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Paperback More Java Pitfalls: 50 New Time-Saving Solutions and Workarounds Book

ISBN: 0471237515

ISBN13: 9780471237518

More Java Pitfalls: 50 New Time-Saving Solutions and Workarounds

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

Building on the success of Java Pitfalls (0-471-36174-7), this book provides more specific programming solutions to fifty difficult Java programming problems Shows experienced programmers how to identify and avoid weaknesses in Java and related J2EE technologies that can cause programs to go haywire Explores advanced topics including networking, XML and Java programming, and the Java Virtual Machine

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Good resource, very relevant to problem solving

This book is full of valuable information, and something that I believe I can use for my team of Java developers on our projects. I have enjoyed this entire book, but here are my comments on a few of my favorite "articles" from this book. #1 - When Runtime.exec() won't. An excellent 13 page discussion of how things can go wrong with the famous Runtime.exec(). There are so many ways to mess up when running OS processes from Java, and this article discusses most of them, and more importantly, the right way to go about using Runtime.exec(). #5 - Avoid Granularity Pitfalls in java.util.logging. This is a well-written discussion of the java.util.logging API, and helps programmers avoid using it in the wrong way. This is a good tutorial, but I really like the pictures that show the relationship between the logger and the handler - it is much easier for people to understand that way. #15 - Avoiding singleton pitfalls - This is a great discussion of how multiple "singletons" can happen in your VM, if you don't set them up the right way... My company has seen this happen a lot, but I have seen few discussions on it before this book. #24 - JSP design errors. This is something that I don't believe many other books talk about, and is very valuable. A lot of the JSPs that I have seen out there look bad, and this shows how they should be developed. The examples are good, and this is short and to the point and conveys the points well. #41 - The problem with multiple concurrent ResultSets. This shows an example of having 2 ResultSet objects open at the same time in an iteration, and showing the results in Sybase, Oracle, MySQL, Access, and SQLServer. It shows how, depending on the implementation of the driver & database, different behavior can be seen, and shows how to fix it. This is an excellent article - most examples I have seen before do not take the time to show behavior from multiple databases. These are only a few of the articles from this book. I like the book because it is full of self-contained articles that discuss aspects of the Java programming language that are tricky - or are often misunderstood and misused. I also like it because it covers performance, design, and in many cases, gives metrics. Some of the APIs discussed in the book I have not used yet (j2me, jaxrpc, jaxr), but probably will in the future. This is an extremely relevant resources. I can't say enough good things about this book. I give this an excellent rating, and recommend it highly.

A Top Shelf Java Resource

After reading this book, I am certain that it will serve as a tremendous resource to both the programmer and architect alike. Each pitfall gives the developer practical advise through the use of concise and effective examples. The architect receives accurate and honest tradeoffs and evaluations of all viable options to be considered, along with a valid recommendation and rationale. This book should serve as a "top shelf" reference for all developers who take seriously the business of crafting quality Java-based software solutions.

Like Everything but the title

This is a wonderful book, and I have already used it to fix problems. I highly recommend it. Like the source code, like the examples, and like the solutions.

Great book

This book is full of good Java programming tips. I thought the first "Java Pitfalls" was good, but I like how this one focused more on some of the specific APIs, such as Java Servlets, JDO, JAXR, and EJB stuff, etc. It also has some pretty good OO design advice. If you're stuck with a bad bug on your software project, there's a good bet that either "Java Pitfalls" or "More Java Pitfalls" will help you out.

Extremely Useful

This book is one of the best Java books I have picked up in some time. Many books these days are a regurgitation of web pages, JavaDocs, and the pages at Sun. Other books offer programming insight but are boring reading. This book is different. It is written well(humorous at times) and it is full of useful information that you can use on any Java project. Especially if you are a server-side developer, you will get a lot out of this.
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