The Software Engineer's Guidebook is (finally!) out today!
413 pages, 27 chapters, 10 online-only bonus chapters, and 4 years of writing.
Available to order as paperback, off Amazon:
Thank you for all the patience - hopefully, it was worth the wait!
The Software Engineers Guidebook (@EngGuidebook) was available in 7 additional languages till now (German, Japanese, Korean, Trad Chinese, Simplified Chinese, Mongolian, Russian): now out in Hungarian! Carried in all major bookstores in Hungary.
Found it in a Libri in Veszprém:
These are called post-commit code reviews, and they have been popular inside more mature teams (and at places where releases are not continuous, but done less frequently).
From The Software Engineer's Guidebook, in Chapter 23, Software Engineering:
Just learned a team at Microsoft is doing code reviews *after* merge.
Why? To move faster.
No more pausing work to wait for code reviews.
No need for stacked PRs.
No more time-consuming merge conflicts caused by long code review delays.
This has risks, but may work well for a team that is:
- mature
- high trust
- has strong automated quality checks
The Software Engineer's Guidebook has now been translated to 6 languages 👀
Selling as a localized book in Germany, Japan, South Korea, China, Taiwan and Mongolia
Get those versions here: https://t.co/AxKb8y0qix
Wow - The Japanese translation of The Software Engineer's Guidebook is this week's best seller in Tokyo's largest bookshop, Kinokuniya Shinjuku (photo from the store)
Thanks to @ryukbk for the standout translation, and @OReillyMedia Japan for publishing.
https://t.co/fdZ95qJBz7
Black Friday deal: the DRM-free ebook and audiobook version of The Software Engineer's Guidebook is 40% off.
Use the code BLACKFRIDAY2025 at checkout:
ebook: https://t.co/KbhqWjHf6g
Audiobook: https://t.co/Lsp0c203Ro
The Software Engineer’s Guidebook (@EngGuidebook) is now available as hardcover from Amazon. Here’s me holding the first print (the proof - it’s nice!)
And it’s also out as an ebook on the O’Reilly platform.
Get it here: https://t.co/x5iKgGZqaY
I learned how The Software Engineer’s Guidebook (@EngGuidebook) ended up being translated to Mongolian:
This engineer (Suiribaatar) bought the English version, liked it, and suggested to his company (Nasha Tech) to translate it.
The company did it.
You can just do things.
Pinch me: the Mongolian translation of The Software Engineer's Guidebook (@EngGuidebook) is ready. The book launch will be on Monday, in the capital, Ulaanbaatar.
I'll be there!
After a year of publishing, The Software Engineer's Guidebook has passed 33,000 copies sold (not counting translations recently out in German and Korean)
Thank you to everyone who read it.
Audible is an example of a product that is wonderful for customers, but treats publishers and authors poorly.
It is also a platform that seems to have grown complacent - and approves new titles slowly, unlike its competitors.
More details: https://t.co/NKJxXilSnc
It will eventually released on other major audiobook platforms as well.
However: Other platforms like Audible can take 4-6 more weeks to release.
The Spotify team helpfully expedited it (thank you!)
An important difference between software engineering and many other engineering disciplines (eg civil engineering):
physical laws are a lot less limiting for software engineering, thanks to the intangible nature of software
From The Software Engineer’s Guidebook, Chapter 15
The German translation of @EngGuidebook is out this week: Kindle tomorrow (26 Nov) and print on Thursday (28 Nov). Holding a print copy that arrived:
Proud to say this makes me an O'Reilly published author - five years after pitching this exact book to O'Reilly!
A reason engineers are often drawn to working on platform teams.
Especially if on product teams engineers feel like they don't have much input in influencing the team direction / tactics.
From The Software Engineer's Guidebook: Chapter 5: (Thriving in Different Environments)