bearophile Wrote:

> Andrei Alexandrescu:
> 
> > (I'm not 100% convinced it's ethical to give the second link here, 
> > because there's clearly an implied invitation to upvote. Please advise.)
> 
> I think it's OK. You are not asking people to up-vote, and people here are 
> free to down-vote too if they don't like. Showing your links to the things 
> you like is not bad.
> 
> Regarding your book about D, I think it will be a nice manual about a 
> language in development, and I'll buy&read it, but it's not the kind of 
> computer book I like most.
> 
> I like programming books that 1) show the practice of programming, or 2) that 
> teach a new programming language while they show how to do something else 
> (like some part of computer graphics, simulations, etc).
> 
> In many years I have found only very few books that show the practice of 
> programming: Programming Pearls, Game Programming Gems, Turtle Geometry, 
> Beautiful Code, and very few others. If you know more please tell me :-)
> 
> Bye,
> bearophile

"Beautiful Code"?

bearophile, is that the book with chapters written by many different authors 
including one
(or possibly more) by Douglas Crockford?    Whilst I don't have the hardcopy I 
seem to
remember reading an online edition of one of the chapters by him and it was 
great.
Hmm, operator precedence parsing (lit. circa 1970?) revisted by Crockford in 
Javascript, if
that serves my memory?  Trust this is the same book.

(Hey thanks, for sake of karma, in moving this thread along from negativity.)

ciao
justin

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