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Anatoly Volkhover

Which topics I should be getting your way first? Which additional topics would you like me to cover? I’d like to hear from you!

  • Mike says:

    Just ordered your book; cannot wait to dig in! Based on what I’ve read in the preview pages, I can tell that this was a good purchase. Where should readers submit errata?

  • Julio says:

    Thanks, loved this book

  • Anon says:

    Topic: Quality over time. How to measure code quality (stylecop, fxcop), when to remove code (features not used, causing more problems than it’s worth), which bugs are worth fixing (users want fixes and product manager says no), peer review (when to fire someone), etc.

    • anatoly says:

      Thank you, Anon! Super interesting topic. Have to admit that I may not have all the answers yet;) On my hit list for the second book. Many many thanks!
      — Anatoly

  • Not Beginner says:

    Hey, great book, thanks! Can’t wait for part II and III 🙂

    What I would like to read more about is how to properly integrate MVC frameworks into architecture/business logic. MVC’s are nice and greatly speed up development (they give us sessions, templates, form validations, data retrievals, etc.), but at the same time they pollute the whole architecture and after a while they simply dominate it. So you’re no longer an architect, you’re just another “neck deep” framework user. Have you used any MVC’s (or frameworks in general) in your big projects mentioned in the book? Real life stories would be very appreciated. I know Uncle Bob covers this topic in his books, but there are no real stories there.

  • Fabio Galuppo says:

    Great book about Software architecture, principles and techniques. I’m waiting for the next ones and a full hardcover book compiling all volumes 😁

  • STANFORD says:

    Really got a lot out of your book. Much confirmed and elucidated what I already thought. But much also challenged what I thought.

    When is the next one coming?

  • Norman Eugene White says:

    Your book is great. I am an old codger like you. I started as a Mathematician at Douglas Aircraft in 1956. Later in 1965 I joined IBM and was on the team that wrote the IBM 360 Assembler. So, I am still working, and I have over 62 years of software development experience. I wrote my first book called “Questions to Ask an Alien” published by Amazon Books.

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