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Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Ekin Basım Yayın
Sum up: A true gem if you are learning to program, but a bit too slow-paced if you already are a proficient programmer. I had been programming for several years when I wanted to get more into the functional way of solving programming problems which had begun to receive more attention towards the end of the noughties with the success of new programming languages such as F#, Clojure and Scala. After researching a whole lot I found that this book had received a lot of positive critique, as a sort of more noob-friendly alternative to Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs (by Abelson and Sussman). To me, SICP seemed to have a certain shroud of high-brow elitism to it that scared me away from reading it, so this seemed like what I was after. And it kind of was. This text seemed perfect for an academic learner like myself, building knowledge stepwise, with a lot of emphasis on how to solve things, thinking before you type, and to my great enjoyment; a kind of test driven development attitude. Really a wonderful way to teach (functional) programming and program design to a newcomer. The problem was only that I am no newcomer to programming, and as such, the pace of the text was a bit too slow. I intended to finish the text before starting a functional programming class, but never got past chapter six. The content was great, the pedagogical angle was superb, but it simply went too slow for me and I did not finish it. My functional programming class actually used SICP, which turned out to be the best technical book I have read. It was simply an enjoyable read, once you got into it. If you already know your way around branch structures and the basics of programming, just delve into Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs. It has the same content, but progresses at a much higher pace and demands a whole lot more of the reader. But if you are new to programming and is not the type of person that just likes to learn from examples, this text is great and truly recommended.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Alfa Yayınları
Really enjoyed this book. I wondered if my father crossed paths with him, and will never know but there were both in WWII and both pilots, although Doolittle is about 20 years older than my dad. Very well written and lots of pictures which are nice. A amazing couple...husband AND wife! A good read, and goes quickly.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Ekin Basım Yayın - Akademik Kitaplar
This was a good book but was painful for me to read. I cried a lot.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Timaş Yayınları
It was all right...a brilliant plot, but disorganized. The Casts (who should know how to spell anyway) need a MUCH better editor. Grammar mistakes are everywhere in this book.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Çıra Yayınları
This book itself was all right, with plenty of epic elements. A lot of chapters begin by skipping a scene, then replaying it in flashback. That is kinda weird. Beware--if you read this book, you will probably end up reading the entire rest of the series (14 books long) just to find out what happens at the end. Having finished book 11, I can tell you I haven't seen any closure so far. So if you're the kind of person that can't start a series without finishing it, then you're in for a long road.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Remzi Kitabevi
Despite thinking this is a book everyone should read, I don't think it's for everyone. I LOVE the world building Tolkien does, but not everyone agrees. His work with languages has also been inspiring to me. Too often people read this and go, "Too much description!" and forget that for Tolkien, that's what it was about -- the world. Out of necessity there was a plot and characters, but for him, it was less about them, than it was about people like Tom Bombadil, or Treebeard. ^^ That said, I've read this trilogy too many times. *grins* Read it five times between my twelfth and thirteenth birthdays, alone.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: ION
Somewhere in the middle of the second part of the trilogy, I began to take a queer theorist's stance towards the book, and when that happened, I discovered these novels were actually rather detrimental towards feminist and queer ideals, as opposed to working for them, which is what I would have expected from someone like Butler. The trilogy, while offering an interesting alternative to the two-gender system by adding a third gender in between male and female, decides to delete all the infinite other genders that exist, which disturbed me greatly. Whether or not the author agrees with it, she has still displayed a message via the Oankali's choice in who was spared from extinction (see: only heteronormative people). The message is more or less that people who aren't straight masculine men or feminine women are useless to the continuation of the human race, and useless entirely according to the Oankali (who only really seemed to care about reproduction). In addition, there is a very biological deterministic attitude that arises somewhere along the way through the trilogy. Things like "You're male, so you're going to do this, think that, and act this way, and there's nothing you can do about it because that's how you were made" are very prevalent, which also ruffled my feathers terribly.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: TÜBİTAK Yayınları
A classic.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Nesil Yayınları
Another childhood staple. I grew up reading Judy Blume books, and this is another funny, engaging coming of age story. A jewish girl in the 40s thinks Hitler is alive and well in Miami Beach.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Doğan Egmont Yayıncılık
I was looking for some clarification of this (admittedly vague) concept that I'm very drawn to--not sure if that's what I got, but there was certainly countless intriguing ideas and thoughts presented along the way. To be fair, the concept itself is difficult to begin with, and as Jung fully admits, it is impossible to empirically "prove" one way or the other. Not that such a thing stops Jung, and, frankly, that's kind of the beauty of it. "It is only the ingrained belief in the sovereign power of causality that creates intellectual difficulties and makes it appear unthinkable that causeless events exist or could ever occur. But if they do, then we must regard them as creative acts, as the continuous creation of a pattern that exists from all eternity, repeats itself sporadically, and is not derivable from any known antecedents."
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