Developing Java Beans
โ Scribed by Robert Englander
- Book ID
- 127445304
- Publisher
- O'Reilly Media
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 1 MB
- Edition
- 1st
- Category
- Library
- ISBN
- 0585002614
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
O'Reilly books are rarely for neophytes, but advanced users swear by them, and these will be no exception. Englander covers a hot Java subtopic for students, programmers, and professionals already familar with Java and object-oriented programming. He discusses events, event adapters, properties, persistence, java archive files, the BeanBox tool, property editors, ActiveX, and the java.beans Package. Flanagan's work is the book Java programmers want nearby when they are at the keyboard. A complete ready-reference work, this belongs in all collections supporting programmers. Java is a constantly changing language so Nutshell will be coming out often with new editions; always have the newest one on hand. Reese goes beyond simple applet design to relational databases, SQL, object-oriented database applications, application servers, and remote object manipulation. The examples used throughout the book are based on a banking application designed in Java.
โฆ Subjects
Java
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Learn about the New I/O (NIO) API introduced in J2SDK v 1.4 that provides new features and improved performance in the areas of polling, buffer management, character converters, and much more.
Java Enterprise Edition (Java EE) continues to be one of the leading Java technologies and platforms. Beginning Java EEย 7 is the first tutorial book on Java EEย 7. Step by step and easy to follow, this book describes many of the Java EEย 7 specifications and reference implementations, and shows them i
As simple Web access to data housed on corporate mainframes is fast becoming a core business requirement, mainframe programmers need to learn how to develop Java applications to keep pace with growing corporate needs. Focusing on concepts familiar to mainframe programmers, this book gives step-by-st
Very nice. I had ran across some of the code from the book on a repository on-line so sought it out. It's enough to get you most of the way, about 75%, and gives you hints for the rest. It doesn't lead you by the nose, and explains all that they do very well. I'm actually using this book as a re