Marketplace books
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Beginning Spring 2: From Novice to Professional (Beginning from Novice to Professional)
by Dave Minter
Spring has made a remarkable rise since its conception in 2002. Users find Spring the ideal framework to build their applications in J2EE environments. Beginning Spring 2 is the first and only Spring–authorized book that takes you through the first steps of using Spring, and requires no prior J2EE experience. It discusses relevant integrated technologies that you should be aware of, and illustrates how Spring makes using them easier.
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Building Spring 2 Enterprise Applications
by Interface21, Seth Ladd, Bram Smeets
Spring has made a remarkable rise in popularity since its conception in 2002. Many users have found the lightweight, open source Spring Framework 2.x ideal for building their applications in Java EE environments. Written by Interface21, Building Spring 2 Enterprise Applications will take developers through the following: Covers the first steps of using Spring while discussing the relevant technologies that Spring can be integrated with, what to be aware of, and how working with Spring makes the
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What is WebSphere? Java, J2EE, Portal and Beyond! (Demystifying IBM's Middle Tier Technology)
by Cameron W McKenzie
What is WebSphere? is the reference you need to start understanding, managing, and capitalizing on an IBM based, WebSphere infrastructure. As a developer, mentor and technical trainer, the author, Cameron McKenzie, has been preaching the virtues of WebSphere for years. However, in his sermons, the same questions keep coming up, over and over again. What is WebSphere? tackles those questions in a funny, informative and easy to understand manner.
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Core Servlets and Javaserver Pages: Advanced Technologies, Vol. 2 (2nd Edition) (Core Series)
by Marty Hall, Larry Brown, Yaakov Chaikin
Java EE is the technology of choice for e-commerce applications, interactive Web sites, and Web-enabled services. Servlet and JSP technology provides the link between Web clients and server-side applications on this platform. Core Servlets and JavaServer Pages, Volume 2: Advanced Technologies, Second Edition, is the definitive guide to the advanced features and capabilities provided by servlets and JSP.
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Java EE 5 Development using GlassFish Application Server: The complete guide to installing and configuring the GlassFish
by David Heffelfinger
This book is a Developer's Guide, covering the ins and outs of developing Java EE 5 applications deployed to the standards-compliant, high performance GlassFish application server. GlassFish is a free, open-source Java EE 5-compliant application server that is quickly gaining massive popularity. This book explains GlassFish installation and configuration, and then moves on to Java EE 5 application development, covering all major Java EE 5 APIs.
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Java Enterprise in a Nutshell (In a Nutshell (O'Reilly))
by Jim Farley, William Crawford, Prakash Malani, John Norman, Justin Gehtland
For the intermediate to advanced Java developer, Java Enterprise in a Nutshell shows how to work with all of today's relevant Java APIs. Plus, it's a topnotch reference for all enterprise classes. Part tutorial and part reference work that you can use everyday at your desk, this title is a worthwhile resource for any Java developer building Web or enterprise software. The practical, succinct focus here on actual Java enterprise APIs helps distinguish this text from the pack.
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Java(TM) Message Service API Tutorial and Reference: Messaging for the J2EE(TM) Platform (Java Series)
by Mark Hapner, Rich Burridge, Rahul Sharma, Joseph Fialli, Kim Haase
Aimed at the more experienced Java developer who needs to work with enterprise messaging, Java Message Service API Tutorial and Reference delivers starter code and a complete reference to all JMS classes that you will need to know to work effectively with this powerful feature of the J2EE platform. The no-nonsense, just-the-facts approach of this dual tutorial/reference is perhaps its salient feature.
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JBoss at Work: A Practical Guide
by Tom Marrs, Scott Davis
Consisting of a number of well-known open source products, JBoss is more a family of interrelated services than a single monolithic application. But, as with any tool that's as feature-rich as JBoss, there are number of pitfalls and complexities, too.
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JBoss: A Developer's Notebook (Developers Notebook)
by Norman Richards, Sam Griffith
There's nothing ordinary about JBoss. What began as an open source EJB container project six years ago has become a fully certified J2EE 1.4 application server with the largest market share, competitive with proprietary Java application servers in features and quality. And with its dynamic architecture, JBoss isn't just a J2EE server. You can alter the services to make J2EE work the way you want, or even throw J2EE away completely.
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Professional Java Development with the Spring Framework
by Rod Johnson, Juergen Hoeller, Alef Arendsen, Thomas Risberg, Colin Sampaleanu
The Spring Framework is a major open source application development framework that makes Java/J2EE(TM) development easier and more productive. This book shows you not only what Spring can do but why, explaining its functionality and motivation to help you use all parts of the framework to develop successful applications. You will be guided through all the Spring features and see how they form a coherent whole.