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The World of Scripting Languages

The World of Scripting Languages

List Price: $55.00
Your Price: $55.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Great expectations, almost-as-great disappointment
Review: Scripting is a hot, extremely-important topic, and Barron is to be commended for the very idea of basing a whole book on presenting and surveying it. However, the execution of this good idea turns out to be far too flawed -- this book is NOT to be recommended. There is no coverage of the most important, up-and-coming scripting languages, particularly Python; this is a truly damning defect. The role of scripting in conjunction with XML, EJB/Corba, databases, and other crucial technologies is absent. Nothing about scripting's use for component prototyping, its connection with the Extreme Programming movement, integration of scripting in one's general or special purpose applications; nothing on the vital issue of interaction between scripting and security. A pity: this book could have been far, far more than what it turned out to be. As it is, it provides little or nothing that's not already and better available elsewhere.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Great expectations, almost-as-great disappointment
Review: Scripting is a hot, extremely-important topic, and Barron is to be commended for the very idea of basing a whole book on presenting and surveying it. However, the execution of this good idea turns out to be far too flawed -- this book is NOT to be recommended. There is no coverage of the most important, up-and-coming scripting languages, particularly Python; this is a truly damning defect. The role of scripting in conjunction with XML, EJB/Corba, databases, and other crucial technologies is absent. Nothing about scripting's use for component prototyping, its connection with the Extreme Programming movement, integration of scripting in one's general or special purpose applications; nothing on the vital issue of interaction between scripting and security. A pity: this book could have been far, far more than what it turned out to be. As it is, it provides little or nothing that's not already and better available elsewhere.


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