Java J2EE Portal
Enterprise Java Station
J2EE curve
Java News / Articles
Java News / Articles
Netbeans_Jdeveloper_Eclipse
Java IDEs - NetBeans vs Eclipse vs JDeveloper
JavaOne 2007 Update
Task Scheduling with Quartz - Integration with OSWorkflow
Processing...
Buy Java, Deals On Software Technology Store
Click here for great deals on computers, laptops, software and books
Pro Java Programming: 7I Book Review PDF Print
Written by Harshad Oak   
Jul 29, 2005 at 06:44 AM

Pro Java Programming (2nd edition) by Brett Spell is a handy book for developers who know the basics but are fairly new to real world Java development. It should also be useful to intermediate-advanced users who want to brush up their skills or learn about the new things offered by J2SE 5.0.


The author does not spend time teaching you OOPS concepts or telling you how to write your first Java class. He instead starts the book by "going inside java". The chapter about designing libraries, classes and methods stood out because of the many useful tips the author has to offer. What I particularly liked was that Brett Spell does not keep telling us known theory but instead provides practical and adoptable solutions. Brett has tried to keep things simple and provide content that can help on real projects.

For example, in case of method design, he says "Readability, extensibility and reliability are important and you should be hesitant to sacrifice those qualities for an alogorithm that seems elegant and clever unless doing so provides some important advantage to your aplication"

Seeing over 250 pages, over 1/3rd of the book dedicated to Swing, was unexpected. As most java developers are into enterprise Java these days and well away from Swing, the Swing sections I thought were not required. Cut out the Swing part and you would have a sleek and useful reference book instead of a 700 page giant costing $59.99. And anyway there are many 'Swing Only' books available.

The book I thought also could have had a chapter about simplifying design patterns and one that would help the reader graduate to J2EE or some other facet of Java.

The later chapters about annotations, JDBC and XML are useful. The chapter dedicated to Internationalization should be especially useful if you are working on applications that needs that capability.

Rating: (7 / 10 I)

Author: Brett Spell
Publisher: Apress
ISBN: 1-59059-474-6
Pages: 720
Published: June 2005
Price: $59.99


User Comments

Comment by 'Guest' on 2007-01-14 22:31:07
Its very nice book

Comment by Narayana on 2007-01-14 23:15:42
good book
Your Name / Email Address
Comment
Spam Protection - Please enter the code in the image -

Listen to code


Add This Feed Button

Enter your Email


Java Expert Interviews
Pradeep Chopra Whizlabs
Certifying your way to success
JonasJacobiJSFAjax
Pure Ajax creates the next generation legacy applications
Mukesh Hegde NCStudio IDE
Java IDE in a brand new avatar. Making development server centric.
Processing...
Go to top of page  Home |
SiteMap

Copyright 2004 to 2008 Rightrix Solutions. All rights reserved. All product names are trademarks of their respective companies. Java and all Java-based marks are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the United States and other countries. Rightrix Solutions and IndicThreads.com are independent of Sun Microsystems, Inc.

Views expressed at IndicThreads.com reflect the views of the authors alone, and do not necessarily reflect those of IndicThreads.com. IndicThreads.com and it's authors are not responsible for reader comments and opinions.

Enterprise Java J2EE JEE Portal >> IndicThreads.com