As Tin pointed out, most technical machining books ( ie. a book from a technical insitute teaching machining) have a chart in them.
I have been guilty of this in the past about taking too little of a chip load say less than 0.001" and have prematurely dulled a cutter. With less than particularly 0.0005" chip load on lathes and say 1/4" and up end mills either HSS or carbide, there is more of a rubbing action than a cutting action. I'm not saying that there aren't times when to get in size you do need to cut with a small chip load to get that darned dimension ie. bearing fit. With the machinery's handbook one can get lost in it trying to find information. Don't get me wrong, I look up stuff all the time in this book. There are books that have the info in easy to find charts. I have my own chart laminated for quick reference but cannot share due to copy write laws.
One thing I can say is the insert/end mill manufactures sometimes have charts on their web site or catalog.