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253 points mattcollins | 5 comments | | HN request time: 0.719s | source
1. lastofus ◴[] No.42188142[source]
This is one of my favorite software development books of all time. It's the book that finally offered straight forward guidance and wisdom on how to properly utilize OOP language features.

I'm very happy to see it out for Python!

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2. crabmusket ◴[] No.42188180[source]
Sandi's earlier book, POODR, was also great. While it is focused on Ruby, most of the advice applies more broadly.

Reading these two really helped me understand just how impoverished the concept of OOP has become by C++ and Java, from its Smalltalk roots.

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3. giraffe_lady ◴[] No.42188369[source]
I was so lucky to have run into poodr when I did. Early enough in my career to still feel like I didn't know anything, but with just enough experience to have encountered the problems she was addressing "in the wild." Absolutely formative for me I have no idea where I'd be without it. The only other book to even approach its impact for me is working effectively with legacy code.
4. inopinatus ◴[] No.42190869[source]
Avdi Grimm preaches a similar gospel.
5. jonathaneunice ◴[] No.42196085[source]
Concur. I took Sandi's workshop based on the 99 Bottles book, in Ruby with a Ruby crowd, but was immediately able to apply it to Python programming.

Very helpful and clear thinking about refactoring out complexity—and not just refactoring for its own sake, but under the constraint that you want to move your program forward, add new functionality, etc. Refactoring with a direction, purpose, and direct payoff.