Java How to Program: Early Objects Version: United States Edition
Autor Paul J. Deitelen Limba Engleză Mixed media product – 16 mar 2009
"Beautiful collections of exercises–a nice illustration of how to use Java libraries to generate impressive and stimulating graphics with minimal code and effort. I found the “Making a Difference” exercises to be very nice and tactfully presented." – Amr Sabry, Indiana University
"A comprehensive introduction to programming in Java that covers all major areas of the platform. To me, the best way to understand programming is by example, and this book contains copious, well-described sample code." – Simon Ritter, Sun Microsystems
"Great example of polymorphism and interfaces. Great comparison of recursion and iteration. I found the [Searching and Sorting] chapter to be just right. A very understandable, simplified explanation of Big O–the best I have ever read! A great synthesis of details to help someone create generic data structures. I appreciate the addition of the GUI-based threading issues. Great approach to Java web technologies." – Sue McFarland Metzger, Villanova University
"I’m sure this [ATM] case study will be of immense value to practitioners and students of the object-oriented approach. Demystifies inheritance and polymorphism, and illustrates their use in getting elegant, simple and maintainable code." – Vinod Varma, Astra Infotech Private Limited
Preț: 709.00 lei
Preț vechi: 864.63 lei
-18% Nou
Puncte Express: 1064
Preț estimativ în valută:
135.70€ • 141.43$ • 112.97£
135.70€ • 141.43$ • 112.97£
Cartea nu se mai tipărește
Doresc să fiu notificat când acest titlu va fi disponibil:
Se trimite...
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780136053064
ISBN-10: 0136053068
Pagini: 1560
Dimensiuni: 178 x 232 mm
Greutate: 2.1 kg
Ediția:8Nouă
Editura: Pearson Education
Colecția Prentice Hall
Locul publicării:Upper Saddle River, United States
ISBN-10: 0136053068
Pagini: 1560
Dimensiuni: 178 x 232 mm
Greutate: 2.1 kg
Ediția:8Nouă
Editura: Pearson Education
Colecția Prentice Hall
Locul publicării:Upper Saddle River, United States
Cuprins
Introduction 1 Introduction to Computers, the Internet and the Web
Introduction to Programming and Introduction to Classes and Objects 2 Introduction to Java Applications
3 Introduction to Classes and Objects
Control Statements, Methods and Arrays 4 Control Statements: Part 1
5 Control Statements: Part 2
6 Methods: A Deeper Look
7 Arrays and ArrayLists
Object Oriented Programming 8 Classes and Objects: A Deeper Look
9 Object-Oriented Programming: Inheritance
10 Object-Oriented Programming: Polymorphism
11 Exception Handling
Object Oriented Design with the UML 12 (Optional) ATM Case Study, Part 1: Object-Oriented Design with the UML
13 (Optional) ATM Case Study, Part 2: Implementing an Object-Oriented Design
Graphics, GUI, Applets and Multimedia 14 GUI Components: Part 1
15 Graphics and Java 2D™
23 Applets and Java Web Start
24 Multimedia: Applets and Applications
25 GUI Components: Part 2
Strings and Files 16 Strings, Characters and Regular Expressions
17 Files, Streams and Object Serialization
Data Structures 18 Recursion
19 Searching, Sorting and Big O
20 Generic Collections
21 Generics
22 Data Structures
Multithreading and Networking 26 Multithreading
27 Networking
Database-Driven Desktop and Web Application Development 28 Accessing Databases with JDBC
29 Web Applications: Part 1
30 Web Applications: Part 2
31 JAX-WS Web Services
Appendices A Operator Precedence Chart
B ASCII Character Set
C Keywords and Reserved Words
D Primitive Types
E Number Systems
F GroupLayout
G Java Desktop Integration Components
H Mashups
I Unicode®
J Using the Java API Documentation
K Creating Documentation with javadoc
L Bit Manipulation
M Formatted Output
N UML 2: Additional Diagram Types
O Labeled break and continue Statements
P Design Patterns
Q Using the Debugger
Introduction to Programming and Introduction to Classes and Objects 2 Introduction to Java Applications
3 Introduction to Classes and Objects
Control Statements, Methods and Arrays 4 Control Statements: Part 1
5 Control Statements: Part 2
6 Methods: A Deeper Look
7 Arrays and ArrayLists
Object Oriented Programming 8 Classes and Objects: A Deeper Look
9 Object-Oriented Programming: Inheritance
10 Object-Oriented Programming: Polymorphism
11 Exception Handling
Object Oriented Design with the UML 12 (Optional) ATM Case Study, Part 1: Object-Oriented Design with the UML
13 (Optional) ATM Case Study, Part 2: Implementing an Object-Oriented Design
Graphics, GUI, Applets and Multimedia 14 GUI Components: Part 1
15 Graphics and Java 2D™
23 Applets and Java Web Start
24 Multimedia: Applets and Applications
25 GUI Components: Part 2
Strings and Files 16 Strings, Characters and Regular Expressions
17 Files, Streams and Object Serialization
Data Structures 18 Recursion
19 Searching, Sorting and Big O
20 Generic Collections
21 Generics
22 Data Structures
Multithreading and Networking 26 Multithreading
27 Networking
Database-Driven Desktop and Web Application Development 28 Accessing Databases with JDBC
29 Web Applications: Part 1
30 Web Applications: Part 2
31 JAX-WS Web Services
Appendices A Operator Precedence Chart
B ASCII Character Set
C Keywords and Reserved Words
D Primitive Types
E Number Systems
F GroupLayout
G Java Desktop Integration Components
H Mashups
I Unicode®
J Using the Java API Documentation
K Creating Documentation with javadoc
L Bit Manipulation
M Formatted Output
N UML 2: Additional Diagram Types
O Labeled break and continue Statements
P Design Patterns
Q Using the Debugger
Notă biografică
Paul J. Deitel, CEO and Chief Technical Officer of Deitel & Associates, Inc., is a graduate of MIT’s Sloan School of Management, where he studied Information Technology. He holds the Java Certified Programmer and Java Certified Developer certifications, and has been designated by Sun Microsystems as a Java Champion. Through Deitel & Associates, Inc., he has delivered Java, C, C++, C# and Visual Basic courses to industry clients, including IBM, Sun Microsystems, Dell, Lucent Technologies, Fidelity, NASA at the Kennedy Space Center, the National Severe Storm Laboratory, White Sands Missile Range, Rogue Wave Software, Boeing, Stratus, Cambridge Technology Partners, Open Environment Corporation, One Wave, Hyperion Software, Adra Systems, Entergy, CableData Systems, Nortel Networks, Puma, iRobot, Invensys and many more. He has also lectured on Java and C++ for the Boston Chapter of the Association for Computing Machinery. He and his father, Dr. Harvey M. Deitel, are the world’s best-selling programming language textbook authors.
Dr. Harvey M. Deitel, Chairman and Chief Strategy Officer of Deitel & Associates, Inc., has 45 years of academic and industry experience in the computer field. Dr. Deitel earned B.S. and M.S. degrees from MIT and a Ph.D. from Boston University. He has 20 years of college teaching experience, including earning tenure and serving as the Chairman of the Computer Science Department at Boston College before founding Deitel & Associates, Inc., with his son, Paul J. Deitel. He and Paul are the co-authors of several dozen books and multimedia packages and they are writing many more. With translations published in Japanese, German, Russian, Spanish, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese, Korean, French, Polish, Italian, Portuguese, Greek, Urdu and Turkish, the Deitels’ texts have earned international recognition. Dr. Deitel has delivered hundreds of professional seminars to major corporations, academic institutions, government organizations and the military.
Dr. Harvey M. Deitel, Chairman and Chief Strategy Officer of Deitel & Associates, Inc., has 45 years of academic and industry experience in the computer field. Dr. Deitel earned B.S. and M.S. degrees from MIT and a Ph.D. from Boston University. He has 20 years of college teaching experience, including earning tenure and serving as the Chairman of the Computer Science Department at Boston College before founding Deitel & Associates, Inc., with his son, Paul J. Deitel. He and Paul are the co-authors of several dozen books and multimedia packages and they are writing many more. With translations published in Japanese, German, Russian, Spanish, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese, Korean, French, Polish, Italian, Portuguese, Greek, Urdu and Turkish, the Deitels’ texts have earned international recognition. Dr. Deitel has delivered hundreds of professional seminars to major corporations, academic institutions, government organizations and the military.
Caracteristici
• Full color — Program listings include highlighting of the new features presented and syntax coloring of code to help readers better interpret the code.
• Signature “Live Code™ Approach” — Language features are presented in the context of complete working programs.
— Features thousands of lines of code in hundreds of complete working programs.
— Enables students to confirm that programs run as expected.
— Students can also manipulate the code from the book's Companion Website or from the author's Website.
• Outstanding, consistent and applied pedagogy:
— Icons throughout identify hundreds of Software Engineering Observations; Good Programming Practices; Common Programming Errors; Portability Tips; Performance Tips, Testing and Debugging Tips, and Look-and-Feel Observations.
— Provides hundreds of valuable programming tips and facilitates learning.
• Extensive set of interesting exercises and substantial projects that enables students to apply what they've learned in each chapter.
• Also available with the Multimedia Cyber Classroom:
— Provides extra hands-on experience and study aids for no additional cost.
— Includes:
o Many hours of detailed, expert video walkthroughs of many of the book's live-code examples;
o Post-assessment exams with hundreds of short answer questions (all with answers);
o Hundreds of self-review exercises drawn from the text (with answers);
o Hundreds of programming exercises from the main text (these exercises don't have answers in the main text, but half of these exercises have answers in the Java Multimedia Cyber Classroom);
o Hundreds of tips that are marked with icons and show how to write code that's portable, reusable, and optimized for performance; and full-text searching and hyperlinking.
• Signature “Live Code™ Approach” — Language features are presented in the context of complete working programs.
— Features thousands of lines of code in hundreds of complete working programs.
— Enables students to confirm that programs run as expected.
— Students can also manipulate the code from the book's Companion Website or from the author's Website.
• Outstanding, consistent and applied pedagogy:
— Icons throughout identify hundreds of Software Engineering Observations; Good Programming Practices; Common Programming Errors; Portability Tips; Performance Tips, Testing and Debugging Tips, and Look-and-Feel Observations.
— Provides hundreds of valuable programming tips and facilitates learning.
• Extensive set of interesting exercises and substantial projects that enables students to apply what they've learned in each chapter.
• Also available with the Multimedia Cyber Classroom:
— Provides extra hands-on experience and study aids for no additional cost.
— Includes:
o Many hours of detailed, expert video walkthroughs of many of the book's live-code examples;
o Post-assessment exams with hundreds of short answer questions (all with answers);
o Hundreds of self-review exercises drawn from the text (with answers);
o Hundreds of programming exercises from the main text (these exercises don't have answers in the main text, but half of these exercises have answers in the Java Multimedia Cyber Classroom);
o Hundreds of tips that are marked with icons and show how to write code that's portable, reusable, and optimized for performance; and full-text searching and hyperlinking.
Caracteristici noi
• The online Multimedia Cyber Classroom electronic learning support is fully updated. The new version includes 10+ hours of Camtasia-based VideoNotes presented by Paul Deitel, the author of Pearson’s wildly successful Java and C# LiveLessons products.
• New “Making a Difference” exercise sets encourage students to associate computers and the Internet with solving problems that really matter to individuals, communities, countries and the world.
—These new exercises encourage students to think for themselves as they explore complex social issues and increase awareness of important issues the world is facing.
—Many of the new exercises require students to conduct research on the web and weave the results into their problem-solving process.
• The optional object-oriented design/UML 2 automated teller machine (ATM) case study has been refined and reorganized into two optional chapters that present the ATM’s design and complete code implementation.
•Java’s new Nimbus graphical user interface (GUI), introduced in Java SE 6 update 10, is now used throughout the book.
• The popular Eclipse and Netbeans open source integrated development environments (IDEs) are covered more extensively via online support materials.
• Generic collections are introduced earlier, with a stronger treatment of generics and collections.
• Applet treatment is enhanced to include material on Java Web Start and the new applet features introduced in Java SE 6 update 10, such as applets that can be dragged from your browser to your desktop then launched from the desktop in the future.
• Updated chapters on databases, web development with Java Server Faces, and Web services (now including REST) to reflect significant developments. Enthusiastic feedback on this treatment from the professional community includes:
— “The JDBC chapter is very hands on. I like the fact that Java DB/Apache Derby is used in the examples, which makes it really simple to learn and understand JDBC.” Sandeep Konchady, Sun Microsystems
—“Equips you with the latest web application technologies. Examples are impressive and real! Want to develop a simple address locator with Ajax and JSF? Jump to Chapter 30.” Vadiraj Deshpande, Sun Microsystems
— “Covers web services with Java SE 6 and Java EE 5 in a real-life, example-based, friendly approach. The Deitel Web Services Resource Center is really good, even for advanced developers.” Sanjay Dhamankar, Sun Microsystems
—“Mandatory book for any serious Java EE developer looking for improved productivity: JSF development, visual web development and web services development have never been easier.”Ludovic Chapenois, Sun Microsystems
• Significant treatment of testing and debugging includes unit testing with JUnit.
• Defining occurrence page numbers for each term have been added in the terminology lists for quick reference.
• Exception handling is covered earlier in the text.
• Most exercises are now titled.
• New “Making a Difference” exercise sets encourage students to associate computers and the Internet with solving problems that really matter to individuals, communities, countries and the world.
—These new exercises encourage students to think for themselves as they explore complex social issues and increase awareness of important issues the world is facing.
—Many of the new exercises require students to conduct research on the web and weave the results into their problem-solving process.
• The optional object-oriented design/UML 2 automated teller machine (ATM) case study has been refined and reorganized into two optional chapters that present the ATM’s design and complete code implementation.
•Java’s new Nimbus graphical user interface (GUI), introduced in Java SE 6 update 10, is now used throughout the book.
• The popular Eclipse and Netbeans open source integrated development environments (IDEs) are covered more extensively via online support materials.
• Generic collections are introduced earlier, with a stronger treatment of generics and collections.
• Applet treatment is enhanced to include material on Java Web Start and the new applet features introduced in Java SE 6 update 10, such as applets that can be dragged from your browser to your desktop then launched from the desktop in the future.
• Updated chapters on databases, web development with Java Server Faces, and Web services (now including REST) to reflect significant developments. Enthusiastic feedback on this treatment from the professional community includes:
— “The JDBC chapter is very hands on. I like the fact that Java DB/Apache Derby is used in the examples, which makes it really simple to learn and understand JDBC.” Sandeep Konchady, Sun Microsystems
—“Equips you with the latest web application technologies. Examples are impressive and real! Want to develop a simple address locator with Ajax and JSF? Jump to Chapter 30.” Vadiraj Deshpande, Sun Microsystems
— “Covers web services with Java SE 6 and Java EE 5 in a real-life, example-based, friendly approach. The Deitel Web Services Resource Center is really good, even for advanced developers.” Sanjay Dhamankar, Sun Microsystems
—“Mandatory book for any serious Java EE developer looking for improved productivity: JSF development, visual web development and web services development have never been easier.”Ludovic Chapenois, Sun Microsystems
• Significant treatment of testing and debugging includes unit testing with JUnit.
• Defining occurrence page numbers for each term have been added in the terminology lists for quick reference.
• Exception handling is covered earlier in the text.
• Most exercises are now titled.