Patrick H. Winston, (co-)author of "On To Java, Third Edition", "On To Smalltalk", "On To C++", "On To C", Artificial Intelligence, and Lisp presents his book.
Guidelines for good software design/web page design (and examples of what not to do!), plus open-source tools and libraries for developers, focussing on Java, Perl, Javascript, CGI, and XML.
Tutorials on several languages (Assembly, C/C++, Java, Perl, PHP, Visual Basic), discussion forums on each, general forum, news, survey, holds quarterly programming contests. In English, despite .sk domain.
Tutorials and source code for VB, ASP, PHP, XML, SQL Server, C#, C++ and .NET developers. Plus software reviews, developer jobs, blogs and a discussion forum.
Provides link directory, technical articles, news, forum, and online books for Java, Linux, JavaScript, Perl, ActiveX, Visual Basic, HTML, DHMTL, XML, ColdFusion, C and C++.
Search engine optimized for software developers and other IT professionals. Focused on technical content difficult to find with other search tools and sites.
Programming tutorials and source code for many programming languages and especially for the .NET Framework. Also has software articles, reviews, news, projects, forums, blogs from the IT domain.
An online collection of tutorials, sample code, standards, and other resources provided experts at IBM to assist software developers using open standards and cross-platform technologies.
A growing archive of source code examples for different languages and platforms. All code is written for the purpose of helping others learn to program. C, C++, Perl, Python, HTML sources. Shell scripts.
Lets programmers submit code for review by other programmers; many source code samples to help educate beginners on many concepts; contests where programmers vote for the most efficient, useful code recently submitted.
Provides developers with a place to upload, meet, share, exchange ideas and codes, build, improve, bug-fix, read, redistribute, and modify the source code of contributions submitted to the site.
For many programmers with computer related injuries such as Repetitive Strain Injury (RSI), programming via voice is the only way they can exercise their talents in their chosen profession. Yet, programming-by-voice using off the shelf speech recognition systems is now awkward because programming languages were never meant to be spoken.
A community site for open source developers. Articles covers several languages as well as important stuff like regular expressions and community building.