Software Engineering Classics (Programming/General) | 
enlarge | Authors: Jim Mccarthy, Steve Mcconnell Creator: Steve Maguire Publisher: Microsoft Pr Category: Book
List Price: $69.99 Buy Used: $1.39 You Save: $68.60 (98%)
New (5) Used (13) from $1.39
Avg. Customer Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 383624
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 3 Pages: 712 Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.8 Dimensions (in): 10 x 7.8 x 2.5
ISBN: 0735605971 Dewey Decimal Number: 016.0051 UPC: 790145059710 EAN: 9780735605978 ASIN: 0735605971
Publication Date: October 1998 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: Buyscbooks Provides clean books with no writing or highlighting.We strive to exceed the expectations of our customers,Our full time staff ensures that all books are clearly represented and arrive to your doorstep promptly.Thank you for shopping. At Buyscbooks The customer is always right!
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Review This three-book set includes Steve Maguire's Debugging the Development Process, Jim McCarthy's Dynamics of Software Development, and Steve McConnell's Software Project Survival Guide. Together, these books convey the field knowledge of three experienced development-team leaders. Anyone planning to participate in a software project, particularly as a manager, should read these books. Debugging the Development Process shows how Microsoft goes about creating, writing, testing, and improving products. Maguire always keeps one eye on the product's purpose--as well as the purpose of the company--as he offers valuable advice on how to design and build software products that are efficient in terms of time and money. The book is full of design philosophy, including entertaining passages on conflicts between marketing people and developers. (The LAYOFF parable, the highly ominous Excel macro that almost was, is amusing). Dynamics of Software Development explores the crazy mix of creativity, intelligence, technical skill, and general humanity that makes up a software development team. Such groups require special handling in order for them to yield good products. McCarthy offers a bromide-rich explanation of techniques he's used (again, at Microsoft) to hire bright people, motivate them, stave off burnout, and still get the product out the door on time. His advice is sound and should prove invaluable--even if your development team consists of one person. Because software development is inherently complex and developers often must attempt to satisfy shifting goals, even successful, well-managed software projects have a death-march aspect to them. Software Project Survival Guide explains what you can do to make building software enjoyable and rewarding, not just survivable. McConnell goes heavy on hints, tips, and checklists of things you can implement now to create a better development team. --David Wall
Product Description In an exclusive limited offering, three revered software development classics get reissued in special boxed edition-just in time for the '98 holiday season! This "Best Practices" triad is the ideal reference set for the software engineer, developer, project leader, or technical manager. It features Software Project Survival Guide by Steve McConnell, Dynamics of Software Development by Jim McCarthy, and Debugging the Development Process by Steve Maguire. Each of these bestselling titles has earned high critical acclaim-in fact, Maguire's and McConnell's books both won the prestigious Jolt! Cola Award. The "Best Practices" series emphasizes practical, process-oriented techniques and timeless tips. As a boxed set, these SOFTWARE ENGINEERING CLASSICS will provide limitless years of service!
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| Customer Reviews:
Three great guides for a Project Manager July 25, 2001 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Technical books are often preachy. 'This is the ONLY way to this. You've been doing this wrong ALL your life.' We've all read one of those. These three books are like gentle friends discussing what one might need/want to do to survive successfully through a software project. My favorite book out of the trio is the Survival Guide. It has all sorts of checklists I have been able to modify for use in my projects. Additional support/tools is/are offered through the author's website. I like the 'contingency planning' aspect that this book offers, and a lot of others miss. A great read overall. I didn't sleep at all through this one. ;)
Excellent mental fodder for Project Managers/Leads March 9, 1999 22 out of 23 found this review helpful
Anyone aspiring to be (or in the current position of) project lead or project manager should get this set. These help you understand, accept, and shape to your advantage many of the "soft", human, non-technical factors in software development.Also - be sure and get "Code Complete" - it is a comprehensive collection (and interpretation) of many of the great ideas from notable gurus such as Yourdon/DeMarco/Constantine, Kernigan & Richie, Dijkstra, Meyer, etc. etc. (plz excuse the spelling errors!) Every programmer needs a copy of "Code Complete" and the companion, "Writing Solid Code". Software Standards and QA groups should use these texts as references and standards.
Three EXCELLENT software development books... all are a MUST February 1, 1999 9 out of 15 found this review helpful
I have read all three of Steve's books, and they ALL are worth ten times their price! If you are SERIOUS about making software a career, buy this set!
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