Thursday, June 4, 2009

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JDBC API Tutorial and Reference, Third Edition

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The JDBC(TM) API makes it possible to access databases and other data sources from the Java(TM) programming language. This book, which updates and expands previous editions, presents the definitive description of the complete JDBC(TM) 3.0 API. The 3.0 version of the JDBC API incorporates all previous versions and adds new features to round out the technology.

Containing in-depth explanations that go beyond the specification, this third edition is a complete resource that pairs a step-by-step tutorial with a comprehensive reference to all of the JDBC classes and interfaces.

For those new to Java technology, the book includes an introduction to the Java programming language and to SQL. It builds on this basic knowledge to walk you through creating a JDBC application--from setting up a database and establishing a connection to retrieving values from result sets and using prepared statements. In addition, the authors provide many examples along the way that demonstrate how to execute common tasks. It then proceeds to more advanced topics, such as using scrollable and updatable result sets, batch updates, SQL99 data types, custom mapping, pooled connections, distributed transactions, pooled statements, automatically generated keys, savepoints, and more.

You will also find thorough but easy-to-follow explanations of the JDBC metadata interfaces. Example code demonstrates how to use these interfaces to get information about databases, result sets, and parameters to stored procedures.

As a bonus, the book includes a preview of the upcoming standard implementations of rowsets, the technology that lets you handle data from any tabular data source as a JavaBeans(TM) component.

From Array to XADataSource, a useful alphabectical reference provides concise but complete information on every class and interface in the JDBC API. Each entry includes an overview of how the class or interface is used plus a full explanation of its methods and fields.

Other valuable features are a chapter on the mapping between SQL types and types in the Java programming language, an appendix for driver writers, an appendix summarizing the API added in each version of the JDBC API, a glossary, and an index.

Maydene Fisher is a technical writer specializing in object-oriented programming languages. A native of San Jose, California, she has worked on both coasts, documenting complex financial models on Wall Street and various Java technologies in Silicon Valley. Jon Ellis, who has worked with databases for ten years, is the architect for the JDBC 3.0 specification. Currently based in Tokyo, Japan, he is leading several Java Community Process specifications in the wireless space. Jonathan Bruce, a transplant from Ireland, where he worked on the JNDI API, is now based in Santa Clara, California. In addition to working on the JDBC 3.0 API, he has contributed to developing the subset of the JDBC API for mobile devices and the standard implementations for rowsets.


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