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Starting with Java |
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Just starting Java? Need a terrific Java reference book? Check out our
Editor's Choice
published by Mike Murach & Associates.
Application Developers
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The J2EE Architect's Handbook
By: Derek C. Ashmore
This handbook is a concise guide to architecting, designing and building J2EE applications. This handbook will guide the technical architect through the entire J2EE project including
identifying business requirements, performing use-case analysis, object and data modeling, and guiding a development team during construction. Whether you are about to architect your first
J2EE application or are looking for ways to keep your projects on-time and on-budget, you will refer to this handbook again and again.
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Java Master Reference
By: Arthur Griffith
Packed with over 1600 pages of detailed information and code, this book is the ultimate Java
programmers resource. Get explanations for over 7,000 keywords, API calls, class libraries, and
language constructs. Youll also find complete coverage of JDK 1.1, JavaBeans, inner classes,
introspection, and security.
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Java Thread Programming
By: Paul Hyde
Shows you how to take full advantage of Java's thread facilities: when to use threads to
increase your program's efficiency, how to use them effectively, and how to avoid common
mistakes. There is thorough coverage of the Thread API, ThreadGroup classes, the Runnable
interface, and the synchronized operator. Extensive, complete, code examples show programmers
the details of creating and managing threads in real-world applications.
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Java and XML
By: Brett McLaughlin, Justin Edelson
Topics include:
- The basics of XML, including DTDs, namespaces, XML Schema, XPath, and Transformations
- The SAX API, including all handlers, filters, and writers
- The DOM API, including DOM Level 2, Level 3, and the DOM HTML module
- The JDOM API, including the core and a look at XPath support
- The StAX API, including StAX factories, producing documents and XMLPull
- Data Binding with JAXB, using the new JAXB 2.0 annotations
- Web syndication and podcasting with RSS
- XML on the Presentation Layer, paying attention to Ajax and Flash applications
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Essential Visual J++ 6.0 Fast: How to Develop Java Applications and Applets With
Visual J++
By: John R. Cowell
If you are new to Java or are an existing Java programmer who wants to switch to Visual J++,
this book gives you all the essential information you need using lots of examples. Topics
covered in this book include: the Java language, polymorphism, inheritance and encapsulation,
graphics and animation, handling events, using files, exception handling, abstract windowing
tool kit, the Java applet wizard and the resource wizards, debugging, and project management.
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The Elements of Java Style
By: Al Vermeulen (Editor), Scott W. Ambler, Greg Bumgardner, Eldon Metz, Trevor
Misfeldt, Jim Shur, Patrick Thompson
This book explains not just what you can do with the syntax, but what you ought to do. It
illustrates rules with parallel examples of correct and incorrect usage. Not only will Java
developers and programmers who read this book write better Java code, but they will become more
productive as well.
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Enterprise Java Computing: Applications and Architectures
By: Govind K. Seshadri, Gopalan Suresh Raj), Terence Parr
Advanced information on JDBC, servlets, JNI, RMI, Java IDL, and EJBs - the basic building
blocks of any significant corporate business application. Using this book, developers should be
able to: integrate relational databases with RMI and servlets using JDBC, develop sophisticated
servlet-based middleware, design multi-tier EJB applications, write Jini services, understand
advanced issues regarding RMI and Java IDL development, and perform Java/legacy-system
integration using JNI.
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Domino Development with Java
By: Anthony S. Patton
Opens with a quick look at the IBM/Lotus Domino Designer IDE amply illustrated with screen
shots. The book then dives in with code samples that show off the APIs and simple
programming conventions to get at Domino databases, views, items, rich-text items, and
collections. Code samples demonstrate the available APIs that are used for each Domino
Java object. Nearly every line of code is annotated (by using numbered bullets), with a
corresponding comment on the details of each API. Later sections turn toward activity logging,
access-control lists (ACLs) and agents, names, and date-time values. There's also a brief
discussion of using the IBM VisualAge for Java tool.
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Developing Java Software, 2nd Edition
By: R. Winder, Graham Roberts
Taking an object-oriented approach, the authors look at the ways in which aspects of
the Java language contribute to the learning of Java programming techniques. They begin
by considering the nature of programming, particularly with classes and objects. They
then turn to such topics as the basic framework of a program, the development of
libraries of Java software, and abstractions that can be used to construct applications.
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Debugging Java: Troubleshooting for Programmers
By: Will David Mitchell
Troubleshooting reference for the Java programmer. Filled with solutions to common and rare\
bugs. Proactive focus helps developers identify bad coding habits and adopt strategies to build
clean code.
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