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Refer The Java(TM) Developers Almanac 1.4, Volume 1: Examples and Quick Reference (4th Edition) to a friend!

If you have a friend that you would like to recommend this page to, or if you just want to send yourself a reminder, here is the easy way to do it!

Simply fill in the e-mail address of the person(s) you wish to tell about The Java(TM) Developers Almanac 1.4, Volume 1: Examples and Quick Reference (4th Edition), your name and e-mail address (so they do not think it is spam and can reply to you directly with gracious thanks), and click the SEND button.

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Resource title:The Java(TM) Developers Almanac 1.4, Volume 1: Examples and Quick Reference (4th Edition)
Resource URL:http://www.tutorialmaniacs.com/the-java-tm--developers-almanac-1.4--volume-1--examples-and-quick-reference--4th-edition-.html
Description:While Java started out simply enough with relatively few objects and APIs, today's Java 2, Standard Edition (J2SE), bundles over 2,100 classes. The Java Developers Almanac provides a truly valuable reference to nearly all the classes and APIs in standard Java. This "white pages" for Java puts all classes and APIs at your fingertips, along with short samples that illustrate essential programming tasks. It's a compliment to say that this title resembles a telephone book. With over 1,000 pages (and printed on similar paper stock), The Java Developers Almanac, like a phone book, is organized alphabetically. Early sections look at Java 2 classes by package, such as graphics (including Java 2D), file I/O, network programming, and AWT and Swing. Early sections include several hundred short code excerpts, which provide key programming solutions. The heart of this text is an A-to-Z compendium of over 2,100 Java classes, and a whopping 24,000 methods and properties. Readers get a listing of what's in each class, along with prototype and arguments. As an "almanac," the book contains no room for explaining what each method does--by using a clever set of symbols, however, each listing provides the details of each method (such as which ones are "final," "static," and the like), plus the version of Java in which each method first appeared (JDK 1.0, 1.1, 1.2, or 1.3). These reference sections set a new standard of clarity for documenting classes. (Method and property names are aligned in the middle of the page, regardless of return type; a typographic convention that makes it easy to find what you need quickly.) Later sections provide useful references that list the changes from Java 1.0 through 1.3, as well as PersonalJava, the Java Native Interface (JNI), plus some of the details of the Java Virtual Machine (with a listing of byte codes). An innovative index cross-references all methods and classes (including where objects are used as parameters and return values). Truly encyclopedic and remarkably well organized, this book is a virtual must-have for any serious Java developer. --Richard Dragan

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