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Expert One-on-One J2EE Design and Development
 
 

Expert One-on-One J2EE Design and Development (Paperback)

by Rod Johnson (Author) "I believe that J2EE is the best platform available for enterprise software development today ..." (more)
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 71.99
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Product Details


Product Description

Product Description

What is this book about?

The results of using J2EE in practice are often disappointing: applications are often slow, unduly complex, and take too long to develop. Rod Johnson believes that the problem lies not in J2EE itself, but in that it is often used badly. Many J2EE publications advocate approaches that, while fine in theory, often fail in reality, or deliver no real business value.

Expert One-on-One: J2EE Design and Development aims to demystify J2EE development. Using a practical focus, it shows how to use J2EE technologies to reduce, rather than increase, complexity. Rod draws on his experience of designing successful high-volume J2EE applications and salvaging failing projects, as well as intimate knowledge of the J2EE specifications, to offer a real-world, how-to guide on how you too can make J2EE work in practice.

It will help you to solve common problems with J2EE and avoid the expensive mistakes often made in J2EE projects. It will guide you through the complexity of the J2EE services and APIs to enable you to build the simplest possible solution, on time and on budget. Rod takes a practical, pragmatic approach, questioning J2EE orthodoxy where it has failed to deliver results in practice and instead suggesting effective, proven approaches.

What does this book cover?

In this book, you will learn

  • When to use a distributed architecture
  • When and how to use EJB
  • How to develop an efficient data access strategy
  • How to design a clean and maintainable web interface
  • How to design J2EE applications for performance

Who is this book for?

This book would be of value to most enterprise developers. Although some of the discussion (for example, on performance and scalability) would be most relevant to architects and lead developers, the practical focus would make it useful to anyone with some familiarity with J2EE. Because of the complete design-deployment coverage, a less advanced developer could work through the book along with a more introductory text, and successfully build and understand the sample application. This comprehensive coverage would also be useful to developers in smaller organisations, who might be called upon to fill several normally distinct roles.

What is special about this book?

Wondering what differentiates this book from others like it in the market? Take a look:

  • It does not just discuss technology, but stress its practical application. The book is driven from the need to solve common tasks, rather than by the elements of J2EE.
  • It discuss risks in J2EE development
  • It takes the reader through the entire design, development and build process of a non-trivial application. This wouldn't be compressed into one or two chapters, like the Java Pet Store, but would be a realistic example comparable to the complexity of applications readers would need to build.
  • At each point in the design, alternative choices would be discussed. This would be important both where there's a real problem with the obvious alternative, and where the obvious alternatives are perhaps equally valid.
  • It emphasizes the use of OO design and design patterns in J2EE, without becoming a theoretical book


From the Publisher

It does not just discuss technology, but stress its practical application. The book is driven from the need to solve common tasks, rather than by the elements of J2EE.

It discuss risks in J2EE development
It takes the reader through the entire design, development and build process of a non-trivial application. This wouldn't be compressed into one or two chapters, like the Java Pet Store, but would be a realistic example comparable to the complexity of applications readers would need to build
At each point in the design, alternative choices would be discussed. This would be important both where there's a real problem with the obvious alternative, and where the obvious alternatives are perhaps equally valid
It emphasizes the use of OO design and design patterns in J2EE, without becoming a theoretical book --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
I believe that J2EE is the best platform available for enterprise software development today. Read the first page
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Concordance
Browse Sample Pages
Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Expert One-on-One J2EE Design and Development
52% buy the item featured on this page:
Expert One-on-One J2EE Design and Development 4.9 out of 5 stars (23)
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Customer Reviews

23 Reviews
5 star:
 (21)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.9 out of 5 stars (23 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
5.0 out of 5 stars A must read for J2EE Developers, and Solution Architects, Jul 17 2004
By Edmon Begoli (Knoxville, TN United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This is the one if not the only book on the market that can truly serve you as a comprehensive manual for J2EE solution architectures. Every line in this book is worth of gold. It personally helped me justify, reinforce, discover or solidify some very important architectural desicions in my practice.
For instance there is a whole section on presentation tier technology choices. That section covers all of the popular frameworks and technologies (JSP, Struts, XSLT,...).
Each technology is described in terms of what it is, and what are its benefits and drawbacks. Then there is a very good code samples section. Author uses one application throughout the book, and then implements it using various technologies.
Moreover, he suggests you when does it make sense, and when does it not to implement the technology as a solution. It is amazing how much wisdom is built into this book.

Of course some of the APIs covered in the book will be outdated (EJB 2.1), but that does not bother me much. The wisdom is what matters.

Writing in general is very thorough, very practical and reinforced with some very strong real life examples.
Author obviously posseses the maturity and experience that
is so rare to find.
It is a great professional resource, and career builder.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Just buy it, Jul 9 2004
By Scuba Steve (Reston, VA, USA) - See all my reviews
Rod Johnson is one of the few technical authors with whom I can almost never disagree. A quick read indicates clearly that his technical insight, which ranges from architectural to low-level coding best practices, are not born of some academic exercise...they are the fruit of actual production J2EE experience...not an academic blueprint. At times, I felt like I was reading my own words. Over the years, I began to wonder if I was the only J2EE developer who was not "drinking all the kool aid." My experience with over a dozen high-volume production applications moved me away from the pure party line. Now, I realize that my religion has a leader. Don't get me wrong, I learned a significant amount from this book. Rod's experience is daunting and even an experienced J2EE developer will glean countless insights from this well-written text.

So what's not to like? Well, frankly, I was disappointed that security got the same level as attention in this book as it does in most - especially since there has yet to be an excellent J2EE text produced on the topic. While I didn't expect Rod to write the definitive tome on authentication and authorization, I expected more than two pages with a collection of URLs for more info. In fact, I loved the fact that he led off the text with testing and was shocked that he didn't follow immediately with security - another system aspect that is frequently relegated to the margins...and often implemented poorly. So how does that influence my review? Well, on Amazon's five star scale, I am taking away one star....but I also started by awarding him ten stars for the rest of the text.

final static int MAX_RATING = 5;

final int rating = Math.min(MAX_RATING, (10-1));

if (rating == 5) {

   you.buyNow();

}

Rock on Rod. Can't wait for the "Developing without EJBs" text.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Insightful in many ways, but left me hanging, May 27 2004
By Melvin (Wynnewood, PA United States) - See all my reviews
There's no doubt that Rod knows what he's talking about. Much of the book contained best practices that were incredibly valuable, and he seemed to have a focused direction that he wanted to take us in - not just re-hash the J2EE specification.

However, I felt like was left hanging at the end of the book. He talks about a sample application throughout his discussions on design and the source code for the application is available from wrox's (the publisher) website. But after downloading and compiling the application, I discovered that most of the web tier was left incomplete. Apparently, he leaves us to make our own decision about implementing the web-tier, but it would be nice to see at least one option illustrated completely.

All that talk about this sample application and I couldn't even run it and play with it to reinforce what I learned.

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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars I agree with all the other 5-star reviews
This is one of the best technical books I've ever read, regardless of topic. Johnson has an amazing technical mind and is a great writer, to boot. Read more
Published on May 15 2004 by Michael A. Thomas

5.0 out of 5 stars Great Book
Great discussion of J2EE design and development. This is not a beginners book. It has a lot of great material on the pitfalls of J2EE development and how to avoid the traps... Read more
Published on May 2 2004

5.0 out of 5 stars Simply Amazing
Even though this book is named "J2EE design and development", it seems to be much more than that. Read more
Published on Jul 31 2003 by synaxent

5.0 out of 5 stars Invaluable resource for any serious user of J2EE
When I first heard about my coworkers talking about this book, I thought "oh great, another J2EE book! Read more
Published on Jul 25 2003 by John D

5.0 out of 5 stars The Best book for J2EE app development
I chose this book because it was the No.1 best-selling book at amazon and I was not disappointed. In fact, this is one of the best architecture cum programming books I've read... Read more
Published on Jul 10 2003 by David Wong

5.0 out of 5 stars The best value for a book: EXPERT EXPERIENCE!!
I have a lot of books, this is the best book I had never. This book is not a theorical book, no, it offers a lot of experience tips and definitions that can convert you to a true... Read more
Published on May 15 2003

5.0 out of 5 stars The best value for a book: EXPERT EXPERIENCE!!
I have a lot of books and it is the best book I had never. This book is not theorical, no, it offers lots of experience, tips and definitions that can convert you to a true j2EE... Read more
Published on May 15 2003 by LUIS LOPEZ PEIRO

5.0 out of 5 stars By far the best J2EE book
It's not an average J2EE book . Rod discussed a lot of framework design issues. He also criticized some J2EE flaws and told us how to avoid them. Read more
Published on April 24 2003 by Huang Teng Shiu

4.0 out of 5 stars Great book - but Rod's own framework?
This is a great book - by far the best J2EE design book I have read to date. Approximately the first half of the book contains not just the HOW, but the WHY of J2EE design - this... Read more
Published on Mar 31 2003 by Matt Etheridge

5.0 out of 5 stars Not you average J2EE book
I would rank this book with a select few of the many Java books I have read over the last 5 years. Rod does a unique job of presenting an opiniated view of many J2EE technologies... Read more
Published on Jan 17 2003

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