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IRF540
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Posted on 06-27-08 5:11
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If anyone knows best book for Core Java and J2EE? Any help will be appreciated
Thanx
Last edited: 27-Jun-08 05:47 AM
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KillEmAll
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Posted on 06-27-08 9:51
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For J2SE/Core: I dont have a particular preference but in general its not the book but how you use the knowledge that matters. Goto a University's website and get links to their Java course (any prestigious University should do). Do all their assignments. Use your book as a reference. Google is of great help too. J2EE: It is lot harder to find a good J2EE book. Usually some books focus more on some technologies and leave others out altogether. Best source for information would be Suns documentation online. Again, it is up to you to figure out how to implement it. I would suggest you create a mock mini project of your own and build up on it. Start out with a simple shopping cart project (using Servlets and JSPs). Later on you can add various technologies as you learn about em like EJB's, Webservices, JDBC, AJAX etc. If you've got time learn about various J2EE "frameworks" like Struts, Spring and Hibernate too. Get free versions of eclipse, apache tomcat and weblogic to set up your workbench and application server to deploy your code in. Best of luck! PS. Or join an Indian consultancy. DONT sign any documents before hand. If you dont wanna work for em after the training tell them you are going back to Nepal or whatever.
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OcRam
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Posted on 06-27-08 12:37
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google.com is the point of entry for what u need to know. That's how I started although I am not a computer major but needed Java for my thesis.
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jhigatighare
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Posted on 06-27-08 4:07
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I'd say... go for 'Core Java' from Sun Mircosystems press. There are two versions of it-- 1. Fundamentals and 2. Advanced Features. This book will give you more concepts than any other book. Others are more focussed on applicabilities of the features that Java language have. This one will make you understand things at it's core level. Applications...you can find thousands of examples online online. Complement the reading with Java's specification from java.sun.com. It's always good to learn the specification of the language if you really want to know the language thoroughly. Goodluck for your Java experience.
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techGuy
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Posted on 06-27-08 4:58
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IRF540
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Posted on 06-27-08 6:30
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Thanx everyone I appreciate your help. If anyone have anymore ideas I would appreciate your help
Thanx !
Last edited: 27-Jun-08 07:33 PM
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Java
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Posted on 06-27-08 6:57
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Go to this site; http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/java/library/j-stc/ where you can use Struts to develop some really cool application. Though, this is little bit advance one.
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sajhabusaima
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Posted on 06-28-08 3:32
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1. Paste http://freecomputerbooks.com/ to address bar. 2. Click java and j2ee 3. Click Core option You can find 100's of java book.
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IRF540
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Posted on 06-28-08 7:15
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