Once there's a book for Rust of the same caliber and depth as e.g. Stroustrup's for C++, I'll get that. But "how to?" books. No. There's no point. The web does that.
I also have a hard time reading books these days because I just fall asleep once I curl up with them.
I do occasionally pick up reference books and flip through them but don't in general buy new ones. For some specialized domain I'll try to find classic CS textbooks on the topic. But their price has gotten crazy.
But I did just line up all my classics (Knuth, Smalltalk Blue Book, "The Linux Programming Interface" etc.) in a nice line on my desk so they'd be visible in my webcam for calls ;-) Nice and pretentious.
I also have a hard time reading books these days because I just fall asleep once I curl up with them.
I do occasionally pick up reference books and flip through them but don't in general buy new ones. For some specialized domain I'll try to find classic CS textbooks on the topic. But their price has gotten crazy.
But I did just line up all my classics (Knuth, Smalltalk Blue Book, "The Linux Programming Interface" etc.) in a nice line on my desk so they'd be visible in my webcam for calls ;-) Nice and pretentious.