Reddit Books

The most-mentioned books on r/javascript

Reddit is a social media and news aggregation website that ranks content based on a voting system. People worldwide post content (usually links, but also original content), and other users can “upvote” or “downvote” posts, pushing the most interesting content to the top. 

It’s a place where you can find groups of like-minded people. Reddit calls these groups subreddits, and they cover different topics, including niche interests, politics, hobbies, and thousands of other topics people want to talk about.

Since its launch in 2005, the site has become one of the most popular social media sites with millions of monthly active users. 

We've processed billions of comments to find the books most mentioned on Reddit. 

Table of Contents

 

The most-mentioned books on r/javascript

JavaScript127 users
JavaScript Patterns25 users
Professional JavaScript for Web Developers24 users
Clean Code23 users
Effective JavaScript22 users
JavaScript20 users
Secrets of the JavaScript Ninja17 users
JavaScript14 users
JavaScript and JQuery8 users
The Principles of Object-Oriented JavaScript8 users
Code Complete7 users
Pro JavaScript Design Patterns7 users
Object-Oriented JavaScript7 users
Introduction to Algorithms6 users
Head First Design Patterns6 users
Head First JavaScript Programming5 users
You Don't Know JS5 users
The Pragmatic Programmer4 users
Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs4 users
Test Driven Development4 users
Learning JavaScript4 users
High Performance JavaScript4 users
Cracking the Coding Interview4 users
Head First HTML5 Programming4 users
A Smarter Way to Learn JavaScript. The new tech-assisted approach t...4 users
Pro JavaScript Techniques4 users
JavaScript Application Design4 users
Working Effectively with Legacy Code3 users
Design Patterns3 users
DOM Scripting3 users
Single Page Web Applications3 users

Our methodology

Book mentions are found by checking every reddit comment for links to Amazon, Goodreads, Google Books, and O'Rielly Media. Non-link mentions are too tricky to parse in an unbiased way: books with short, simple titles like The Road get massively under- or over-counted.

When a user mentions the same book multiple times in the same subreddit, we only count the top-voted comment. This curbs users shilling a particular book, and gives a more representative feel for an entire subreddit.

 

Who are we

Find accountability partners, and study online courses & books with other learners. Moocable helps you find your next course/book/problem set, and lets you find study partners.

Junaid Khan

Junaid Khan

Junaid Khan is the founder of Moocable - the platform to help learner find their next MOOC, and study partners. A passionate learner, he struggled with self-learning.