I recently had a question closed due to a bad fit for Q&A

How does one request book recommendations for formal treatments of subject matter?

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Thanks Peter. Unfortunately, I don't have an account. – noloader Nov 26 '11 at 3:49
Thanks random. From the link, I can't tell if asking for a recommendation is on-topic or off-topic. Next (for me) is the small leap to citations for answers. If book recommendations are subjective and not worthy, then neither are citations using the same book. It does not make sense to me. – noloader Nov 26 '11 at 4:40
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I'm giving you a sympathy upvote. Surely you got so many downvotes because people were saying "Don't ask about shopping recommendations, it's offtopic". Downvotes on meta mean disagreement. To downvoters I remind you this sort of question is ontopic in chat – The Unhandled Exception Nov 26 '11 at 13:54
The Unhandled Exception - thanks for the sympathy, but there's no need. Folks can keep subtracting points if they like - I really don't care. If a book recommendation is off topic, perhaps it should be stated clearly somewhere. Its not in the FAQ (I did read it before posting). Hence the reason I asked for the recommendation in the first place, and then asked 'how to request a recommendation' after the first request was closed. Jeff. – noloader Nov 28 '11 at 14:37
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It's right there in the FAQ, second entry, "What kind of questions should I not ask here?": You should only ask practical, answerable questions based on actual problems that you face. Chatty, open-ended questions diminish the usefulness of our site and push other questions off the front page ... avoid asking subjective questions where every answer is equally valid: “What’s your favorite ______?” [or] there is no actual problem to be solved – The Unhandled Exception Nov 28 '11 at 16:11
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migrated from stackoverflow.com Nov 26 '11 at 3:50

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4 Answers

What's to say a good book today is a good book tomorrow? Or the next day, or the next day? In 2007, The "ASP.NET tips and Tricks book" (that Jeff Atwood and others published) was a great ASP.NET book, but today, there could be better choices.

So that's one problem.

Secondly, it's somewhat subjective. There's no real 'fact' here. I may think Fooing widgets, 3rd edition is the BESTEST EVAR. You may think the 2nd edition of 'Baring Foos' is awesome-sauce. Either way, what happens when the OP picks one or the other? It's all opinion.

That's problem #2.

Finally, the answers could go on forever. There are 2,948 titles on Amazon for books about C# (according to an Amazon search on books for... wait for it... C#), so you could conceivably have 2,948 answers on the 'best book for C#'. Who's to say that one book is better than the others?

If you want a book recommendation, look at blogs or Amazon reviews. Stack Exchange is not the place for it.

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"Secondly, it's somewhat subjective. There's no real 'fact' here. I may think Fooing widgets... " Good books should generally get upvotes, and bad books should get down votes? In the big picture, the voting system appears to be well adapted to this sort of thing. Perhaps I'm missing something. – noloader Nov 28 '11 at 14:41
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@noloader you are, people rarely downvote. It costs reputation, and that keeps people from downvoting. Also, Who's read even 1% of the books on C# out there? How can you give upvotes without knowing whether it's a good book? Finally, the 'one book per answer' means that after the first page, barely anything will get read, resulting in massive duplication, which then makes that question like every other forum post in the world: undecipherable and unhelpful. – George Stocker Nov 28 '11 at 14:52
Keep book reputation to Amazon, where it sells (and searched for). – Jonas Jan 3 at 11:35
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I don't know that you can. Shopping recommendations are off-topic on the entirety of the Stack Exchange network.

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"Shopping recommendations are off-topic...." - not necessarily true. There are a number of books which are available for free, with no shopping involved. For example, Handbook of Applied Cryptography (cacr.math.uwaterloo.ca/hac). – noloader Nov 26 '11 at 4:01
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Money doesn't have to change hands for it to still be a shopping request @nol – random Nov 26 '11 at 4:03
Random - its clearly not a shopping request. I'm not sure how you and Al Everett are arriving at shopping request. Its a request for a book(s) on specific topics of a subject matter. – noloader Nov 26 '11 at 4:04
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@noloader You're getting hung up on the word "shopping". Questions asking for recommendations for the best book on a topic are generally considered off topic. – joran Nov 26 '11 at 4:07
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Joran - not to be argumentative, but I did not even use the word 'shopping'. It was brought up by others. google.com/… – noloader Nov 26 '11 at 4:10
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@noloader And they're often closed, as over half of the front-page results of that query were. "Shopping" isn't the point; replace the word with "looking". – Dave Newton Nov 26 '11 at 4:23
Dave - there's a big difference between looking and shopping. The first responder used the word shopping, not me. Anyway, I'm not clear why only half were closed; and how one would use citations in answers (since a citation is an implicit recommendation by a subject matter expert). Should answers with citations be removed? – noloader Nov 26 '11 at 4:43
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It's an infinite list problem, for one. For another, you've already chosen your solution: a book. Now you're just polling to see what other people think you should get. Fine, don't call it "shopping". "In your opinion what should I get?" questions are off-topic for the entirety of the Stack Exchange network. – Al Everett Nov 26 '11 at 4:59
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You can ask for recommendations in chat!

Your best bet is to first see if anyone has created a chat room for what you're looking for and then if not, create a new chat room first, something like Recommend me some books. Then stay in your room, and possibly draw some people in from active rooms (like the tavern, the lounge, casual chat) with a polite, discrete post, something like:

Hey everyone. I am looking for some book recommendations. If you have them, join me in [link to your room](http://url.of/your/room)

Remember that while chat is realtime it's also archived, has RSS feeds, and can act like a forum as well. So You can create a chat room and as long as you keep it active, you can return to it days later and see what was said when you were gone. So you don't have to worry about missing any recommendations.

FYI, This is what what Jeff Atwood himself did when he wanted recommendations for a new router.

Do not ask about shopping recommendations on the main site. They will be closed. It is offtopic.

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More on the shopping recommedation. Good lord.... – noloader Nov 28 '11 at 14:43
@noloader I don't understand that comment... what do you mean? – The Unhandled Exception Nov 28 '11 at 16:08
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I started out believing that SE could support a recommend X, or Suggestions for a Building Architecture Book covering the User Experience Perspective style request, but after reading this an several of the linked questions, I have to conclude that the SE framework fails in this regard.

The reason I find the idea of such questions compelling, is my perception that there is a set of relevant cannon for many fields. If you are in medicine then you've likely at least heard of Gray's Anatomy, the original, not the other one. In Architecture, then The Timeless Way of Building is something you've likely bumped into. This plays out across the majority of subjects I come across. The more I read about a field, the more material I see that references some subset of what came before. We even have the seminal work of Cyberpunk.

But cannon is ultimately an illusion. Only this moment I learned of Bruce Bethke. No matter what I, nor even my group of wildly diverse and widely read friends have encountered and consider to be cannon, and no matter how long ago a work was published or even how many times it has been referenced, someone could reasonably argue that the cannon of X was merely founded on some W that came before. History has deep roots.

Additionally new books get written, this is not a problem only of having to add it to the list or even superseding the strengths of the existing works though. This means that cannon changes. I'd easily add, as suggested in the [ux.se] question, How Buildings Learn to the list in the Architecture category. But why choose that one and not The Not So Big House? So now in answering these questions I have to consider when and where I should stop. Do I only include the first work I read on a subject? Should I include the possibly relevant books from the appendix of works I trust? What if a book in a completely unrelated field jogged some fundamental understanding in me but maybe not the next guy?* How do I answer if the book I consider definitive on subject X does not even acknowledge the existence of some concept Y that the OP mentioned?

To add to @GeorgeStocker's point about a good book today but maybe not tomorrow, it gets worse than just better material being in print. What happens when the 333rd edition of How to Win Friends and Influence People devotes 90% of its pages to how to use Facebook to pickup dates? What happens when the book I, or even the majority of the community, remember(s) is not the book being published when the next user clicks to see the Bestest of the Best of the Best reads on Underwater Basket Weaving?

In the end these questions can only ever be considered subjective, and therefore not a good fit for the SE format.

*See A Pattern Language for an Architecture book that made a significant impact on Software Engineering and to an extent Computer Science.

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Book suggestions can still be passed on in answers to questions, as you can quote from books / articles and link to the books in question. Hell, StackExchange even has an Amazon affiliate link whenever a book link is posted which means you're doing your bit for the network with each link to amazon. However questions requesting book recommendations don't benefit the network. – Jon W May 4 at 21:55
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