This Paperback Book item from Coriolis Group Books was reviewed on 3-Nov-2008.
Search ISBN:1576109178 offer from Abebooks or used books from Alibris. The Science of Debugging Reference Book. Classifications : Information Systems Software Engineering Computer Science Computers & Internet Subjects Books General AAS Computer Science Computers & Internet Subjects Books Software Development Software Design, Tes . Click the following link to view the cover of The Science of Debugging. Related topics: Information Systems. Computer Science. Subjects. Books. General AAS. Computer Science. Subjects. Books. Programming. Subjects. requestid: 5e5cca96-3914-4fdc-8a0b-f01e837e7552 requestprocessingtime: 0.1712310000000000 salesrank: 922642 edition: 1st numberofitems: 1 packagedimensions: 149926189740
1) Paperback Book The Science of Debugging by Coriolis Group Books. OK, this book isn´t really bad. But it has very, very little to do with debugging. Most of the book is given over to general software engineering (requirements, design, coding and test). Perhaps 1/4 of the book is really about debugging, and that seems to consist of two things - logging and tracing - over and over again.
Another thing that I found that grated on my nerves was the incessant references to the holy grail (allegedly) of computing, the ´production server´. I also assume that this is implicitly a ´windoze production server´, since the authors seem to be of the opinion that if you even think of installing some software or patch on the server, then you are doomed to have all sorts of problems. They don´t even seem to consider the possibility of running tools over the network, without installing them on the sacrosanct server machines.
There is zero coverage of debug tools (they say "read the manual of your debugger"). They do include code coverage, memcheck, source browser and defect tracking as debug tools. I wouldn´t.
If you want a book that DOES cover debugging (and also some general software engineering, but less overwhelmingly so), then take a look at "Why Programs Fail" by Andreas Zeller.¤ 2) Paperback Book The Science of Debugging by Coriolis Group Books. I admit that I bought this book fully expecting to be "underwhelmed." Instead, I was pleasantly surprised as to how much this work had to offer. They begin the book with this interesting premise: "One of the groups that is likely to discount this book is the system architects camp, although they are the ones that are most likely to be aided by understanding the root causes of bugs and how they can be avoided." After reading this (which appeared on page 6) I decided to mark each page that contained an important architectural-level observation or recommendation. By the end of the book, I had nearly 40 such pages identified! The work is well researched with good references and footnotes. It is also rich with real-world examples of horror stories and debugging nightmares. I found myself filling the margins with recollections of my own, similar experiences. The book is not without faults. There seems to be a great deal of repetition and there were several points where I wished the book had been more carefully edited. I didn´t agree with everything presented and I think they actually got a couple of things completely wrong. Finally, there is at least one puzzle presented where the authors challenge you to "find the bug" where even their answer wasn´t complete! [See page 307--an exercise for the reader.] The author´s aim was to discuss debugging but the book contained as many Software Engineering observations as general debugging tips. I believe that these general observations and recommendations strengthen the work considerably. Any college course in Software Engineering would benefit by including this book as required reading. Any project lead organizing a new product development effort should take an hour and skim though this book again (after an initial, careful reading). Finally, any programmer who wishes to build for debug-ability would do well to review this work. The book´s one sentence synopsis comes directly from the authors (page 109) "One of the most critical (and most overlooked) aspects of debugging is to understand why bugs occur and where they come from." I agree. This book does a marvelous job to address that and much more. I highly recommend it.¤ 3) Paperback Book The Science of Debugging by Coriolis Group Books. In reading the book, there were many great platform idependant ideas for debugging applications. I think it would have been more helpful if the book would have at least cursorily implemented some of those ideas in code (my preference being C/C++). Some examples of what I mean are it says that one of the oldest ways of debugging applications use a log. It even goes to say what elements to include to make it as useful as possible. I think it would have been better to include the code implementing a logger they describe.¤ 4) Paperback Book The Science of Debugging by Coriolis Group Books. The only two eternals of software development are writing the code - and then debugging it. Effective debugging involves far more than walking through code with a debugger. This book recognizes that and sets out to make debugging less baffling, faster, and more effective by providing readers with the knowledge, tips, and techniques needed to rapidly identify, track down, and repair bugs. It goes further by offering practical tips on minimizing bugs and making them easier to find when they do occur. It includes chapters on testing and maintenance as they relate to debugging. Each chapter concludes with a "bug problem" and answers to these problems are provided in the last chapter. Above all, this is a book written by developers who´ve spent years tracking down bugs and offers practical, hands-on advice to make that task more predictable.¤ Page Updated: Robert N. Goolsby, 1-Dec-2008, 1576109178788581091784, 350-760-780-751-781-441-8  The Science of Debugging, Book, Image © Coriolis Group Books
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