Carte I Accidentally Wrote God-Level Code Timothy Ugbaja

I Accidentally Wrote God-Level Code

The Quantum Intelligence Bible That Stack Overflow, Your CTO, and the Universe Weren't Ready For

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Legare: Carte broșată
Editura: Tilaverse Inc.
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Ediția 01. 08. 2026
280.72 lei
I Accidentally Wrote God-Level Code The Quantum Intelligence Bible That Stack Overflow, Your CTO, an...

Informații despre carte

Limbă
engleză
Legare
Carte - Carte broșată
Publicat
2026
Pagini
468
EAN
9798295888984
Enbook ID
53227303
Editura
Greutate
622
Dimensiuni
152 x 229 x 24

Descriere completă

I Accidentally Wrote God-Level Code The Quantum Intelligence Bible That Stack Overflow, Your CTO, and the Universe Weren't Ready For

There is a ticket on your board right now whose fix will generate another ticket on Friday.

You already know how to close it. You know the pattern. You know the tool. You will open the editor, write the solution, pass the review, and ship it by Thursday. The code will be clean. The tests will pass. The diagnosis will be wrong.

This book is about the thirty seconds before the editor opens.

Most technical books teach engineers to solve problems better. This one teaches engineers to solve better problems - to ask the one question that changes not the speed of the work, but the nature of it.

What would have to be true for this symptom to be the right thing to fix?

That instrument, planted in Chapter 1 and practiced across thirty-five chapters, is the entire argument. Everything else is the proof.

The book moves from individual decisions (why naming is hard, why the linter's silence is not the same as correctness, why the comment written at 2am is more accurate than the confident one) through systems (memory leaks authored at design time, race conditions resolved by acceptance rather than mutex) through teams (retrospectives that produce model updates rather than action items) through infrastructure (the Kubernetes cluster running forty requests per hour, the cloud provider chosen without writing the exit estimate) to legacy (the load-bearing function that cannot be refactored because the universe is the method) and markets (the dimensionality moat, the open-source decision as a strategic question, the README written as a last will and testament).

The appendices include architecture diagrams that require a new geometry, benchmark results versus the speed of thought, the stack trace from the most instructive incident in the argument, a retrospective of every wrong decision in the book (verdict: nothing to change - the decisions were the curriculum), and a glossary of twelve terms the field has not yet invented.

This book is for engineers who are good at their jobs and have occasionally wondered, on a Friday morning, whether Thursday's fix was the right response to what actually broke.

The instrument is the gift. The thirty seconds are the investment. The compounding is the return.

All chapters exist simultaneously until read.