Editorial Review / Publisher's Information:
Product Description Raves for the First Edition!  âI sure wish I had this book ten years ago. Some might think that I donât need any Java books, but I need this one.â âJames Gosling, fellow and vice president, Sun Microsystems, Inc.  âAn excellent book, crammed with good advice on using the Java programming language and object-oriented programming in general.â âGilad Bracha, coauthor of The Java⢠Language Specification, Third Edition  â10/10âanyone aspiring to write good Java code that others will appreciate reading and maintaining should be required to own a copy of this book. This is one of those rare books where the information wonât become obsolete with subsequent releases of the JDK library.â âPeter Tran, bartender, JavaRanch.com  âThe best Java book yet written.... Really great; very readable and eminently useful. I canât say enough good things about this book. At JavaOne 2001, James Gosling said, âGo buy this book!â Iâm glad I did, and I couldnât agree more.â âKeith Edwards, senior member of research staff, Computer Science Lab at the Palo Alto Research Center (PARC), and author of Core JINI (Prentice Hall, 2000)  âThis is a truly excellent book done by the guy who designed several of the better recent Java platform APIs (including the Collections API).â âJames Clark, technical lead of the XML Working Group during the creation of the XML 1.0 Recommendation, editor of the XPath and XSLT Recommendations  âGreat content. Analogous to Scott Meyersâ classic Effective C++. If you know the basics of Java, this has to be your next book.â âGary K. Evans, OO mentor and consultant, Evanetics, Inc  âJosh Bloch gives great insight into best practices that really can only be discovered after years of study and experience.â âMark Mascolino, software engineer  âThis is a superb book. It clearly covers many of the language/platform subtleties and trickery you need to learn to become a real Java master.â âVictor Wiewiorowski, vice president development and code quality manager, ValueCommerce Co., Tokyo, Japan  âI like books that under-promise in their titles and over-deliver in their contents. This book has 57 items of programming advice that are well chosen. Each item reveals a clear, deep grasp of the language. Each one illustrates in simple, practical terms the limits of programming on intuition alone, or taking the most direct path to a solution without fully understanding what the language offers.â âMichael Ernest, Inkling Research, Inc.  âI donât find many programming books that make me want to read every pageâthis is one of them.â âMatt Tucker, chief technical officer, Jive Software  âGreat how-to resource for the experienced developer.â âJohn Zukowski, author of numerous Java technology books  âI picked this book up two weeks ago and can safely say I learned more about the Java language in three days of reading than I did in three months of study! An excellent book and a welcome addition to my Java library.â âJane Griscti, I/T advisory specialist Are you looking for a deeper understanding of the Java⢠programming language so that you can write code that is clearer, more correct, more robust, and more reusable? Look no further! Effective Javaâ˘, Second Edition, brings together seventy-eight indispensable programmerâs rules of thumb: working, best-practice solutions for the programming challenges you encounter every day.  This highly anticipated new edition of the classic, Jolt Award-winning work has been thoroughly updated to cover Java SE 5 and Java SE 6 features introduced since the first edition. Bloch explores new design patterns and language idioms, showing you how to make the most of features ranging from generics to enums, annotations to autoboxing.  Each chapter in the book consists of several âitemsâ presented in the form of a short, standalone essay that provides specific advice, insight into Java platform subtleties, and outstanding code examples. The comprehensive descriptions and explanations for each item illuminate what to do, what not to do, and why.  Highlights include: -
New coverage of generics, enums, annotations, autoboxing, the for-each loop, varargs, concurrency utilities, and much more -
Updated techniques and best practices on classic topics, including objects, classes, libraries, methods, and serialization -
How to avoid the traps and pitfalls of commonly misunderstood subtleties of the language -
Focus on the language and its most fundamental libraries: java.lang, java.util, and, to a lesser extent, java.util.concurrent and java.io Simply put, Effective Javaâ˘, Second Edition, presents the most practical, authoritative guidelines available for writing efficient, well-designed programs.
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