architecture as a Kernel Engineer at Apple, directed the responses to dozens of high-stakes production outages, and managed teams of up to 25 engineers. Along the way, the author discovered a love of mentorship and had the good fortune to mentor tens of talented engineers. Those engineers inspired him with their hundreds of questions about career paths, technical tradeoffs, and day-to-day effectiveness; when a short blog post on those themes brought a riot ofresponses about maturing professionals' need for guidance, the author set out to fill the gap with this book.