Patterns Books
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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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PHP 5 Objects, Patterns, and Practice
Published 16 years ago includes sample chapter
by Matt Zandstra, Apress
...if you have seen true object-oriented development, and have had trouble using these concepts in PHP; don't despair any longer. Matt (Zandstra) has done all the work for you--all you need is a weekend or two to do a little reading. While being an easy read, Zandstra's introduction to the object-oriented features is, I believe, perfectly adequate to get started with object-oriented PHP programming.
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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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Developing Application Frameworks in .NET
Published 16 years ago includes sample chapter
by Xin Chen, Apress
Application frameworks, which provide a base of common services on which applications are built, offer the benefits of extensibility, modularity, and reusability of both code and design to your applications. This book explains what frameworks are and how they fit into applications, and offers many object-oriented techniques used in application frameworks.
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Pro Jakarta Commons
Published 17 years ago includes sample chapter
by Harshad Oak, Apress, Apress
The author does a great job of surveying the Jakarta Commons components and showing how each solves real problems. An enjoyable read with lots of easy to understand examples. — Floyd Marinescu, creator of TheServerSide.com and author of EJB Design Patterns Jakarta Commons are easily reusable components that can quickly be put to good use in any server-side Java development undertaking. In fact, components are not big applications, but sleek code bits that perform specific tasks very well.
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Pro JMX: Java Management Extensions
Published 17 years ago includes sample chapter
by J. Jeffrey Hanson, Jeff Hanson, Apress
...grab a copy of Pro JMX at your local bookstore and stick yourself deep into your La-Z-Boy for a relaxing reading experience. — Valentin Crettaz, Val's Blog Get ready to plunge into the complete world of JMX architecture&emdash;including the release of JMX Remoting 1.2! Pro JMX: Java Management Extensions features cutting-edge examples of JMX integration with distributed applications, including sequence diagrams and real-world sample code.
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Java Persistence for Relational Databases
Published 17 years ago includes sample chapter
by Richard Sperko, Apress
Java Persistence for Relational Databases is chock full of best practices and patterns, for those of you who want to connect to databases using Java! Coverage includes various database-related APIs for Java, like JDO, JDBC (including the newest 3.0 APIs), and CMP ("Container Managed Persistence" with EJB). All those things you developers have wanted to know&emdash;but were afraid to ask&emdash;are featured inside this book.
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Web Services Patterns: Java Edition
Published 17 years ago includes sample chapter
by Paul B. Monday, Apress
Web Service Patterns: Java Edition describes architectural patterns that can guide you through design patterns (service implementation and usage) and illustrates the different ways in which you can use web services. Author Paul Monday had two primary goals in writing this book: to show some interesting design patterns that are applicable to web services as well as the broader computing community and to give some hands-on experience using a web service environment.
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Bug Patterns In Java
Published 18 years ago includes sample chapter
by Eric Allen, Apress
Bug Patterns in Java presents a methodology for diagnosing and debugging computer programs. The act of debugging will be presented as an ideal application of the scientific method. Skill in this area is entirely independent of other programming skills, such as designing for extensibility and reuse. Nevertheless, it is seldom taught explicitly. Eric Allen lays out a theory of debugging, and how it relates to the rest of the development cycle.
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Software Development on a Leash
Published 18 years ago includes sample chapter
by David Birmingham, Valerie Haynes Perry, Apress
Suitable for any project manager or VB software professional willing to think outside the proverbial box, Software Development on a Leash presents some innovative ideas for building more flexible software based on patterns, and "best practices" for reusable component design illustrated in Visual Basic.This book's most salient feature is the authors' no-holds-barred attack on "traditional" ways of designing software.