books about: hibernate
 
 



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The Definitive Guide to Terracotta: Cluster the JVM for Spring, Hibernate and POJO Scalability (The ...3 reviews
Terracotta, Inc.

Apress, 2008

A Must have book to buy to understanding Terracotta Best Practices
A must have book to buy to understanding Terracotta Best Practices,I personally was an early adopter and has had much success, Terracotta has proven over the years to help ease the development of HA systems, that scale from the start...this book has real world examples (not just Hello Worlds! Programs) ..to build and deploy systems backed by Terracotta for your enterprise.
  
  











  



  
JBoss at Work: A Practical Guide34 reviews
Tom Marrs, Scott Davis

O'Reilly Media, Inc., 2005

Great Developer book for starters to JBOSS
Its a great book if you have just started your development with JBOSS 4. It is easy to read from a developer/deployment perspective and also delves into how to automate the deployment descriptors and deploy into JBOSS. Covers most of the common J2ee/Web applications using hibernate and Ant. Probably needs upgrading to JBOSS 5 but is great if your current development is in JBOSS 4.
  
  











  



  
Hibernate Made Easy: Simplified Data Persistence with Hibernate and JPA (Java Persistence API) Annotations18 reviews
Cameron Wallace McKenzie

PulpJava, 2008

Very good indeed
I rarely read a technical book from cover to cover. This book rocks. This is like an instruction manual on Hibernate. Just stuff with no fluff that needs to get the job done. I am not a friend of the author nor a Java programmer to begin with. I am a C#, VB, and SQL Server DBA who got a new position to do Java and Hibernate. Freaked out! So I was trying to find something that would get me ...
  
  











  



  
Hibernate in Action (In Action series)60 reviews
Christian Bauer, Gavin King

Manning Publications, 2004

Useful narrative
I found this book useful and readable, and it helped me develop my first (and second) Hibernate applications. It begins with a brief overview of the kinds of problems which ORM solutions need to address. It then introduces Hibernate along with a couple of examples, upon which subsequent chapters build. (Some reviewers have criticized the examples, but I thought they were useful, and I didn't ...
  
  











  



  
Groovy Recipes: Greasing the Wheels of Java (Pragmatic Programmers)15 reviews
Scott Davis

Pragmatic Bookshelf, 2008

Great book for getting into Groovy
Groovy Recipes is an excellent introductory book into Groovy programming. The first few chapters give clear instructions for learning how to use Groovy. The remaining chapters give clear instructions for using some of Groovy's cool features: using Groovy with Java, Grails programming, metaprogramming, working with XML, File manipulation, and web services). Much akin to the fun and energetic ...
  
  











  



  
Groovy in Action19 reviews
Dierk Koenig, Andrew Glover, ...

Manning Publications, 2007

Great Primer (if a bit dated) on a Great Language
While getting a little long in the tooth (GINA was released pre-Groovy 1.0, Groovy is now above 1.5), the material presented in the book is still very relevant and helpful. The biggest issue is that some of the newer (and cooler!) features, such as ExpandoMetaClass, of the language are not covered. That being said, this is still a great introduction to the a language that will likely become an ...
  
  











  



  
Enterprise JavaBeans 3.0 (5th Edition)188 reviews
Bill Burke, Richard Monson-Haefel

O'Reilly Media, Inc., 2006

Great EJB3 Book! You will be greatly pleased with your purchase.
This is a great introduction to EJBs in general, and now EJB3. (the JSR 220 standard) Just like EJBs are now easier to develop with version 3, so is it easy to read and study this book. I hold O'Reilly in a high regard, (doesn't mean I'm a fan boy though, they do have their share of bad apples) and their high standards show in the quality of writing in this book. You will be happy with your ...
  
  











  



  
Blinky: The Bear Who Wouldn't Hibernate1 review
Helen L. Partridge

PublishAmerica, 2008

Blinky: The Bear Who Wouldn't Hibernate
An endearing story about a Mom's concern for her little one and how she could not rest/hibernate until her baby could fall asleep for the winter.
  
  











  



  
Harnessing Hibernate5 reviews
James Elliott, Tim O'Brien, ...

O'Reilly Media, Inc., 2008

Harness Hibernate... fast
Harnessing Hibernate is a fine book, which uses the most efficient ways to achieve its goal. Though focusing on Hibernate, the book enlists the usage of various frameworks such as Spring Framework, Stripes and Maven. Part I: Hibernate in a hurry: The core Build: The book starts with how you should build which used to be a dread. The authors choose to use Ant - Maven task, which is cool. ...
  
  











  



  
Java Enterprise in a Nutshell (In a Nutshell (O'Reilly))25 reviews
Jim Farley, William Crawford, ...

O'Reilly Media, Inc., 2005

Great reference for an immense topic
Java Enterprise in a Nutshell tries to do the impossible - fit Enterprise Java into a nutshell. I don't think it matters how big of a nutshell you have, it would be a truly impossible task. Farley and Crawford, though, do a nice job shoe-horning as much Enterprise Java as they can into an 800+ page book. They go over many topics including all the J2EE standards like EJBs and JSPs to open ...
  
  











  



  
Beginning Hibernate: From Novice to Professional (Beginning: from Novice to Professional)14 reviews
Jeff Linwood, Dave Minter

Apress, 2006

A bad name for a really good book
I found this book to be really well organized and methodical, starting with the basics of Hibernate and working up to more complex aspects and features in a gradual, measured fashion. My only prior exposure to a book on Hibernate was Hibernate: A Developer's Notebook; it was short and sweet, and of necessity was kind of lightweight, not sufficient for really getting into Hibernate deeply. I ...
  
  











  



  
Beginning POJOs: Lightweight Java Web Development Using Plain Old Java Objects in Spring, Hibernate, and ...11 reviews
Brian Sam-Bodden

Apress, 2006

A "big" little book.
If you are just starting to see what the lightweight framework application hubbub is about this is the best introductory book on the subject that I have read. I purchased this book, got distracted by another project and only recently picked it up to read the chapter on Spring. I read the Introduction, became hooked by the authors very natural and readable narrative style and soon I had read ...
  
  











  



  
Linux Desktop Pocket Guide (Pocket Reference)6 reviews
David Brickner

O'Reilly Media, Inc., 2005

Great product!
The Linux Desktop Pocket Guide has helped me to to have a better understanding Linux.
  
  











  



  
Java Persistence with Hibernate50 reviews
Christian Bauer, Gavin King

Manning Publications, 2006

A Massive Book for a Magnificent Framework
Some of the reviews for this book are a little harsh. This is the most complete book on Hibernate on the market. It covers everything, and I mean everything. From mapping to annotations, to whatever, it's in here. The book is written by the makers of Hibernate, and you can find an answer to pretty much every question you'll ever have explained in extreme detail, and in a very, very ...
  
  











  



  
Agile Java Development with Spring, Hibernate and Eclipse (Developer's Library)45 reviews
Anil Hemrajani

Sams, 2006

Nice idea...but simplistic and patchy
I like the concept of this book. Combining a whole bunch of ideas that these days are well proven and likely to result in well written software and productivity gains. Agile, Java, Eclipse, Hibernate, Spring. All stuff that I am working with right now. Seems the perfect book to fill in the gaps in my current knowledge. Unfortunately, though the author may be a fine developer, he is not a ...
  
  











  



  
Spring in Action51 reviews
Craig Walls, Ryan Breidenbach

Manning Publications, 2007

Exactly What You Would Expect
This book is exactly what you would expect from the In Action Series. The book is thorough and comprehensive. I even thought it had a slightly more personal writing style than some other In Action books.
  
  











  



  
Hibernate: A Developer's Notebook39 reviews
James Elliott

O'Reilly Media, Inc., 2004

Still good years later
I purchased this book when it first came out, and this past weekend finally got around to doing all of the examples. I suggest downloading Hibernate2, which is what the book covers. Hibernate3 is a bit different in structure and will just slow down what you are trying to learn. Needless to say 2 days later I am building my backend with Hibernate and upset with myself that I did not read and ...
  
  











  



  
Java Open Source Programming: with XDoclet, JUnit, WebWork, Hibernate9 reviews
Joseph Walnes, Ara Abrahamian, ...

Wiley, 2003

Great explanation of many useful and not well known tools.
I learn a lot by reading this book about "not well known" open source like Lucene and WebWork. I must say that the explanation of Xwork and WebWork is excellent. I also learn what can do Lucene for me. However, Lucene seems require more explanation that the one provided on the book. If you don't recognize some of the open sources framework named on the book cover, you should! And reading this ...
  
  











  



  
Web Development with Java: Using Hibernate, Jsps and Servlets1 review
Tim Downey

Springer, 2007

Web development using current Java technology
The rapid changes in Java web technology have left a morass of outdated books. So it is refreshing to see this book using Java 5 annotations, JSP 2.0 with its EL (expression language), and Hibernate 3 annotations both for validation and for persistence. Unfortunately Spring is not covered, causing home-grown solutions for some things Spring could do. I didn't see any real errors in concepts, but ...
  
  











  



  
Better, Faster, Lighter Java31 reviews
Bruce Tate, Justin Gehtland

O'Reilly Media, Inc., 2004

keep it simple
This is a great book. It compares different tools, and shows how to keep things simple and maintainable. Whether it's common sense, like other reviewers wrote, depends on your experiences. It's easy to get overwhelmed by all the different Java tool acronymns- this is a sane response to all the marketing based feature creep. If you are a beginning/intermediate programmer, I think this is a ...
  
  











  








   



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