DDJ was my favorite of those mentioned. Byte was #2. The rest were a pass for me. After DDJ called it quits, they released a CDR containing an archive of all issues, which I still have. Much of the content was timeless.
There was a Toronto Commodore magazine called The Transactor that was my absolute favourite. It covered everything from the CBM 4032 and 8032 through the various Amigas. The magazine was very much programmer oriented, from assembly to BASIC and C.
It also published the Commodore Inner Space Anthology, containing full memory maps, ASCII tables, BASIC reference, and much, much more.
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* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small-C
* https://github.com/trcwm/smallc_v1
Byte and Dr Drobbs had the odd technical article but gone mostly mainstream by the 80s.
But one of my classmates showed me an issue of Hardcore Computist (renamed Computist) and I was hooked.
Technical knowledge about circumventing copy-protected software interspersed with cracks for various software programs.
see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computist
back issues on archive.org at https://archive.org/search?query=Hardcore+Computist
It also published the Commodore Inner Space Anthology, containing full memory maps, ASCII tables, BASIC reference, and much, much more.
https://www.commodore.ca/commodore-gallery/the-transactor-ma...
Earlier on, when I was first using our VIC-20 and C64, I learned a great deal from Compute and Compute's Gazette.
https://web.archive.org/web/20120519135652/http://www.bombja...
https://phrack.org/