There is a pre-internet and Internet pre-Stackoverflow bit. Called O'reilly books.
Learning to program for example Perl. I had the learning book, the reference book and the cookbook. learning I did once, the reference had post its on it and was on my work desk. The cookbook was more the facebook type you read it on the toilet.
They had books on everything that were the industry standard. DNS, Apache, Javascript, ... The revised them regularly. For Js had the 1st, 2nd, 3rd edition. I know this sounds all ancients like real paper books. But even work had O'reilly subscription so you could order what you need.
For me it was O'reilly books, man pages. But lets not forget when you installed Linux like RedHat (not fedora yet) you could install the linux howtos. Oh boy did I learn a lot from them too: https://tldp.org/HOWTO/HOWTO-INDEX/howtos.html
Finally there was IRC if you were stuck but this was off course the internet stage. I just went online to ask a question, dialup was expensive ;)
Learning to program for example Perl. I had the learning book, the reference book and the cookbook. learning I did once, the reference had post its on it and was on my work desk. The cookbook was more the facebook type you read it on the toilet.
They had books on everything that were the industry standard. DNS, Apache, Javascript, ... The revised them regularly. For Js had the 1st, 2nd, 3rd edition. I know this sounds all ancients like real paper books. But even work had O'reilly subscription so you could order what you need.
For me it was O'reilly books, man pages. But lets not forget when you installed Linux like RedHat (not fedora yet) you could install the linux howtos. Oh boy did I learn a lot from them too: https://tldp.org/HOWTO/HOWTO-INDEX/howtos.html
Finally there was IRC if you were stuck but this was off course the internet stage. I just went online to ask a question, dialup was expensive ;)