Home | Contact Us | FAQ | Search & Site Map | Link to Us
Sign In | Join | Other 45 Sites in Network
HomeAnnouncementsWhite Papers
Discussion GroupsFirst AidDatabasesJavaBeansGUIJava 3DVirtual MachineCORBASecurityToolsGeneral
Java DirectoryOpen Source ProjectsSample Book ChaptersUser GroupsWeb Resources
Related Topics
Databases.NETMore Topics ...

Java Forum / General / November 2005

Tip: Looking for answers? Try searching our database.

java books

Thread view: 
Tuurbo46 - 31 Oct 2005 20:50 GMT
Hi
  I have just started my final year as an undergraduate and im currently
struggling on our core Java programming module.  Please could somebody
advice me on a good book/ URL that has lots of examples and covers vectors,
hashsets, hashtables etc.....

Thanks Turbo
Ajay - 31 Oct 2005 20:59 GMT
http://www.codeguru.com/java/tij/
This is a free book which was of help when I started learning java...

But I would strongly recommend the official
java programming language third edition.. Its verbose but explicit and
easy to read..
Ajay - 31 Oct 2005 21:00 GMT
http://javaalmanac.com/
This is a good source for examples.
Tuurbo46 - 31 Oct 2005 21:15 GMT
> http://javaalmanac.com/
> This is a good source for examples.
TechBookReport - 31 Oct 2005 23:36 GMT
> Hi
>    I have just started my final year as an undergraduate and im currently
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
>
> Thanks Turbo

Take a look at the recommendations on
http://www.techbookreport.com/JavaIndex.html.

Most of the recommended titles cover the Java collections. If you're
interested in the underlying algorithms of vecrtors, hash tables and so on,
(rather than in how to use them), then take a look at something like 'Data
Structures With Java' (http://www.techbookreport.com/tbr0056.html).
zero - 01 Nov 2005 20:21 GMT
> Take a look at the recommendations on
> http://www.techbookreport.com/JavaIndex.html.

that list seems a bit outdated
TechBookReport - 02 Nov 2005 10:59 GMT
>>Take a look at the recommendations on
>>http://www.techbookreport.com/JavaIndex.html.
>
> that list seems a bit outdated
If you look at the list of reviews you'll see that there are lots of new
titles being reviewed. However, the list of recommendations includes the
books that are considered the best rather than the most recent.

What titles would you recommend?

Signature

TechBookReport Java book reviews
http://www.techbookreport.com/JavaIndex.html

zero - 02 Nov 2005 13:31 GMT
TechBookReport <tbr@nospam.nos> wrote in news:YsKdndC0L-
ONE_XeRVnyhQ@pipex.net:

>>>Take a look at the recommendations on
>>>http://www.techbookreport.com/JavaIndex.html.
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>
> What titles would you recommend?

Well the one that caught my eye was Java How To Program by Deitel.  An
excellent book that will bring an absolute beginner into the OO and Java
world.  But this site mentions the 5th edition, which covers Java 1.4.2.  
To learn Java 1.5, you need the 6th edition, which has been available for
several months now.

The same with Ivor Horton's Beginning Java 2, the site mentions the SDK
1.4.2 edition.  I think 1.5 has enough new features to warrant a review of
the new edition.

That being said, the list does give some good reviews, and I'm sure any
smart reader will find the new editions and understand that, if the
previous edition was good, the new one can't be all bad.


Free Magazines

Get these publications absolutely FREE for up to 12 months. There are no hidden fees and no obligation. Simply choose a title, complete the application form and submit it. Read more ...

Oracle MagazineNetwork ComputingComputer WorldBio-IT WorldeWeekInformation WeekInfosecurity
 
Sign In
Join
My Latest Posts
My Monitored Threads
My Blog
My Photo Gallery
My Profile
My Homepage

Start New Thread
Enable EMail Alerts
Rate this Thread



©2009 Advenet LLC   Privacy Policy - Terms of Use
This website includes both content owned or controlled by Advenet as well as content owned or controlled by third parties.