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Rating:  Summary: A below average book from Oracle Press Review: Although it covers all the aspects of JDeveloper, the author struggles between teaching Pure Java and JDeveloper. Very poor/less examples. I would prefer some other book.
Rating:  Summary: JBuilder not JDeveloper Review: As indicated in previous reviews, the book does not really cover specifics of JDeveloper. This book is an inferior JBuilder 2.0 overview. It would be nice to have a JDeveloper 3.1 book, but alas it is not yet available.
Rating:  Summary: Database part a saving grace Review: Could have done better. Have not covered key server-side technologies like servlets, JSP, EJB, CORBA etc. The writeup on the database tools of JDeveloper is helpful. That is the only saving grace.Contents might be misleading if the reader is new to java(for example in the the 3.1 version all JBCL components begin with the oracle name rather than the borland name) I am sure the authors will do good in their second edition of this book. They should not be blamed entirely, the Oracle software kept maturing since the contemplation stage of the book.
Rating:  Summary: Out Dated Review: Does not come close to aiding in learning release 3 of JDeveloper. Neither is it a good review of Borlands JBuilder as another reviewer suggested. Save your money and wait for the Dorsey book to ship. Hopefully it applies to release 3.X
Rating:  Summary: Out Dated Review: Does not come close to aiding in learning release 3 of JDeveloper. Neither is it a good review of Borlands JBuilder as another reviewer suggested. Save your money and wait for the Dorsey book to ship. Hopefully it applies to release 3.X
Rating:  Summary: JBuilder not JDeveloper Review: I use Jdeveloper at the office, and I thought that this book could help me with some of the finer points of using this software package. It did not. It touches on the basic stuff, but if you want to create any EJB components and deploy them, this book is no good for you. There is a book from Oracle that is targeted from development for 8i and it is more useful to a developer. The topics that this book covers are very trivial and out of date for the most part (Jdeveloper 1.x).
Rating:  Summary: Does't tell you anything you couldn't figure out Review: I use Jdeveloper at the office, and I thought that this book could help me with some of the finer points of using this software package. It did not. It touches on the basic stuff, but if you want to create any EJB components and deploy them, this book is no good for you. There is a book from Oracle that is targeted from development for 8i and it is more useful to a developer. The topics that this book covers are very trivial and out of date for the most part (Jdeveloper 1.x).
Rating:  Summary: Not a book about Jdeveloper Review: This book was originally called JBuilder Essebtials. They have simply changed the cover. All references within this book are to the JBuilder IDE not the JDeveloper IDE. Althought the envirnonments are similar there are differences that make the book unusable in some circumstances. If you are looking for a book on Jdeveloper look elsewhere or buy JBuilder Essentials, it's cheaper.
Rating:  Summary: The online help of JDeveloper is better Review: We're now about to get JDeveloper 3 (at this moment still in beta - beginning of October 99) that has very excellent support for Oracle8i and Oracle Application Server 4, Servlets, Java Server Pages, Java Stored Procedures etc. etc. and the books and online help and examples provided with the product itself are presumably better than any book can be. Apart from that: the GUI-Beans have changed as well - supporting Swing etc. No more JBCL's ... Fazit: Get the product, read what you get included with it and you have the best basis you can get. You dont need this book really. Well, at least not anymore, because at the time it came out it had some interesting information.
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