J2EE Books
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J2EE FrontEnd Technologies: A Programmer's Guide to Servlets, JavaServer Pages, and JavaBeans
Published 19 years ago includes sample chapter
by Lennart Jorelid, Apress
J2EE FrontEnd Technologies: A Programmer's Guide to Servlets, JavaServer Pages, and Enterprise JavaBeans concisely and accurately describes what you need to know about effective enterprise development based on servlets, JSPs, and EJBs. Servlets, JSPs, and EJBs are the most important aspects of Java as it is used in the production of enterprise Web applications today.
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JBoss 3.2 Deployment and Administration
Published 17 years ago includes sample chapter
by Meeraj Kunnumpurath, Apress, Apress
Deploying J2EE applications and configuring the application server are some of the most tricky, non-standard elements of J2EE development. But JBoss 3.2 Deployment and Administration will help you navigate configurative, administrative, and deployment tasks on the Jboss application server. Meanwhile, JBoss is the leading open source J2EE application server. It was voted the JavaWorld 2002 Editor's Choice for Best Application Server.
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.NET Development for Java Programmers
Published 18 years ago includes sample chapter
by Paul Gibbons, Apress
Java developers have adapted to a world in which everything is an object, resources are reclaimed by a garbage collector, and multiple inheritance is replaced by interfaces. All of these things have prepared developers to thrive in Microsoft's new .NET environment using C#. Despite similarities between Java and C#, complex differences still lurk. This book will walk you through both language and library differences, to help you develop enterprise applications requiring mastery.
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Pro Apache Geronimo
Published 14 years ago includes sample chapter
by Kishore Kumar, Apress
Pro Apache Geronimo teaches you all about using Apache Geronimo, the open source lightweight J2EE/Java EE 5 web application server. Geronimos GBeans enable you to deploy sophisticated server-side enterprise Java applications and perform special enterprise-level Java development for transactional support.
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Oracle JDeveloper 10g: Empowering J2EE Development
Published 17 years ago includes sample chapter
by Harshad Oak, Apress
The age for using a simple text editor is long gone. The ever-growing complexity of Java and J2EE creates a need for Java development tools that offer more. If you want to be more productive with Java, you need a Java IDE. Oracle JDeveloper 10g is an IDE that enables you to develop Java applications with minimal effort. JDeveloper can do wonders for your Swing, JSP, Servlets, Struts, EJBs, and Web Services developments.
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Foundations of AOP for J2EE Development
Published 15 years ago includes sample chapter
by Lionel Seinturier, Renaud Pawlak, Apress
Foundations of AOP for J2EE Development covers a relatively new programming paradigm: aspect-oriented programming, or AOP. Presented are the core concepts of AOP: AspectJ 5, JBoss AOP, Spring AOP, and JAC. Specific features of these tools are compared. The book also explores the potential uses of AOP in everyday programming life, such as design patterns implementation, program testing, and application management.
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Pro Eclipse JST: Plug-ins for J2EE Development
Published 15 years ago includes sample chapter
by Christopher M. Judd, Hakeem Shittu, Apress
The open source Eclipse has proven to be a best-of-class, extensible application development framework. Out of the zip file, Eclipse offers many tools for developing Java applications including wizards, unit testing, debuggers, and editors. However, these tools do not support the development of enterprise applications. Up until this point, an enterprise developer using Eclipse had to spend a large amount of time locating and evaluating plug-ins to build a suite of enterprise tools.
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Enterprise Java Development on a Budget: Leveraging Java Open Source Technologies
Published 17 years ago includes sample chapter
by Brian Sam-Bodden, Christopher M. Judd, Apress
Developers in the J2EE space may feel that they've got a good handle on all the different open-source tools and utilities that are floating out there around on the Internet; I know I did. After reading just the first three chapters, it became (painfully) obvious that I was wrong. — Ted Neward, Author, Instructor, Editor-in-Chief of TheServerSide.NET Open source has had a profound effect on the Java community. Many Java open source projects have even become de-facto standards.
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Pro J2EE 1.4: From Professional to Expert
Published 16 years ago includes sample chapter
by Sue Spielman, Meeraj Kunnumpurath, Neil Ellis, James L. Weaver, Apress
Authors Spielman and Kunnumpurath have spent hours coding the new features of J2EE 1.4&emdash;so that you can catapult the examples into your own development projects without spinning extra cycles. This book will shape your understanding of intricate, complex J2EE 1.4 development. It is packed with real-world experience, best practices, and plenty of code, so you can move forward with your project, using the latest and greatest J2EE 1.4 functionality. Pro J2EE 1.
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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.