Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Tag:

Bitter Java

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Review
"!!!! Exceptional" -- Today's Books

"A superbly presented guide...an essential, core addition to the Java user's reference shelf collection." -- Wisconsin Bookwatch

"At last we have a book that tackles the problems rather than pretending there are none." -- CVu, the Journal of the ACCU

"Does a great job of articulating a philosophical foundation on which good architects and programmers can build." -- JavaPro Magazine

"It is the rare computer science book that truly captivates me....I just couldn't put Bitter Java down." -- Skip McCormick, co-author of Anti-patterns

"Packed with useful design tips and techniques for the serious Java server-side developer. . . . read it many times." -- VisualBuilder

"Save big bucks by reading this book instead of hiring a consultant." -- CompuNotes

"Will leave you with an instinctive sense for the antipatterns . . . so you can keep your Java brewing smooth and sweet." -- SitePoint Tech Times

Product Description
It is a well-known fact that most software projects fail. Drawing important lessons from failure is the goal of Bitter Java, a systematic account of common server-side Java programming mistakes, their causes and solutions. This book covers antipatterns for base Java and J2EE concepts such as Servlets, JSPs, EJBs, enterprise connection models, and scalability. It illustrates common pitfalls of Java programming through code examples and then presents re-factored code and explains why the new solutions are safe.

Written in an engaging style, this book begins each chapter with an extreme sports adventure gone wrong, and cunningly weaves the moral of the story into the discussion of Java development problems. Bitter Java begins with an overview of antipatterns and lays the foundation for server-side Java development. The author quickly builds momentum with a set of core server-side antipatterns for servlets and JSPs. He uses a bulletin board example to discuss common mistakes in basic server-side design, and iteratively refactors it until he reaches good design. By reusing this example, the author guides the reader through increasingly complex antipatterns of caching, database connections and EJBs. High-level discussions of programming hygiene and performance tuning, complete with related antipatterns, help to round out the coverage.

The intermediate developer is the intended reader of this book but developers at all levels will gain insight from the discussions of basic design patterns for Java JSP programming, round tripping, the perils of ignoring caching and connection pooling. More advanced topics such as performance tuning, EJB and XML are also included.
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