books about: javabeans
 
 



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Enterprise JavaBeans189 reviews
Richard Monson-Haefel

O'Reilly, 1999

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 ...
  
  











  



  
Mastering Enterprise JavaBeans and the Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition62 reviews
Ed Roman

John Wiley & Sons, 1999

Super EJB book
Early this month I emailed Jacquie Barker (author Beginning Java Objects and Deploying Java Objects). This was the email and I quote "Yes, your email about the difficulties encountered by legacy programmers in transitioning to J2EE is indeed true. It took me quite sometime to really understand the whole concept, but after a journey (as you call it) distance equivalent to reading 5 different books ...
  
  











  



  
Programming Web Components (Object Technology Series)2 reviews
Reaz Hoque, Tarun Sharma

Computing Mcgraw-Hill, 1997

Reaz Hoque and Tarun Sharma have done an excellent job!
This isn't the type of book you'd just pick up on the spur of the moment. But if you're developing component-based software, especially software that's going to be used on the Web, then your ears are already perking up. Programming Web Components is a large tome of a book which focuses on the latest methods of creating and using Web-based software components. Though Programming Web Components ...
  
  











  



  
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 ...
  
  











  



  
WebLogic 6.1 Server Workbook for Enterprise JavaBeans (3rd Edition)3 reviews
Greg Nyberg

O'Reilly Media, Inc., 2002

Excellent EJB 2.0 Hands-on Workbook
If you are new to WebLogic or EJB 2.0 and want to learn either or both, there are few better hands-on learning source than this. You do need solid foundation on J2EE/EJB first, though. The author explains really well how's and why's of doing things certain ways and gives many useful tips associated with implementing EJB2.0 - especially on the Container Managed Relationship (CMR). The provided ...
  
  











  



  
EJB 3 in Action25 reviews
Debu Panda, Reza Rahman, ...

Manning Publications, 2007

Everything you ever wanted to know about EJB3
Having struggled with the complexities and problems of EJB 1 and 2 (most java programmers I talked to doing large EJB projects, for example, stay clear from using entity beans), I was really drawn to the advantages of EJB3 as described in the first chapter of "EJB3 in Action". The book's next 2 chapters, in keeping true to the title of the book, provide a whirlwind tour that shows EJB3 in ...
  
  











  



  
Java Messaging (Programming Series)5 reviews
Eric Bruno

Charles River Media, 2005

Very Good on Messaging Concepts and Implementation
As we look at how much we use the web, it is sometimes hard to remember just how new this concept of worldwide packet switching really is. Java was started as a new language before a lot of the new concepts like XML and SOAP were conceived. But as a new language it has been able to move into using these new concepts faster than nearly any other language. What I especially liked about this ...
  
  











  



  
Head First EJB (Brain-Friendly Study Guides; Enterprise JavaBeans)73 reviews
Kathy Sierra, Bert Bates

O'Reilly Media, Inc., 2003

Valuable even if you want to use EJB 3.0
This book helped me to understand what is enterprise how they fit together how to create EJB 2.0 actually it let you have a strong understanding of J2EE concepst.the authors are very experienced and their books are really the best and should be best ev er selling
  
  











  



  
Mastering Enterprise JavaBeans (2nd Edition)67 reviews
Ed Roman, Scott Ambler, ...

Wiley, 2001

Excellent - great examples, covers everything
This is an excellent and complete book on EJB. I read 1st and 2nd edition of the O'Reilly EJB book based on recommendations; I have to say the Ed Roman book is far superior - he covers every detail, including peripheral considerations, and has complete and numerous examples. 1 downside - many typos - but thankfully they are so obvious, it doesn't detract from comprehension.
  
  











  



  
How to Program Javabeans2 reviews
Michael Morrison, Randy Weems, ...

Ziff-Davis Press, 1997

Educate your manager...
My manager asked me to explain Java and JavaBeans. This book did the trick. It's well laid-out, with lots of colour pictures, and deals with non-trivial issues in an understandable manner. It also comes with a Java tutorial, along with a try-and-(maybe)-buy version of a tool from Sun. I use this book a lot, along with "Borland's JBuilder: No Experience Required" by Zukowski, and "JBuilder ...
  
  











  



  
Enterprise JavaBeans Component Architecture: Designing and Coding Enterprise Applications (Java 2 Platform, ...7 reviews
Gail Anderson, Paul Anderson

Prentice Hall PTR, 2002

Excellent Book
This is an excellent book to learn EJB. I started to study EJB by trying out couple books in the market. But failed to understand and further frightened with J2EE. Once i started to read the book, i have a better understanding of what is EJB and J2EE. Buy the book, go through the contents, download the source codes, deploy to a J2EE compliant server and enjoy learning. It is really a nice book ...
  
  











  



  
Java Enterprise Best Practices11 reviews
Robert Eckstein

O'Reilly Media, Inc., 2002

Good reference for Java architects and sys. designers.
Title: Java Enterprise Best Practices First Edition December 2002 Author(s): The O'Reilly Java Authors City: Sebastapol, CA Publisher: O'Reilly Published Date: December 2002. ISBN: 6 36920 00384 7 Reviewer Name: Ravi Mahalingam email: mravichandran@Hotmail.com Review Date: 12 Mar 2003. Overall value of the book:5 Instructional value of the book:4 Reference value of the book: 4 This book unlike ...
  
  











  



  
Beginning EJB 3 Application Development: From Novice to Professional12 reviews, ...

Apress, 2006

Spin up quickly on EJB 3 with ease
I thoroughly enjoyed reading the "Beginning EJB 3 Application Development" book. (I'm a senior programmer, have been using Java since 1995 and am co-founder and co-leader of the Austin Java Users Group.) The book started off with a nice executive overview of EJB 3 and the usability problems with EJB 2 that it solved. On a side note, I have been impressed by the EJB 3 working group for making ...
  
  











  



  
Mac OS X for Java Geeks12 reviews
Will Iverson

O'Reilly Media, Inc., 2003

I like
* This book has provided preliminary introduction to the platform with exploring the technical underpinnings of the Mac OS X Java implementation. * This booke is good for new java developer for Mac OS X platform, someone can explore the pragmatics of Java development, including how to set up your development environment. * And makes you aware of Apple's various additons to the java platform and ...
  
  











  



  
Professional Java Server Programming: with Servlets, JavaServer Pages (JSP), XML, Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB), ...82 reviews
Danny Ayers, Sing Li, ..., 1999

Great book
Over all this is a great book. It give you the overall idea on Java Server Programming. If you really serious on specific topic, you have to buy another one. It is good for the beginner to grap the general idea on Java Server Programming.
  
  











  



  
EJB Cookbook7 reviews
Benjamin G. Sullins, Mark B. Whipple

Manning Publications, 2003

Valuable resource in a convenient form
Although some of the recipes don't fit directly into the strict cookbook form this book is still an excellent resource for J2EE programmers. The author intends this book to be read by engineers with some EJB experience who encounter challenges or problems with EJB. The book organizes these problems into topics by chapter (e.g. transactions, security, logging, data access, code generation, etc.), ...
  
  











  



  
Applied Enterprise JavaBeans Technology (Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition Series)2 reviews
Kevin Boone

Prentice Hall PTR, 2003

I wish more books were written this way.
If there's one J2EE book to use as a starting point it's this one. Boone has many working examples with useful comments in the source code. He even develops working examples of home-grown middleware to give a flavour of what J2EE is really trying to accomplish (while stripping away the complexities that accompany a mature middleware product). The example JCA 1.0 resource adapter distinguishes ...
  
  











  



  
Mastering Javabeans (Mastering)3 reviews
Laurence Vanhelsuwe

Sybex Inc, 1997

Quick, Effective explanations/demonstrations of JavaBeans
This book is great. It helps with accelerated learning of key javabean concepts with just the right amount of code that will help to assist you in understanding key concepts, but not take forever to decipher. Ohh, did I mention the code WORKS. This is key and why a book company that I was a longtime supporter of let me down BIG TIME. This javabeans stuff has become fun. It's just a pitty that ...
  
  











  



  
Developing Javabeans Using Visualage for Java4 reviews
Dale R. Nilsson, Peter M. Jakab

John Wiley & Sons Inc (Computers), 1998

Easy to read with clear examples!
This was the first book I read regarding developing Java Beans with VisualAge. I have read many since and have not found a better book. Great read! I would love to be able to find more books like this one.
  
  











  



  
Mastering Enterprise JavaBeans 3.09 reviews
Rima Patel Sriganesh, Gerald Brose, ...

Wiley, 2006

Superb Book
Finally. A solid, practical review of EJB -- if you had given up on enterprise bean architecture because of past limitations, most stacks have much better implementations today. This book is a really solid reference and reminded me why I wanted to build in EJB in the first place.
  
  











  








   



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Great EJB3 Book! You will be greatly pleased with your purchase.


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