PROGRAMMER TUTORIALS
solutions to programmer problems

ASP
C#
C++
COBOL
Delphi
HTML
Java
J2EE
JavaScript
JSP
.NET
Perl
PHP
SQL
Visual Basic
XML
View Shopping Cart


Get a FREE Apple iPod Photo

  Books : Mac OS X for Java Geeks


List Price: $39.95
Amazon.com's Price: $26.37
You Save: $13.58 (34%)
Prices subject to change.



Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours




Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 005.4465
EAN: 9780596004002
Format: Illustrated
ISBN: 0596004001
Label: O'Reilly Media, Inc.
Manufacturer: O'Reilly Media, Inc.
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 304
Publication Date: 2003-04
Publisher: O'Reilly Media, Inc.
Sales Rank: 896633
Studio: O'Reilly Media, Inc.




Related Items:


Editorial Review:

Product DescriptionMac OS X for Java Geeks delivers a complete and detailed look at the Mac OS X platform, geared specifically at Java developers. Programmers using the 10.2 (Jaguar) release of Mac OS X, and the new JDK 1.4, have unprecedented new functionality available to them. Whether you are a Java newbie, working your way through Java Swing and classpath issues, or you are a Java guru, comfortable with digital media, reflection, and J2EE, this book will teach you how to get around on Mac OS X. You'll also get the latest information on how to build applications that run seamlessly, and identically, on Windows, Linux, Unix, and the Mac. The book begins by laying out the Mac OS X tool set, from the included Java Runtime Environment to third-party tools IDEs and Jakarta Ant. You'll then be brought up to speed on the advanced, Mac-specific extensions to Java, including the spelling framework, speech framework, and integration with QuickTime. In addition to clear explanations of these extensions, you'll learn how to write code that falls back to non-Mac specific code when it runs on other platforms, keeping your application portable. Once you have the fundamentals of the Mac OS X Java platform in hand, this book takes you beyond the basics. You'll learn how to get the Apache web server running, and supplement it with the Jakarta Tomcat JSP and servlet container. JSPs and servlets running on Mac OS X are covered, as is installation and connectivity to a database. Once you have your web applications up and running, you'll learn how to interface them with EJBs, as running the JBoss application server on Mac OS X is covered. Finally, the latest developments in web services, including XML-RPC and SOAP, are found within.


Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - good book for MacOS X Java developers
The first half of the book is good material. After reviewing some fundamentals of MacOS and how it applies to Java, you create a sample application. Most of the material in this half is still relevant even 3 years later - although Java 1.3 is now in the past, the author did include info about 1.4. The IDE section is probably the most dated with no discussion about Eclipse. One nit here, is that there is a lot of code to enter and the author shouldn't have waited until 2/3 of the way through the ... Read More



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - It should have been titled "Mac OS X for Java Beginners"
This book was misleading with the title, it seemed as though a large portion of the book was dedicated to covering basic Java concepts (definition of EJB, JMX, JSP, etc., JVM layout).

The information on cross-platform development was somewhat useful, but as a Java geek you probably were already aware of these items (path separators, new lines, etc.).

The book does have its useful moments, hence the three stars, but it wasn't worth the $39.95 price tag. Chapters 5 (Finder ... Read More



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Mac OS X for Java Geeks is a solid...
I'll start with my grade, a C-, generously given. The author, Will Iverson, did a good job of briefly touching on all aspects of Java and Java development. He gave a chapter to the Java topics: Apple's JVM, Java tools/IDEs, Java GUIs, stand-alone Java apps, Servlets, JSPs, Tomcat, and EJBs. And a few other chapters on more Mac OS X stuff like databases, Apple extensions, and some Apple specific Java APIs.

The chapters cover their stated topics well giving just enough info that the reader ... Read More



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - I like
* This book has provided preliminary introduction to the platform with exploring
the technical underpinnings of the Mac OS X Java implementation.
* This booke is good for new java developer for Mac OS X platform, someone can explore the
pragmatics of Java development, including how to set up your development environment.
* And makes you aware of Apple's various additons to the java platform and describes how
to package and deliver an application to end users that looks and behaves ... Read More



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Fills it's niche
This is more of a set of self-contained articles than a book. Though it is not specifically written that way. I'm mixed about why this book was necessary. The topics are a hodge-podge. Which leads me to the 'set of articles' notion.

That being said, overall the writing is good and the topics are fairly well covered. Chapter three, on tools, is a standout. There are some problems, the code isn't well annotated, and some chapters, like chapter 9 on Speech, feel out of place altogether.

For ... Read More







2000-2006 ProgrammerTutorials.com


Top100WebShops.com