The Java Tutorial, w. CD-ROM
(Sprache: Englisch)
This hands-on introduction to the Java programming language has been updated for J2SE 5.0 and written by the members of the Java Software team. It uses an interactive approach to help new programmers learn by example.
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This hands-on introduction to the Java programming language has been updated for J2SE 5.0 and written by the members of the Java Software team. It uses an interactive approach to help new programmers learn by example.
Inhaltsverzeichnis zu „The Java Tutorial, w. CD-ROM “
Foreword xix Preface xxiChapter 1: Getting Started 1 1.1 The Java Technology Phenomenon 1 1.2 The "Hello World!" Application 6 1.3 A Closer Look at the "Hello World!" Application 24 1.4 Common Problems (and Their Solutions) 27 1.5 Questions and Exercises: Getting Started 30 Chapter 2: Object-Oriented Programming Concepts 33 2.1 What Is an Object? 33 2.2 What Is a Class? 35 2.3 What Is Inheritance? 37 2.4 What Is an Interface? 38 2.5 What Is a Package? 39 2.6 Questions and Exercises: Object-Oriented Programming Concepts 40 Chapter 3: Language Basics 43 3.1 Variables 43 3.2 Operators 55 3.3 Expressions, Statements, and Blocks 66 3.4 Control Flow Statements 69 Chapter 4: Classes and Objects 85 4.1 Classes 85 4.2 Objects 97 4.3 More on Classes 106 4.4 Nested Classes 122 4.5 Enum Types 128 4.6 Annotations 132 Chapter 5: Interfaces and Inheritance 139 5.1 Interfaces 139 5.2 Inheritance 147 Chapter 6: Generics 167 6.1 Introduction 167 6.2 Generic Types 169 6.3 Generic Methods and Constructors 172 6.4 Bounded Type Parameters 173 6.5 Subtyping 175 6.6 Wildcards 177 6.7 Type Erasure 178 6.8 Summary of Generics 179 6.9 Questions and Exercises: Generics 180 Chapter 7: Packages 183 7.1 Creating and Using Packages 183 Chapter 8: Numbers and Strings 195 8.1 Numbers 195 8.2 Characters 210 8.3 Strings 212 Chapter 9: Exceptions 233 9.1 What Is an Exception? 233 9.2 The Catch or Specify Requirement 235 9.3 Catching and Handling Exceptions 236 9.4 Specifying the Exceptions Thrown by a Method 245 9.5 How to Throw Exceptions 246 9.6 Unchecked Exceptions--The Controversy 252 9.7 Advantages of Exceptions 253 9.8 Summary 258 9.9 Questions and Exercises: Exceptions 259 Chapter 10: Basic I/O 261 10.1 I/O Streams 261 10.2 File I/O 286 10.3 The New I/O Packages 291 10.4 Summary 292 10.5 Questions and Exercises: Basic I/O 292 Chapter 11: Collections 293 11.1 Introduction to Collections 293 11.2 Interfaces 295 11.3 Implementations 342 11.4 Algorithms 355 11.5 Custom Collection Implementations 360
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11.6 Interoperability 364 Chapter 12: Concurrency 369 12.1 Processes and Threads 369 12.2 Thread Objects 371 12.3 Synchronization 377 12.4 Liveness 384 12.5 Guarded Blocks 386 12.6 Immutable Objects 391 12.7 High-Level Concurrency Objects 395 12.8 For Further Reading 402 12.9 Questions and Exercises: Concurrency 403 Chapter 13: Regular Expressions 405 13.1 Introduction 405 13.2 Test Harness 406 13.3 String Literals 407 13.4 Character Classes 409 13.5 Predefined Character Classes 414 13.6 Quantifiers 416 13.7 Capturing Groups 422 13.8 Boundary Matchers 424 13.9 Methods of the Pattern Class 425 13.10 Methods of the Matcher Class 431 13.11 Methods of the PatternSyntaxException Class 437 13.12 Summary 439 13.13 Additional Resources 440 13.14 Questions and Exercises: Regular Expressions 440 Chapter 14: The Platform Environment 443 14.1 Configuration Utilities 443 14.2 System Utilities 452 14.3 PATH and CLASSPATH 457 14.4 Questions and Exercises: The Platform Environment 460 Chapter 15: Swing 463 15.1 A Brief Introduction to the Swing Package 463 15.2 Swing Features 470 15.3 Questions: Graphical User Interfaces 485 Chapter 16: Packaging Programs in JAR Files 487 16.1 Using JAR Files: The Basics 488 16.2 Working with Manifest Files: The Basics 500 16.3 Signing and Verifying JAR Files 507 16.4 Using JAR-Related APIs 514 16.5 Questions: JAR Files 520 Chapter 17: Java Web Start 521 17.1 Running Java Web Start Applications 522 17.2 Deploying Java Web Start Applications 524 17.3 Developing Java Web Start Applications 534 17.4 The JNLP API 536 17.5 Java Web Start and Security 538 17.6 Common Java Web Start Problems 539 17.7 Questions and Exercises: Java Web Start 540 Chapter 18: Applets 543 18.1 Getting Started with Applets 545 18.2 Taking Advantage of the Applet API 559 18.3 Practical Considerations When Writing Applets 578 18.4 Finishing an Applet 593 18.5 Deploying Applets 594 18.6 Solving Common Applet Problems 600 18.7 Questions and Exercises: Java Applets 602 Appendix A: Java Language Keywords 603Appendix B: Preparation for Java Programming Language Certification 605 B.1 Section 1: Declarations, Initialization and Scoping 606 B.2 Section 2: Flow Control 608 B.3 Section 3: API Contents 609 B.4 Section 4: Concurrency 611 B.5 Section 5: OO Concepts 612 B.6 Section 6: Collections / Generics 613 B.7 Section 7: Fundamentals 614 Index 617
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Autoren-Porträt von Mary Campione, Kathy Walrath, Alison Huml
Sharon Zakhour, the Java Tutorial team lead, has worked at Sun Microsystems as a senior technical writer for seven years. She graduated from UC Berkeley with a B.A. in computer science and has worked as a programmer, developer support engineer, and technical writer for more than twenty years. Scott Hommel is a technical writer on staff at Sun Microsystems, where he documents the Java Platform, Standard Edition. Since 1999, he has contributed to every major release of the JDK, mostly in the form of API spec clarifications and core release documentation. Jacob Royal has an M.S. in IT and an M.B.A. in information systems. He has written administrator's guides, API references and programmer's guides, and has identified new tools and developed code and writing standards for various companies, including Lucent Technologies and Autodesk. Isaac Rabinovitch is a freelance technical writer. He has written user manuals, programmer's guides, administrator's manuals, API references, release notes, and support documentation at Sun Microsystems, Borland, SGI, and many other companies. Thomas Risser was educated in physics at Harvard (B.A.) and the University of California at Berkeley (Ph.D.). He has been a technical writer in the computer industry for fifteen years. Mark Hoeber is a former senior technical writer at Sun Microsystems. He has worked as a technical writer for twelve years, focusing on documentation for software developers and system administrators.
Bibliographische Angaben
- Autoren: Mary Campione , Kathy Walrath , Alison Huml
- 2006, 4th ed., 672 Seiten, mit Abbildungen, Maße: 17,6 x 23,4 cm, Kartoniert (TB), Englisch
- By Sharon Zakhour, Scott Hommel, Jacob Royal et al.
- Verlag: Addison-Wesley Longman, Amsterdam
- ISBN-10: 0321334205
- ISBN-13: 9780321334206
Sprache:
Englisch
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