Bestsellers > Books > JavaBeans
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Web Developer's Guide to Java Beans: A Hands-On Guide to Developing Reusable Software Using the Software Component Model Java Beans»rank: 2478741by: Jalal Feghhi
: :Explains how to share Java components and integrate different objects into the Java environment. Provides step-by-step instruction for writing your first Java components. Details the ins and outs of component programming-events, properties, methods, and persistence. Review:Web Developer's Guide to Java Beans presents concepts in rapid-fire fashion and is full of technical terminology that can take effort to decipher, but experienced programmers who want to understand JavaBeans and recent Java advances such as the JDK 1.1 event model will find it a valuable resource. Author Jalal Feghhi offers both a conceptual overview of JavaBeans and other component architectures (ActiveX/DCOM and OpenDoc/CORBA) and a series of hands-on examples that illustrate JavaBeans ... |
CORBA ActiveX y Java Beans»rank: 6525190by: Jean-Marie Chauvet
: :Explains how to share Java components and integrate different objects into the Java environment. Provides step-by-step instruction for writing your first Java components. Details the ins and outs of component programming-events, properties, methods, and persistence. Review:Web Developer's Guide to Java Beans presents concepts in rapid-fire fashion and is full of technical terminology that can take effort to decipher, but experienced programmers who want to understand JavaBeans and recent Java advances such as the JDK 1.1 event model will find it a valuable resource. Author Jalal Feghhi offers both a conceptual overview of JavaBeans and other component architectures (ActiveX/DCOM and OpenDoc/CORBA) and a series of hands-on examples that illustrate JavaBeans ... |
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Core Java Beans»rank: 6614168by: John Pew, Larry Cable
: :Explains how to share Java components and integrate different objects into the Java environment. Provides step-by-step instruction for writing your first Java components. Details the ins and outs of component programming-events, properties, methods, and persistence. Review:Web Developer's Guide to Java Beans presents concepts in rapid-fire fashion and is full of technical terminology that can take effort to decipher, but experienced programmers who want to understand JavaBeans and recent Java advances such as the JDK 1.1 event model will find it a valuable resource. Author Jalal Feghhi offers both a conceptual overview of JavaBeans and other component architectures (ActiveX/DCOM and OpenDoc/CORBA) and a series of hands-on examples that illustrate JavaBeans ... |