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Oracle JDeveloper 10g Handbook

Oracle JDeveloper 10g Handbook at Amazon.com


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ISBN: 0072255838 - Oracle JDeveloper 10g Handbook  
Title:Oracle JDeveloper 10g Handbook
Author:Avrom Roy-Faderman
Peter Koletzke
Paul Dorsey
Publisher:McGraw-Hill Osborne Media
Type:Book / Paperback
Publication Date:27 July, 2004
ISBN / ISBN-13:0072255838  /  9780072255836
List Price:$62.99
You Save:$23.31
Amazon Price:$39.68

*  This book is also available, brand-new, from 3rd-party marketplace sellers at Amazon.com, from $23.88.



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Editorial Review / Publisher's Information:

Product Description
Write code using JDeveloper with help from this definitive guidebook from Oracle Press. Learn to leverage J2EE technology the Oracle way--without the need for lots of existing programming knowledge. Get a complete overview of JDeveloper and understand the internals of ADF Business components. Take advantage of end-to-end support for modeling, developing, debugging, optimizing, and deploying web services and Java applications. Plus, download the book’s source code for easy application development

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Customer Reviews:

 • Solid Coverage Of Oracle Backend Technologies.
07 January, 2006

This book was exactly what I needed. I had been struggling for a couple of months to learn all of the pieces needed to build a business application using JDeveloper. I have some Java experience but not a strong J2EE background. There are plenty of resources around that cover XML, Java, JSP/Servlets and non-Oracle frameworks like Struts, Spring and JavaServer Faces (JSF). Don't expect to learn about those things here. But if you are trying to wrap your head around Oracle's Application Development Framework (ADF), this is the place for you. It's the best single source I've seen for that topic. There is a lot of information on the Oracle Technology Network (OTN), but it's scattered and isn't wrapped in a sequential story the way this book's presentation is. Most of ADF Business Component structure has been stable for a couple of years, so the fact that this book is a bit dated doesn't get in the way. What's missing because of the publication date is coverage of JDeveloper's extensive integration of JSF within ADF. Oracle has set their stake in the ground with JSF as the web client technology, and their ADF Business Components as the backend. It's an elegant combination. This book will give you excellent insight into the backend technologies. The wait is on for similar coverage of the frontend.

- Amazon Customer Review

 • The Best Book For Learning And Understanding Oracle10g Jdeveloper
14 June, 2006

This latest edition for Oracle10g JDeveloper builds on the success of the previous 9i version. As with the previous version, each chapter is well organized with thorough and accurate examples. Well thought-out attention has been given to explaining Oracle's Application Development Framework (ADF). The authors also go into great depth in explaining how to use the newly improved modeling capabilities of 10g JDeveloper (both their strengths and weaknesses). In short, this book as been well received by myself and colleagues I work with and would highly recommend it to anyone getting started in developing Oracle based applications with JDeveloper. I have found no better resource and tutorial for understanding ADF. Regards, -- jeff --------------------------------------- Jeffrey Hunter, OCP Senior Database Administrator http://www.idevelopment.info ---------------------------------------

- Amazon Customer Review

 • Oracle 10g Jdeveloper
03 October, 2008

I have started reading the book i ordered it is fantastic, it helps me to improve myself in office professinal work,pleas let me know more about this press releases...

- Amazon Customer Review

 • Oracle Jdeveloper 10g Handbook
27 February, 2006

it is wath i was looking for. Complete, simple and perfectly explaned; in one word perfect.

- Amazon Customer Review

 • Book Reading Flow Is Choppy; Clearly Written By Multiple Writers, Unfortunately.
20 June, 2007

Whereas this book may have information throughout, that is not what makes good instruction. Some may argue that if you know "XYZ", "ABC", and "concept A" and "concept B", that this book is good. But one should not have to fight to learn when the concepts are not difficult. Briefly -- using the examples as given will still bring up errors when trying to run the examples on some people's systems [I found others with the issues I had in the Oracle forums, and was able to fix them; "luckily" for me, the examples that didn't work for me were the same as a number of others, so I didn't have to look far]. As an example of the flow in the book, in the beginning of chapter 8 [which is the beginning of Part II], it essentially summarizes where you are at; it mentions that you've gone through Chapters 1-4, and then it immediately states what is now coming in Part II [not mentioning chapters 5-7, as if the author didn't even know they were there], and then what happens in Part III. It's as if when one of the three writers wrote the beginning of Part II, they weren't aware that there would be three other chapters in Part I. [and this makes sense, because chapter 5 is very much out of place in where it is. Most people already know the Java part of it anyway]. Also, BC4J is talked about much in the first few hundred pages of the book, but really the best explanation for it is on page 224, after you've seen BC4J referenced numerous times already. And I understand this sounds picky while reading one part described, when the biggest issue is that the flow is all over the place. One shouldn't have to figure out what the authors *meant* to be saying; the authors should say it. [and to reference this example further, the index lets you know you can find BC4J on pages 5, 6, and 109, but no mention of 224. If it did, you might see that the definition given on page 5 is different than the definition given on page 224, because the wording is different [one says BC4J is what came before ADF BC, another says it is just a different name for it]. Some people do not mind having to figure out what the writers were trying to describe, and for you folks, this may be good. But, if you don't like having to first interpret the book, then learn what you are trying to learn, this is just something to think about.

- Amazon Customer Review


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