4th
SEP

Pro Java™ EE Spring Patterns: Best Practices and Design Strategies Implementing Java EE Patterns with the Spring Framework

Posted by GaQuay under Java

Pro Java™ EE Spring Patterns: Best Practices and Design Strategies Implementing Java EE Patterns with the Spring Framework

Pro Java™ EE Spring Patterns: Best Practices and Design Strategies Implementing Java EE Patterns with the Spring Framework

Product Description

“The Java™ landscape is littered with libraries, tools, and specifications. What’s been lacking is the expertise to fuse them into solutions to real–world problems. These patterns are the intellectual mortar for J2EE software construction.” —John Vlissides, coauthor of Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object–Oriented Software

Pro Java™ EE Spring Patterns focuses on enterprise patterns, best practices, design strategies, and proven solutions using key Java EE technologies including JSP™, servlets, EJB™, and JMS APIs.

This Java EE patterns resource, catalog, and guide, with its patterns and numerous strategies, documents and promotes best practices for these technologies, implemented in a very pragmatic way using the Spring Framework and its counters. This title

  • Introduces Java EE application design and Spring framework fundamentals
  • Describes a catalog of patterns used across the three tiers of a typical JEE application
  • Provides implementation details and analyses each pattern with benefits and concerns
  • Describes the application of these patterns in a practical application scenario
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30th
AUG

Object-Oriented Design with UML and Java

Posted by GaQuay under Java, UML

Object-Oriented Design with UML and Java

Object-Oriented Design with UML and Java

Book Description
Unified Modeling Language (UML) is a general-purpose programming language for specifying and visualizing complex software, especially large, object-oriented projects. Object-oriented programming is when a programmer defines not only the data type of a data structure, but also the types of operations/functions that can be applied to the data structure. Java is a general purpose programming language with a number of features that make the language well suited for use on the World Wide Web. Fully road tested from the authors own courses, Object-Oriented Design with UML and Java shows how considering the modeling and programming languages together from the start can be beneficial, shifting the emphasis away from detailed programming issues, and instead allowing the focus to fall on the analysis of the meaning and accuracy of the model. No prior knowledge of object orientation is assumed, though some knowledge of Java or other high level programming language is required.

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28th
AUG

DB2 Express-C: The Developer Handbook for Xml, Php, C/c++, Java, and .net

Posted by bandr under C & C++, Dot NET, Java, PHP

DB2 Express-C: The Developer Handbook for Xml, Php, C/c++, Java, and .net

DB2 Express-C: The Developer Handbook for Xml, Php, C/c++, Java, and .net

  • Paperback: 330 pages
  • Publisher: Prentice Hall Professional Technical Referenc (September 7, 2006)
  • Language: English
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27th
AUG

Object-Oriented JavaScript

Posted by bandr under Java

Object-Oriented JavaScript

Object-Oriented JavaScript

Book Description
Once listed in the “nice to have” sections of job postings, these days the knowledge of JavaScript is a deciding factor when it comes to hiring web developers. And rightly so. Where in the past we used to have the occasional few lines of JavaScript embedded in a web page, now we have advanced libraries and extensible architectures, powering the “fat-client”, AJAX-type rich internet applications.

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20th
AUG

OReilly Java Extreme Programming Cookbook

Posted by bandr under Java

OReilly Java Extreme Programming Cookbook

OReilly Java Extreme Programming Cookbook

Book Description
Extreme Programming does not mean programming naked while rollerblading down the side of the Grand Canyon. It does mean a new approach to software development that is both radical and common-sense. Unlike many software development methodologies, XP has been accepted quickly because its core practices–particularly code sharing, test-first development, and continuous integration–resonated immediately with software developers everywhere. Instead of impressing developers with a body of theory, XP got programmers to say, “Yeah, that’s how I’d like to work.”

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