Core Java
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Core Java
(Prentice Hall PTR core series)
Sun Microsystems Press , Prentice Hall, c2008
8th ed
- v. 1 : pbk
- v. 2 : pbk
- Other Title
-
Core Java : revised and updated for Java SE 6
Related Bibliography 1 items
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Core Java / Cay S. Horstmann, Gary Cornell
BB01036536
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Core Java / Cay S. Horstmann, Gary Cornell
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Note
Description based on 6th print. 2011
v. 1. Fundamentals -- v. 2. Advanced features
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
-
v. 1 : pbk ISBN 9780132354769
Description
This revised edition of the classic Core Java (TM), Volume I-Fundamentals, is the definitive guide to Java for serious programmers who want to put Java to work on real projects.
Fully updated for the new Java SE 6 platform, this no-nonsense tutorial and reliable reference illuminates the most important language and library features with thoroughly tested real-world examples. The example programs have been carefully crafted to be easy to understand as well as useful in practice, so you can rely on them as an outstanding starting point for your own code.
Volume I is designed to quickly bring you up to speed on what's new in Java SE 6 and to help you make the transition as efficiently as possible, whether you're upgrading from an earlier version of Java or migrating from another language. The authors concentrate on the fundamental concepts of the Java language, along with the basics of user-interface programming. You'll find detailed, insightful coverage of
Java fundamentals
Object-oriented programming
Interfaces and inner classes
Reflection and proxies
The event listener model
GUI programming with Swing
Packaging applications
Exception handling
Logging and debugging
Generic programming
The collections framework
Concurrency
For detailed coverage of XML processing, networking, databases, internationalization, security, advanced AWT/Swing, and other advanced features, look for the forthcoming eighth edition of Core Java (TM), Volume II-Advanced Features (ISBN: 978-0-13-235479-0).
Table of Contents
Preface xix
Acknowledgments xxv
Chapter 1: An Introduction to Java 1
Java As a Programming Platform 2
The Java "White Paper" Buzzwords 2
Java Applets and the Internet 7
A Short History of Java 9
Common Misconceptions about Java 11
Chapter 2: The Java Programming Environment 15
Installing the Java Development Kit 16
Choosing a Development Environment 21
Using the Command-Line Tools 22
Using an Integrated Development Environment 25
Running a Graphical Application 28
Building and Running Applets 31
Chapter 3: Fundamental Programming Structures in Java 35
A Simple Java Program 36
Comments 39
Data Types 40
Variables 44
Operators 46
Strings 53
Input and Output 63
Control Flow 71
Big Numbers 88
Arrays 90
Chapter 4: Objects and Classes 105
Introduction to Object-Oriented Programming 106
Using Predefined Classes 111
Defining Your Own Classes 122
Static Fields and Methods 132
Method Parameters 138
Object Construction 144
Packages 15
The Class Path 160
Documentation Comments 162
Class Design Hints 167
Chapter 5: Inheritance 171
Classes, Superclasses, and Subclasses 172
Object: The Cosmic Superclass 192
Generic Array Lists 204
Object Wrappers and Autoboxing 211
Methods with a Variable Number of Parameters 214
Enumeration Classes 215
Reflection 217
Design Hints for Inheritance 238
Chapter 6: Interfaces and Inner Classes 241
Interfaces 242
Object Cloning 249
Interfaces and Callbacks 255
Inner Classes 258
Proxies 275
Chapter 7: Graphics Programming 281
Introducing Swing 282
Creating a Frame 285
Positioning a Frame 288
Displaying Information in a Component 294
Working with 2D Shapes 299
Using Color 307
Using Special Fonts for Text 310
Displaying Images 318
Chapter 8: Event Handling 323
Basics of Event Handling 324
Actions 342
Mouse Events 349
The AWT Event Hierarchy 357
Chapter 9: User Interface Components with Swing 361
Swing and the Model-View-Controller Design Pattern 362
Introduction to Layout Management 368
Text Input 377
Choice Components 385
Menus 406
Sophisticated Layout Management 424
Dialog Boxes 452
Chapter 10: Deploying Applications and Applets 493
JAR Files 494
Java Web Start 501
Applets 516
Storage of Application Preferences 539
Chapter 11: Exceptions, Logging, Assertions, and Debugging 551
Dealing with Errors 552
Catching Exceptions 559
Tips for Using Exceptions 568
Using Assertions 571
Logging 575
Debugging Tips 591
Using a Debugger 607
Chapter 12: Generic Programming 613
Why Generic Programming? 614
Definition of a Simple Generic Class 616
Generic Methods 618
Bounds for Type Variables 619
Generic Code and the Virtual Machine 621
Restrictions and Limitations 626
Inheritance Rules for Generic Types 630
Wildcard Types 632
Reflection and Generics 640
Chapter 13: Collections 649
Collection Interfaces 650
Concrete Collections 658
The Collections Framework 689
Algorithms 700
Legacy Collections 707
Chapter 14: Multithreading 715
What Are Threads? 716
Interrupting Threads 728
Thread States 730
Thread Properties 733
Synchronization 736
Blocking Queues 764
Thread-Safe Collections 771
Callables and Futures 774
Executors 778
Synchronizers 785
Threads and Swing 794
Appendix 809
Index 813
- Volume
-
v. 2 : pbk ISBN 9780132354790
Description
The revised edition of the classic Core Java (TM), Volume II-Advanced Features, covers advanced user-interface programming and the enterprise features of the Java SE 6 platform. Like Volume I (which covers the core language and library features), this volume has been updated for Java SE 6 and new coverage is highlighted throughout. All sample programs have been carefully crafted to illustrate the latest programming techniques, displaying best-practices solutions to the types of real-world problems professional developers encounter.
Volume II includes new sections on the StAX API, JDBC 4, compiler API, scripting framework, splash screen and tray APIs, and many other Java SE 6 enhancements. In this book, the authors focus on the more advanced features of the Java language, including complete coverage of
Streams and Files
Networking
Database programming
XML
JNDI and LDAP
Internationalization
Advanced GUI components
Java 2D and advanced AWT
JavaBeans
Security
RMI and Web services
Collections
Annotations
Native methods
For thorough coverage of Java fundamentals-including interfaces and inner classes, GUI programming with Swing, exception handling, generics, collections, and concurrency-look for the eighth edition of Core Java (TM), Volume I-Fundamentals (ISBN: 978-0-13-235476-9).
Table of Contents
Preface xv
Acknowledgments xix
Chapter 1: Streams and Files 1
Streams 2
Text Input and Output 11
Reading and Writing Binary Data 23
ZIP Archives 32
Object Streams and Serialization 39
File Management 59
New I/O 65
Regular Expressions 75
Chapter 2: XML 87
Introducing XML 88
Parsing an XML Document 93
Validating XML Documents 105
Locating Information with XPath 129
Using Namespaces 136
Streaming Parsers 138
Generating XML Documents 146
XSL Transformations 157
Chapter 3: Networking 169
Connecting to a Server 170
Implementing Servers 177
Interruptible Sockets 184
Sending E-Mail 191
Making URL Connections 196
Chapter 4: Database Programming 217
The Design of JDBC 218
The Structured Query Language 222
JDBC Configuration 227
Executing SQL Statements 232
Query Execution 242
Scrollable and Updatable Result Sets 254
Row Sets 260
Metadata 263
Transactions 273
Connection Management in Web and Enterprise Applications 278
Introduction to LDAP 279
Chapter 5: Internationalization 297
Locales 298
Number Formats 303
Date and Time 310
Collation 318
Message Formatting 324
Text Files and Character Sets 328
Resource Bundles 329
A Complete Example 333
Chapter 6: Advanced Swing 351
Lists 352
Tables 370
Trees 405
Text Components 442
Progress Indicators 479
Component Organizers 492
Chapter 7: Advanced AWT 521
The Rendering Pipeline 522
Shapes 524
Areas 540
Strokes 542
Paint 550
Coordinate Transformations 552
Clipping 557
Transparency and Composition 559
Rendering Hints 568
Readers and Writers for Images 575
Image Manipulation 585
Printing 601
The Clipboard 635
Drag and Drop 652
Platform Integration 668
Chapter 8: Javabeans Components 685
Why Beans? 686
The Bean-Writing Process 688
Using Beans to Build an Application 690
Naming Patterns for Bean Properties and Events 698
Bean Property Types 701
BeanInfo Classes 710
Property Editors 713
Customizers 723
JavaBeans Persistence 732
Chapter 9: Security 755
Class Loaders 756
Bytecode Verification 767
Security Managers and Permissions 771
User Authentication 790
Digital Signatures 805
Code Signing 822
Encryption 828
Chapter 10: Distributed Objects 841
The Roles of Client and Server 842
Remote Method Calls 845
The RMI Programming Model 846
Parameters and Return Values in Remote Methods 856
Remote Object Activation 865
Web Services and JAX-WS 871
Chapter 11: Scripting, Compiling, and Annotation Processing 883
Scripting for the Java Platform 884
The Compiler API 895
Using Annotations 905
Annotation Syntax 911
Standard Annotations 915
Source-Level Annotation Processing 919
Bytecode Engineering 926
Chapter 12: Native Methods 935
Calling a C Function from a Java Program 936
Numeric Parameters and Return Values 942
String Parameters 944
Accessing Fields 950
Encoding Signatures 954
Calling Java Methods 956
Accessing Array Elements 962
Handling Errors 966
Using the Invocation API 970
A Complete Example: Accessing the Windows Registry 975
Index 991
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