J2EE Books
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Enterprise Java for SAP
Published 17 years ago includes sample chapter
by Austin Sincock, Apress
Enterprise Java for SAP is designed as an introduction to the Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition (J2EE) for the SAP developer. After providing a general introduction to Java, author Austin Sincock explores how to open the typically closed SAP environment to the world of Java. Utilizing SAP's latest Java connector, JCo, Sincock details an end-to-end web application that connects directly to SAP, including the deployment and implementation of both a web server and an external database.
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Pro Apache Tomcat 6
Published 13 years ago includes sample chapter
by Matthew Moodie, Kunal Mittal Ed., Apress
Pro Apache Tomcat 6 is ideal for Tomcat administrators and others who want to configure Tomcat. It covers only Tomcat 6 and doesn't get bogged down trying to overexplain tasks from each older version of the server. The book examines the entire installation, including file system, database, and web server, and provides you with security and performance tips.
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Foundations of JSP Design Patterns
Published 16 years ago includes sample chapter
by Andrew Patzer, Apress
...the pattern chapters have plenty of code that allows you to understand the pattern both by explanation and by example of a real application. — Tom Duff, Duffbert's Random Musings Foundations of JSP Design Patterns gives you the tools to build scalable enterprise applications using JSP.
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Practical JBoss Seam Projects
Published 13 years ago includes sample chapter
by Jim Farley, Apress
Practical JBoss® Seam Projects, written by renowned author and enterprise Java practitioner Jim Farley, is expected to be the first practical projects book of its kind on this groundbreaking open source lightweight JSF-EJB3 framework. Practical application scenarios are used to demonstrate the nature of the JBoss Seam framework, its efficacy, and its limitations. The series of scenarios and cases demonstrate key elements of the framework (e.g.
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Pro Java EE Spring Patterns: Best Practices and Design Strategies Implementing Java EE Patterns with the Spring Framewo
Published 12 years ago includes sample chapter
by Dhrubojyoti Kayal, Apress
“The Java™ landscape is littered with libraries, tools, and specifications. What’s been lacking is the expertise to fuse them into solutions to real–world problems. These patterns are the intellectual mortar for J2EE software construction.
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Beginning JBoss Seam: From Novice to Professional
Published 14 years ago includes sample chapter
by Joseph Faisal Nusairat, Apress
Reacting to the popularity of J2EE™ alternatives such as Ruby on Rails and the enterprise Spring Framework, Red Hat JBoss®, Inc. developed JBoss® Seam, a new open source lightweight Java™ EE 5-based contextual application development framework. Beginning JBoss® Seam: From Novice to Professional gets you started as the first book on this popular framework.
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The Definitive Guide to Terracotta: Cluster the JVM for Spring, Hibernate and POJO Scalability
Published 12 years ago includes sample chapter
by Terracotta Inc., Apress
Get the definitive guide on all the fundamentals of Terracotta as well as user secrets, recipes, and prepackaged frameworks. Written by Terracotta CTO Ari Zilka and his team, The Definitive Guide to Terracotta: Cluster the JVM for Spring, Hibernate and POJO Scalability covers the following: High Availability (HA) nth degree scaling and clustering for traditional J2EE and Java EE 5 applications (using Seam or other application) as well as Spring–based enterprise applications Everyday Terr
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Beginning Spring 2: From Novice to Professional
Published 13 years ago includes sample chapter
by Dave Minter, Apress
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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Beginning EJB 3 Application Development: From Novice to Professional
Published 14 years ago includes sample chapter
by Raghu R. Kodali, Jonathan R. Wetherbee, Peter Zadrozny, Apress
I found this book to be an excellent value. While it's an easy reading book it's also very complete and a very good start point in EJB3 development. — Jordi Domingo, Javalobby Contributor EJB 3.0 has made huge advances in ease of development, and its drastically simplified programming model has been widely acclaimed. Targeted at Java and J2EE developers both with and without prior EJB experience, Beginning EJB 3 Application Development takes readers through the details of the EJB 3.
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Professional Java, JDK 5 Edition
Published 16 years ago
by W. Clay Richardson, Donald Avondolio, Joe Vitale, Scot Schrager, Mark W. Mitchell, Jeff Scanlon, Wrox
Professional Java builds upon Ivor Horton's Beginning Java to provide the reader with an understanding of how professionals use Java to develop software solutions.