Val's Blog
Lots of stuff for Web 2.0 freaks and Java addicts
Feeds RSS | Atom | RDF
 
 
Albert Einstein: "Intellectuals solve problems: geniuses prevent them."
[ Login ]

August 2004
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
 1  2  3  4  5  6  7 
 8  9  10  11  12  13  14 
 15  16  17  18  19  20  21 
 22  23  24  25  26  27  28 
 29  30  31     
Jul  |  Today  |  Sep
XML Feeds   Subscribe with Bloglines

Javaranch Sheriff   My LinkedIn Profile
Drop me a line or two   Bloglines Blogroll
JavaRSS   Referers
How cool are you?   My Reviews

Next trips...
SpringOne 2008 (Jun 11-12, 08)
Ajax Exp. 2008 (Sep 29-Oct 1, 08)
Top 10 entries (#hits)
(As of Nov 30, 2007)


Top 10 entries (#hits/day)
Come Back (5.032)
(As of Nov 30, 2007)
Recent Blog Entries
Recent Blog Comments
Re: Review of "Marketing Management 12th"
i know marketing management by kotler is good book but the problem is that the management part of this book is totally missing as fare as i know managemet is complete different subject and it should not be mixed i am student of MBA i was looking at ass...

Re: Review of "Pro Spring"
Using simple POJOs + factories without Spring for "echo" and "counter" would be a lot more easier. No need to write those XML files... So, in this case using Spring makes me write a lot more code... (OK, you can generate everything with the help of And...

pls urgent
Hi I am trying to generate the word doc but i m not understanding wats happening any one pls figure it out /* * WordAPI.java * * Created on May 30, 2006, 10:50 AM * * To change this template, choose Tools | Template Manager * and open the te...
Archives (# entries)
Links
Other Blogs
Other Blogs

Reviewing
Reading
Locations of visitors to this page
What they once said...
 

A couple of weeks ago, O'Reilly sent me a complimentary copy of the first edition of "Better Faster Lighter Java" by Bruce A. Tate and Justin Gehtland. I have just gulped it down and reading it was a great pleasure.

My 9-horseshoes review follows (also available at Javaranch.com):

Next year, Java will finally get a second digit in its age. Over the past 10 years, Java has become one of the most popular language on earth. Popularity is usually a positive sign but it often hides a double-edged sword as an ever increasing indigestible amalgam of (*cough* reusable *cough*) Java libraries/frameworks flood developers everyday. No one will argue that it becomes more and more difficult to make the right decisions when it comes to choosing existing libraries/frameworks for developing new products and/or refactoring older ones.

Don’t worry, you are not alone. Bruce Tate and Justin Gehtland have made a tremendous effort of vulgarizing some fundamental principles that, when applied consistently, can considerably ease your life. They introduce the following basic principles: "Keep it simple", "Do one thing and do it well", "Strive for transparency", "You are what you eat" and "Allow for extension". They also show how two famous open-source frameworks, Spring and Hibernate, elegantly apply these five principles. Finally, they take their own "better-faster-lighter-java" medication by applying it on the Simple Spider project and show how the latter can easily be integrated into the infamous jPetStore application.

I definitely enjoyed reading this book even though it is not necessarily about pure coding. However, I would like to warn entry-level programmers as they might not enjoy the occasional philosophical tone. As well, they might not have had the chance to be frustrated yet which is THE assumption the authors make.

 
About this Blog