By David Flanagan, Brett McLaughlin
First Edition
June 2004
Pages: 200
Series: Developer's Notebooks
ISBN 10: 0-596-00738-8 |
ISBN 13: 9780596007386
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(Average of 5 Customer Reviews)
This no-nonsense, guide by bestselling Java authors Brett McLaughlin and David Flanagan jumps right into Tiger. Using the task-oriented format of this new series, you'll get complete practical coverage of generics, boxing and unboxing, varargs, enums, annotations, formatting, the for/in loop, concurrency, and more.
Full Description
Cover | Table of Contents | Colophon
Featured customer reviews
Quick and informative, September 05 2007
Overall Java 5.0 Tiger A Developer's Notebook was a quick informative read. The subject was audience appropriate and, as promised, did not waste time rehashing a basic Java tutorial.
The examples were easy to follow and thorough though sometimes trivial. In particular the explanation of using parameterized Maps seemed too long considering the simple nature of the topic. One example on Enums on page 40 was fairly confusing due to an unintentional typo while, amusingly enough, describing the dangers of typos.
I found the explanation of Generics useful especially the section dealing with type wildcards. The Enum section was particularly useful to me as I am have been converting work code over to use Enums. Also, while I have worked with Enums before I have not added methods to them, nor did I realized this functionality existed before reading the book. The section on Auto Boxing was interesting though could have been shorter in length as not much has changed from a user's standpoint. Before reading the book, I did not know about the new variable length argument list feature. I found this section particularly helpful. I found that the book seemed too dwell for too long on annotations which did not hold much interest for me. The section on formatting was informative and the jab at C fans was amusing.
This book was very helpful in highlighting the new features of Java 5.0.
Where's the beef?, September 02 2007
Well done! I have been looking for this feedback coz multiple times the same has happened to me in case of orielly books. Not having the soft copy of code makes it impossible to cross check whether author is bluffing or not. And all those who have read exhaustively enough would know that some authors simply print out things which they aren't sure of themselves.
Good 1.5 Overview, January 14 2006
This book provides a good overview of the new 1.5 language features. The only thing I did not like was the chapter on the new concurrent packages. I thought it was more confusing than helpful.
Where's the beef?, November 04 2004
Submitted by Anonymous Reader [Respond | View]
Why would you give a book one star for having the wrong URL to the examples?
excellent 1.5 book, August 28 2004
Java 1.5 Tiger A Developers Notebook has all the information and quality we have come to expect from OReilly. However, the developers notebook series has a very different style than the animal books. The book was a true page-turner and I read all 171 pages in two days.
This book really looks like a notebook complete with notes in the margins, graph paper and coffee cup stains! There is also plenty of room in the margins for the reader to add notes. This book is informative, useful and looks really cool!
A guru narrates the book. He tells you about Java 1.5 and answers your questions. Each chapter discusses several labs in a task/how to I do that?/what about ... format. It is like the author walks you through doing the labs. It really does read like a conversation. As the authors put it All lab, no lecture.
The code examples begin on page two and are prevalent throughout the book. The authors give warnings about common pitfalls and tasks that you cannot do just like you would expect a guru to do. The authors also give opinions and recommendations.
The book assumes a working knowledge of java 1.4 (or earlier.) This is especially important in the conncurrency section. There is excellent cross-referencing so the chapters and tasks can be read in almost any order. I would not give a 5 unless a book was amazing. This one earned it!
The beef is here..., July 15 2004
Submitted by Anonymous Reader [Respond | View]
The examples are here: http://examples.oreilly.com/javaadn/
The beef is here..., July 15 2004
Submitted by Anonymous Reader [Respond | View]
The examples are here: http://examples.oreilly.com/javaadn/
Where's the beef?, July 07 2004
July 7, 2004:
Where are the code samples that are promised? The books says to check
http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/javaadn/
but I don't see anything there.
-- Vladimir
Media reviews
"J5T does an excellent job of providing an overview of the new features in Java 5...Overall J5T is an excellent utility book for people coming from a Java 1.4 background."
-- Nathan Yergler, yergler.net
"McLaughlin and Flanagan's title is intended to cut through both jargon and complex reference structures to bring the meat of the changes [to Java 5.0 Tiger] to the typical Java developer's aid...highly recommended..."
--Diane Donovan, "Midwest Book Review," December 2004
"'Java 5.0 Tiger: A Developer's Notebook' has all the information and quality we have come to expect from O'Reilly...This book is informative, useful and looks really cool!
A guru narrates the book...It really does read like a conversation...The authors give warnings about common pitfalls and tasks that you cannot do -- just like you would expect a guru to do...I would not give a 10 unless a book was amazing. This one earned it!"
--Jeanne Boyarsky, JavaRanch.com, August 2004







