Don't Let the Title Fool You | Agile Java(TM): Crafting Code with Test-Driven Development (Robert C. Martin Series) | Jeff Langr
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Agile Java(TM): Crafting Code with Test-Driven Development (Robert C. Martin Series)
Jeff Langr
Prentice Hall PTR
, 2005 - 792 pages
average customer review:
based on 12 reviews
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highly recommended
Bought for my son, read it cover to cover!!
I had originally bought this book for son who was going to spend the summer working for my development team writing unit
test
for our database POJOs. I was so impressed way in which concepts were incrementally introduced I read the book cover to cover. It is now the only book I recommend to beginners and I introduce it as a 'must' read for all my new hires.
Great Book
I've gotten about 6 chapters into this book and I love it. I've been developing
Java
for almost 7 years and am currently teaching myself
Agile
principles and this book comes as a great help.
Don't Let the Title Fool You
This is my new favorite-book-to-give-to-anyone-who-is-learning-or-using-
Java
.
The title is misleading in that this book is about much more than just the
Agile
Programming stuff. While it does a great job talking about Agile techniques and always starts by creating a unit
test
, the book really is about all aspects of Java (specifically Java 5) programming. Anyone who takes the time to work through the examples will become a much better Java programmer.
OO patterns, collections, type safety and more are covered and explained in the context of a rich, in-depth example. And because the author has you construct a high-quality test suite around the example, you are free to experiment with different ways to implement each new feature - thus proving to yourself the benefits of Agile design.
Just like it says in one of the quotes on the cover, this book is now required reading for the Java programmers at our company.
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I wanted to like it!
I'm not a beginning programmer, or even an absolute
Java
novice, so maybe this book isn't really aimed at me. My biggest gripe is that the
code
snippets continue on and on making the book very poor for anything other than cover-to-cover reading.
Great whether you're learning Java or TDD
This book is primarily for new programmers who want to learn
Java
as their first programming language. The book can also be helpful for programmers familiar with
test
driven
development (TDD) but new to Java, or vice versa. I am an experienced Java developer, and I found that going through
Agile
Java presented me with a new and better way of approaching Java
code
development. This book covers Java 2 Standard Edition (J2SE) version 5.0, but covers only a few of the additional APIs at an introductory level. Technologies that are used pervasively in the majority of enterprise applications, such as logging, JDBC, and Swing, are presented in Agile Java. Some of the information, such as that on logging, will teach you all you need to know for most purposes. Other lessons, such as those on Swing and JDBC, will give you a basic understanding of the technology and will tell you where to go when seeking further information.
The core of Agile Java is fifteen lessons of about 30 pages each. It starts with baby steps in Java, TDD, and OO. The book finishes with a strong foundation for professional Java development. The core lessons should be read sequentially since each lesson builds upon the previous ones. Once you have completed the core lessons, you should have a solid understanding of how to build robust Java code. If you haven't completed the fifteen core lessons, you should not assume you know how to write good Java code. Each of the fifteen core lessons in Agile Java has you build bits and pieces of a student information system for a university. This single common theme helps demonstrate how you can incrementally build upon and extend existing code. Each lesson also finishes with a
series
of exercises. Instead of the student information system, the bulk of the exercises have you build bits and pieces of a chess application. Some of the exercises are involved and quite challenging, but they are where learning the methodology really begins.
There are three additional lessons to cover a few more Java topics. Two of the lessons present an introduction to Swing. These two lessons will provide you with enough information to begin building robust user interface applications in Java. But the bigger intent is to give you some ideas for how to build them using TDD. The third additional lesson presents an overview for a number of Java topics that most Java developers will want to know such as JARs, regular expressions, cloning, JDBC, and internationalization.
I really liked how the author integrated the three concepts of Java programming, TDD, and object-oriented design without confusing matters. The book is very clear with good illustrations. I highly recommend it. The following is the table of contents:
Lesson 1. Getting Started
Lesson 2. Java Basics
Lesson 3. Strings and Packages
Lesson 4. Class Methods and Fields
Lesson 5. Interfaces and Polymorphism
Lesson 6. Inheritance
Lesson 7. Legacy Elements
Lesson 8. Exceptions and Logging
Lesson 9. Maps and Equality
Lesson 10. Mathematics
Lesson 11. IO
Lesson 12. Reflection and Other Advanced Topics
Lesson 13. Multithreading
Lesson 14. Generics
Lesson 15. Assertions and Annotations
Additional Lesson - Swing, Part 1
Additional Lesson II. Swing, Part 2
Additional Lesson III. Java Miscellany
Appendix A: An Agile Java Glossary
Appendix B: Java Operator Precedence Rules
Appendix C: Getting Started with IDEA
Agile Java References
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