The Java(TM) Class Libraries, Volume 2: java.applet, java.awt, java.beans (2nd Edition) (Java Series) | 
enlarge | Authors: Patrick Chan, Rosanna Lee Publisher: Prentice Hall PTR Category: Book
List Price: $59.99 Buy Used: $0.74 You Save: $59.25 (99%)
New (7) Used (24) from $0.74
Avg. Customer Rating: 51 reviews Sales Rank: 916828
Media: Paperback Edition: 2 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 1712 Shipping Weight (lbs): 6.4 Dimensions (in): 9.6 x 7.8 x 2.1
ISBN: 0201310031 Dewey Decimal Number: 005.133 UPC: 785342310030 EAN: 9780201310030 ASIN: 0201310031
Publication Date: October 31, 1997 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Also Available In:
| • | Hardcover - The Java Class Libraries, Volume 1: java.io, java.lang, java.math, java.net, java.text, java.util (2nd Edition) | | • | Paperback - The Java(TM) Class Libraries: Supplement for the Java(TM) 2 Platform, v1.2; Parts A and B(Volume 1, Standard Edition) (Java Series) | | • | Paperback - The Java(TM) Class Libraries Poster, Enterprise Edition, v1.2 (Java Series) |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Review As noted by coauthor Patrick Chan in his interview with Amazon.com, programmers spend much of their time writing little programs that do nothing but explain to them the behavior of certain aspects of a language. Java programmers, working as they do with a relatively new, evolving language, spend more time than most writing experimental programs that help them figure out particular classes.With this book, Chan, Rosanna Lee, and Douglas Kramer attempt to save you the trouble of all that futzing around. Each class in the java.io.*, java.lang.*, java.lang.reflect.*, java.math.*, java.net.*, java.text.*, java.util.*, and java.util.zip.* packages gets explored thoroughly in these pages. In each entry you'll find not only the pedestrian inheritance chart and statement of syntax but a lengthy, lucid discussion of the class (or member), too. Best of all, each entry comes with a working example of how the class or member is used in real life. The authors, all affiliated with Sun Microsystems in Java's earliest days, know their stuff. They have created an omnibus tool that should prove immensely valuable to any Java programmer who wants to get the most out of the language. --David Wall
Product Description As the definitive reference to the Java 1.1.2 version class libraries from the creators of the Java technology at Sun, this book is an essential resource for both beginner and experienced Java programmers. This volume provides comprehensive reference documentation for the development of applets, user interfaces, and Java beans. The information is presented in an easy-to-use, dictionary-like format. The packages covered in Volume 2 are: java.applet, java.awt, java.awt.datatransfer, java.awt.event, java.awt.image, java.awt.peer, and java.beans. The extensive class and member descriptions contain details crucial for developing robust and professional applets and applications. Each description is supplemented by an example that demonstrates the class or member in a relevant context. The 20,000 lines of code in over 350 examples facilitate learning-by-example and provide useful code fragments for your projects. Each class description includes: a class hierarchy diagram showing its connection to related classes; a detailed overview describing its purpose and key concepts; a convenient member summary that briefly describes each member and arranges the members into related groups; an example demonstrating the class in a "real-world" context; and comprehensive descriptions and an example for each member.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 46 more reviews...
A must have book for the beginner August 27, 2003 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
The 1.st sentence of the preface says: "This book is intended as a reference rather than a tutorial". Well for an experienced Java programmer this is certainly true, but for a novice who has just grasped the fundamentals of the language and starts to write down his first lines of code this book is an excellent tutorial. Every class has a description and practically every method of every class has its example code where nearly every line is documented, with links to related methods. Looking into these examples one can quickly learn tips and tricks smoothing the learning curve a lot. The Chan's book is miles ahead, in my opinion, the unuseful example codes one can freely download from the Sun's internet pages, full of magic words comining from blue skyes not documented at all, where one has to figure out what any of them is useful for and where you are on your own. One more time: what I say is true for a novice; the senior Java programmer may feel at his ease with the API's documentation of the Sun's JDK. My last warning: since in Java things change often this kind of books goes into obsolescence quicky. For instance: my copy is the 5th edition (October 2001) and it lacks completely the new Collections class framework.
Great reference! July 12, 2003 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
This book really helps with a huge amount of information and examples for all of the classes in java.io, java.lang, java.math, java.text, and java.util. Wonderful reference book!
Gotta have it July 12, 2003 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
If your a Java 2 developer then you need this on your bookshelf. It contains an enormous amount of useful information, examples, etc. for all the classes in java.applet, java.awt, and java.beans. You gotta have it!
Wonderful! July 12, 2003 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is required on every Java developers bookshelf. It is a wonderful reference.
Nothing can describe Java classes better August 21, 2001 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I strongly recommend this book to all Java users of all levels because no other book describes all classes of java.lang, java.io, java.net, java.util, java.text and java.math packages better. Every class, every method and every exception is explained by very understandable language with good and useful examples. There is no Java language problem you cannot solve with this book.
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