Expert One-on-One J2EE Development without EJB

Expert One-on-One J2EE Development without EJB
Authors
Rod Johnson, Juergen Hoeller
ISBN
0764558315
Published
21 Jun 2004
Purchase online
amazon.com

What is this book about? Expert One-on-One J2EE Development without EJB shows Java developers and architects how to build robust J2EE applications without having to use Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB). This practical, code-intensive guide provides best practices for using simpler and more effective methods and tools, including JavaServer pages, servlets, and lightweight frameworks. What does this book cover?

Page 2 of 2
  1. Editorial Reviews
  2. Customer Reviews

Customer Reviews

Russell J. Nile said
Author is very down-to-earth and practical. Not technology high on latest/greatest. Recognizes that we are building business solutions and not technology solutions.

R. W. Malan said
By now a classic, this book eloquently expressed how the Corba component design committees came up with an EJB specification that was not an ideal cornerstone for all J(2)EE applications. Although very fit for selected purposes the early EJB specs had to evolve to EJB 3 to really leverage the power of Java. Fundamentals of component based flexibility often lost on OO design are explained well, regardless of whether one decides to use Spring the alleviate the risks around it.

Tripurari Sharma said

bought this book long back,
kind of boarting book, nothing is writen very clearly,
AOP part is horrible, its so boaring whenever i try reading it
after reading one or two page i just fall to sleep,

Prasad Reddy said
This book introduces the Spring framework strategy as an alternative to J2EE which is GREAT. I noticed this book is far behind while comparing to the latest updates to Spring framework. Now, I am looking for updated code example and how-tos.

J. Li said
It does not fit for Software Engineer or Developer at all. EJB has bad performance though, it is a well-known fact, no need to say lots on the point. This book is like an advertisement for Spring Framework, but no directly and clear outline of Spring. From beginning to end, the book wrote lots verbose concepts about java, no real touch of authentic content. Although Rod is famous and experience on Java, this book might be an artitechure knowledge book, not good for level below intermedia java developers and SEs.

You might also like...

Comments

Contribute

Why not write for us? Or you could submit an event or a user group in your area. Alternatively just tell us what you think!

Our tools

We've got automatic conversion tools to convert C# to VB.NET, VB.NET to C#. Also you can compress javascript and compress css and generate sql connection strings.

“Weeks of coding can save you hours of planning.”