By now, in 2006, Java is up to version 1.5, with 1.6's release imminent. When the book was written in 2003, it necessarily used the then current Java, 1.4. But much of the book's advice is still germane. Remembering too that the various open source packages it describes are likely to be new revs as
Java Open Source Programming: with XDoclet, JUnit, WebWork, Hibernate
โ Scribed by Joseph Walnes, Ara Abrahamian, Mike Cannon-Brookes, Patrick A. Lightbody
- Publisher
- Wiley
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 482
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Written by leading authorities in the field, this book shows you how to leverage a suite of best-of-breed Open Source development tools to take the pain out of J2EE and build a complete Web-based application. You'll combine these tools to actually reduce the points of failure in your application, while increasing overall system stability and robustness. Along with the tools introduced here, you'll develop the PetSoar application, which follows the PetStore application used by Sun Microsystems to demonstrate features of J2EE. With PetSoar, the authors focus on developing a maintainable and flexible application, rather than showcasing the end result, so that you can apply the material in your own projects.
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Written by leading authorities in the field, this book shows you how to leverage a suite of best-of-breed Open Source development tools to take the pain out of J2EE and build a complete Web-based application. You'll combine these tools to actually reduce the points of failure in your application, wh
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A majority of the content are out of date now. A typical example is the chapter for Maven that is almost useless. Instead of reading this book, I'd rather go Google.