CARVIEW |
By?David Flanagan
First Edition
Pages: 460 (More details)
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The bestselling book on Java and the one most often recommended on the Internet. An incredible value, this comprehensive, quick-reference quide to Java contains descriptions of all of the classes in the Java 1.0 API, with a definitive listing of all methods and variables. It also contains an accelerated introduction to Java for C and C++ programmers who want to learn the language fast.
Full Description
- An advanced introduction to Java. The first three chapters will teach C and C++ programmers everything they need to know to start programming with Java right away.
- Practical, real-world examples that show programmers how to write applets; implement smooth animation; create graphical user interfaces; write client and server programs that communicate over the network; use threads; and more
- A compact reference to the 211 classes, 1828 methods and 235 variables in the Java 1.0 API
- Descriptions of each class
- A Java keyword and concept glossary
- Quick-reference tables of operators, primitives, escape characters, visibility modifiers, doc comment syntax, events, keysyms, fonts, colors, cursors, system properties, Unicode and Java-related HTML syntax
- Documentation for the Java compiler, interpreter, and other tools in the Java Developer's Kit
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Book details
Title:
Java in a Nutshell
Subtitle: A Desktop Quick Reference for Java Programmers
First Edition:
ISBN 10: 1-56592-183-6
ISBN 13: 9781565921832
Pages: 460
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"Just saw the AW Java API Vol 1/2 refs... Ugh.
"I've been waiting anxiously for some real documentation on the Java API specification. I was pretty excited from what I heard about the Addison Wesley series, supposedly "the official source of complete, expert and definitive information on Java."
"I got a call from my local technical bookstore this afternoon (they're here!) so I used it as an excuse to take an afternoon motorcycle ride. Well, at least I had had fun riding.... These books are nothing more than a hardcopy of the HTML documentation distributed with the JDK. No examples. No hints. No class overviews that are worth anything. And worst of all, still no thorough method descriptions.
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