Index Bookstores Magazines My Books Book Reviews Book Bytes About Us Help
Bublos.com
Find Books Faster … Buy Books Cheaper, at Bublos
The Web's Favorite Book Price Comparison Site
Alibris Books
Country:   Max. Timeout:      
  Join Bublos   Sign In   
 

Programming Flex 3: The Comprehensive Guide to Creating Rich Internet Applications with Adobe Flex

Programming Flex 3: The Comprehensive Guide to Creating Rich Internet Applications with Adobe Flex at Amazon.com


Share this book with other people •
 Link to This PageBublos Link Del.ico.usDel.icio.us 
 Tell a FriendTell a friend about this book 

ISBN: 0596516215 - Programming Flex 3: The Comprehensive Guide to Creating Rich Internet Applications with Adobe Flex  
Title:Programming Flex 3: The Comprehensive Guide to Creating Rich Internet Applications with Adobe Flex
Author:Chafic Kazoun
Joey Lott
Publisher:Adobe Dev Library
Type:Book / Paperback
Publication Date:26 September, 2008
ISBN / ISBN-13:0596516215  /  9780596516215
List Price:$54.99
You Save:$20.35
Amazon Price:$34.64

* This book is also available, brand-new, from 3rd-party marketplace sellers at Amazon.com, from $31.24.



Check for the same book at these other US book sites:

• [ Abebooks ]   • [ Alibris ]   • [ Barnes & Noble ]   • [ Half.com ]   • [ Powells ]    … or check UK bookstores
 
Editorial Review / Publisher's Information:

Product Description
If you want to try your hand at developing rich Internet applications with Adobe's Flex 3, and already have experience with frameworks such as .NET or Java, this is the ideal book to get you started. Programming Flex 3 gives you a solid understanding of Flex 3's core concepts, and valuable insight into how, why, and when to use specific Flex features. Numerous examples and sample code demonstrate ways to build complete, functional applications for the Web, using the free Flex SDK, and RIAs for the desktop, using Adobe AIR. This book is an excellent companion to Adobe's Flex 3 reference documentation. With this book, you will:

Learn the underlying details of the Flex framework Program with MXML and ActionScript Arrange the layout and deal with UI components Work with media Manage state for applications and components Use transitions and effects Debug your Flex applications Create custom components Embed Flex applications in web browsers Build AIR applications for the desktop

Flex 3 will put you at the forefront of the RIA revolution on both the Web and the desktop. Programming Flex 3 will help you get the most from this amazing and sophisticated technology.

Other Items You May Enjoy:
Browse Books From These Related Subjects:
•  All Subjects  ›› Specialty Stores  ›› Custom Stores  ›› New & Used Textbooks  ›› Computer Science  ›› Graphics & Visualization  
•  All Subjects  ›› Specialty Stores  ›› Custom Stores  ›› New & Used Textbooks  ›› Computer Science  ›› Programming Languages  
•  All Subjects  ›› Specialty Stores  ›› Custom Stores  ›› New & Used Textbooks  ›› Computer Science  ›› Software Design & Engineering  
•  All Subjects  ›› Specialty Stores  ›› Custom Stores  ›› New & Used Textbooks  ›› Computer Science  ›› General AAS  
•  All Subjects  ›› Specialty Stores  ›› Custom Stores  ›› New & Used Textbooks  ›› General AAS  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› Home Computing  ›› Internet  ›› Internet & Education  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› Home Computing  ›› Internet  ›› General AAS  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› Computer Science  ›› Software Engineering  ›› General AAS  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› Graphic Design  ›› General  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› Graphic Design  ›› General AAS  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› Programming  ›› Graphics & Multimedia  ›› General AAS  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› Programming  ›› Software Design, Testing & Engineering  ›› Software Development  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› Programming  ›› General  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› Programming  ›› General AAS  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› Software  ›› General  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› Software  ›› General AAS  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› Web Development  ›› Web Design  ›› Web Graphics  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› Web Development  ›› Programming  ›› General  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› Web Development  ›› Programming  ›› General AAS  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› Web Development  ›› General AAS  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› General  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› General AAS  
•  All Subjects  ›› Refinements  ›› Edition (format)  ›› Illustrated  
•  Mass Market  ›› Paperback  
•  Trade  
•  All Subjects  ›› Refinements  ›› Binding (binding)  
•  All Subjects  ›› Refinements  ›› Format (feature_browse-bin)  ›› Printed Books  

Customer Reviews:

 • Flex 3 Book With It's Own Unique Strengths
22 October, 2008

This book has many things to commend it, and in particular it is very strong on: * The internal startup sequence of a Flex application * Loading one Flex application into another Flex application * Working with fonts * Programmatic skinning * Runtime CSS * Building custom components I think the book is weak on a few things as well, such as the Flex Builder IDE and remoting. In reference to remoting, the authors make the following surprising statement on page 471: "Several of the remoting gateway products have added support for a Flex data component called RemoteObject. However, because we have found no practical use for RemoteObject, we are omitting any discussion of RemoteObject". Well, I must report that I have found a practical use for it: namely, it's one of the central objects in Blaze DS and LCDS remoting. If you want to learn how to use it, you'll have to read Flex 3 Bible (12 pages on it), Rich Internet Applications with Adobe Flex & Java (referenced on 41 pages), or Adobe's help contents. I believe these authors have a slight tendency to favor ActionScript and Flash APIs over MXML and Flex APIs, a preference that a reader can either choose to follow or not. I don't believe this book would be as good for novice Flex users as some of the others I have read. I think that when authors delve into relatively arcane, advanced features of an API before they get to the common simple things, it tends to make it harder for beginners. For example, here within the first 100 pages of a 600 page book they cover class introspection, loading one Flex application into another, application domains, and resource bundles... all before the novice reader has even been introduced to a simple CheckBox control. The order in which they cover topics is pretty much preserved from "Programming Flex 2", except for the fact that the chapter on application components has been moved forward quite a bit.

- Reviewed by customer ID: AKBC4PJXRUJD4

 • Good Content But Poor Correlation
15 October, 2008

I'm only about a quarter of the way through the book, but have already noticed some things. The book's content is great. Its very thorough and covers a lot of useful material. Unfortunately, the authors miss the mark on correlating their examples to their figures. Most of the code examples have no figure to show what the code renders. And most of the figures that are there, don't correlate to the code examples.

- Reviewed by customer ID: A23OQ0843HT8AI

 • A Must Have For Every Flex Developer!
30 September, 2008

I just got my copy of Programming Flex 3 in the mail yesterday and have already found it to be extremely useful! Like most titles in O'Reilly's "Adobe Developer Library" series, the book is very well organized and contains useful and understandable examples. One thing that Joey and Chafic have done very well is to keep the chapters focused, not bloating them with unnecessary technical jargon that may confuse readers who are new to Flex. This is not to say that this book is by any means only for beginners, as it dives into many advanced topics, it just does it in such a way that it will be easily understood by reader of any skill level. As the title suggests, I believe that this book will be a valuable asset to any flex developer, and it has found a permanent home on my desk next to my copies of The Flex 3 Cookbook (Flex 3 Cookbook: Code-Recipes, Tips, and Tricks for RIA Developers (Adobe Developer Library)), The Actionscript 3 Cookbook (ActionScript 3.0 Cookbook: Solutions for Flash Platform and Flex Application Developers), and Essential Actionscript 3 (Essential ActionScript 3.0 (Essential) (Essential)). If you are looking to learn Flex from the ground up, or would simply like a very good reference manual covering all of the topics that you will most likely encounter on a day to day basis, then I would highly recommend this book!

- Reviewed by customer ID: A1EM34T2NQWZOG


  • International bookstores from Amazon:›› more online bookstores >  
 
    United States United States Canada Amazon Canada France France Germany Germany Japan Japan Spain Spanish books United Kingdom United Kingdom (UK)


Bookstores  |  Magazines  |  My Books  |  Book Bytes  |  Book Reviews  |  Rare Books  |  Help  |  Privacy  |  Top-Ten Book Lists  |  Web Directory  |  Tell-a-Friend  |  Bublos Rewards  |  Set Preferences  |  Contact Us  |  My Bookstores  |  Links to Bublos  |   Link-to-Me  |  About Bublos  |  


 Copyright © 1999 - 2009 Bublos Inc. All rights reserved.