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Paperback Beginning Hibernate: From Novice to Professional Book

ISBN: 1590596935

ISBN13: 9781590596937

Beginning Hibernate: From Novice to Professional

"Beginning Hibernate" is ideal if you're experienced in Java with databases (the traditional, or connected, approach), but are new to open source lightweight Hibernatethe most popular de facto... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

$5.89
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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Great all around Hibernate book

Using this book, I was able to get up and running pretty fast. A very hand section in the back is called "Limitations of Hibernate" that give you a good approach for a few oddball issues I have not found a clear answer for on the internet. For example, aggregating seconds when diffing an end/start date. I recommend this book over the O'Reilly "Programming Hibernete" book.

A Solid "Intermediate" Book

This book is a good book on Hibernate, but not for the complete beginner, ss the title suggests. The book moves quickly into advanced topics, introducing DAOs a little too early for a beginner, as another review has said. I think a total beginner might be frustrated with this book, or so some have complained. I think this book is more focussed on people who are beginning Hibernate, but have a good deal of experience working with other databases or database frameworks. If you're used Toplink, worked heavily with DAOs, did alot of CMP mapping, or have a good deal of JDBC or database programming experience, then this is the right book for you to pick up in order to jump into Hibernate. It's a perfect fit for that type of professional. For someone a little less familiar with database persistence technologies, Hibernate: A Developer's Notebook, or Hibernate Made Easy: Simplified Data Persistence with Hibernate and JPA (Java Persistence API) Annotations might be a better fit.

A bad name for a really good book

I found this book to be really well organized and methodical, starting with the basics of Hibernate and working up to more complex aspects and features in a gradual, measured fashion. My only prior exposure to a book on Hibernate was Hibernate: A Developer's Notebook; it was short and sweet, and of necessity was kind of lightweight, not sufficient for really getting into Hibernate deeply. I looked at Java Persistence with Hibernate but found it kind of baroque. Although that seems to be the most popular book on the subject, I found its approach not especially conducive to learning the subject matter. My background is that I am an experienced Java/J2EE programmer with a strong database background. My organization has been making use of Hibernate but others in my group have been the ones really blazing the trails. So I'd been exposed to Hibernate usage, I could "get" a good portion of what's going on under the hood, but I required better and deeper understanding if I wanted to work more intimately with our lower-level "DAO" code. Most complaints I'm seeing here seem to be saying that this book is not for beginners. First, I would question what kind of "beginners" we are talking about--would a novice Web designer who can use design tools but doesn't know HTML, or a PHP programmer who doesn't know Java or J2EE or enterprise design patterns, find this book useful and readable? I don't think so. So I would have to agree, this is not a book for that kind of "beginner". But this is an indictment of the title, not of the book itself. This IS a book that starts at the beginning and works its way up to rather advanced stuff in what I thought was a well-organized manner. The material in later chapters requires background and experience with other aspects of Java and database technology, including understanding of annotations, abstract query language concepts, etc. For a lighter-weight introduction to Hibernate I might recommend Hibernate: A Developer's Notebook, but if you are really looking to get into the trenches and dig deep, I found this book to be excellent. I've been told that other APress books named "Beginning XXXXX" are mis-titled, that the "Beginning" title really isn't appropriate and really doesn't do the book(s) justice. So be aware that these are books that start at the "beginning" but that doesn't mean they're necessarily appropriate for total neophytes in related technologies.

Great book for learning Hibernate

It's an excelent book, as the name states it's for beginners, full of examples and nicely explained. A must read for anyone wanting to include Hibernate as persistence engine in his/her projects.

THE BEST YET

I bought Hibernate in Action a few months ago (claims to be the Hibernate Bible by some folks). Well it's a good book, but many details and tricky stuff were left out. I had some problems finding useful information from that book. Beginning Hibernate offers MANY MANY more tips. Its written style is consice and to the point. I actually found 2 solutions to the problems I encountered on my first Hibernate project. Very clear explanation on association, class mappings, HQL and Annotations. Definitely recommended to beginners (such as me) and veterans!
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