Wicket in Action | 
enlarge | Authors: Martijn Dashorst, Eelco Hillenius Publisher: Manning Publications Category: Book
List Price: $44.99 Buy New: $24.98 You Save: $20.01 (44%)
New (36) Used (5) from $24.98
Avg. Customer Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 81555
Format: Illustrated Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 392 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 7.4 x 1
ISBN: 1932394982 Dewey Decimal Number: 005.17 EAN: 9781932394986 ASIN: 1932394982
Publication Date: September 15, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: All orders ship same business day via standard shipping (USPS Media Mail) if received by 1 PM CST.
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Product Description There are dozens of Java frameworks out there, but most of them require you to learn special coding techniques and new, often rigid, patterns of development. Wicket is different. As a component-based Web application framework, Wicket lets you build maintainable enterprise-grade web applications using the power of plain old Java objects (POJOs), HTML, Ajax, Spring, Hibernate and Maven. Wicket automatically manages state at the component level, which means no more awkward HTTPSession objects. Its elegant programming model enables you to write rich web applications quickly. Wicket in Action is an authoritative, comprehensive guide for Java developers building Wicket-based Web applications. This book starts with an introduction to Wicket's structure and components, and moves quickly into examples of Wicket at work. Written by two of the project's earliest and most authoritative experts, this book shows you both the "how-to" and the "why" of Wicket. As you move through the book, you'll learn to use and customize Wicket components, how to interact with other technologies like Spring and Hibernate, and how to build rich, Ajax-driven features into your applications.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 2 more reviews...
Intuitive, concise, and practical November 28, 2008 This is the first programming book that I can remember since the old Windows Programming book by Charles Petzold that really was a satisfying read. Its probably not as polished as some books but it makes up for that in its concise and effective style that is extremely rare in Java programming books. I'm looking forward to applying everything I have learned. Go Wicket!
Must have reference for wicket developer October 30, 2008 There is already a lot of appreciation of the book, don't have much to say here
A great informative and technical book October 19, 2008 I have been developing with Wicket for a year or so. When I started working with Wicket I didn't have a good book as a reference. The community is very helpful in this case. In the mailing list you can sometimes see the two writers of this book. Their responses are very helpful. And so is the book. The book covers a lot of theoretical Wicket stuff, which I think is very useful if one wants to understand it better. The book is great for a newcomer as well. Just follow the examples and you'll understand Wicket. I found the book very useful to me, an intermediate / expert Wicket developer. Each time I read a few pages or a chapter, I learn something new. I recommend this book to anyone that uses Wicket or plan to use it.
Well layed out, well thought out and concise October 13, 2008 As the Manning publications book Wicket in Action is soon to hit the shelf of your local book store, I was granted the opportunity of a sneak preview. Now, I'm not a person with a lot of spare time on my hands these days but I felt an obligation to give this book a serious read because A) Wicket is an excellent framework for building web applications B) The people who wrote this book are extremely helpful on the mailing list and irc channel and I wanted to know if their talents translated well to book writing. I'm happy to report it has, in spades.... [...]
Great indepth book about a great technology October 2, 2008 I already bought this book before it was released. I love wicket and this book sure makes it easier to work with Wicket. It gives you a great in depth view on how wicket works. Adding more and more complexity in all the different chapters.
A needed read for anyone who wants to get the most out of Wicket.
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