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Rating:  Summary: Best Book for beginer ! Review: Before I buy this book , I only knew little knowladge for oracle web development. But after read this book , I find this book is perfect for beginer !
Rating:  Summary: Good for beginners, covers only NT/2000 Review: Book is good as a tool for beginners and as a review of technology. It is for those who are in Windows world only. Presumption is that both database and application server are installed on the same PC, which is not always true.
Rating:  Summary: Very good intro; some appl logic examples could be improved Review: I should have rated this 3+ stars, but it doesn't look like Amazon.com is going to let me change the rating.
This book will give you a good intro to Oracle's PL/SQL Web Toolkit as well as the numerous other options that Oracle offers for developing web-based applications. Its examples promote a number of good techniques for segmenting business and presentation logic, but break down a bit when illustrating how application logic should be segmented into procedures.
Use this as a good place to get started, then follow-up with individuals who have built larger scale PL/SQL Web Toolkit applications (via Oracle user groups, OTN, or newgroups) for additional insight on good application architecture. I would also recommend getting a good book on DHTML, CSS, and JavaScript to round out the picture (such as Danny Goodman's Dynamic HTML from O'Reilly).
Rating:  Summary: Just what the doctor ordered! Review: I'm totally new to Oracle, and this book was just what I needed. It led me through every step of installing and configuring Oracle Database, the Oracle Internet Application Server, plus all the tools needed to develop Oracle applications. Then it gave a separate chapter on 5 different methods of writing the applications, including Java, Pl/SQL, Portals, Forms Designer, and Oracle Developer. Everything was clearly laid out, step by step, so that by following the instructions given, I had working examples of all the methods. I especially appreciated chapter 5, Designing an HTML Application, where the author showed an excellent method for designing a web application, starting with storyboards, proceeding to flow diagrams, then writing the code, and then separating the business logic from the presentation code. Using easy to follow examples that lead you from start to finish, the author teaches good programming practices as well as the "how-to's". I'm also used to most books having many errors in them, so you have to troubleshoot to figure out what's supposed to happen. This book was very accurate and complete, and the code actually works. The code examples are also available for download from the website, so you don't have to do a lot of typing. I appreciated the author's clear, easy to understand language. His extensive knowledge of Oracle is evident in the way he made things simple for the beginner. I'll be looking for more books by this author.
Rating:  Summary: Good for beginner Review: Oracle 101 Web applications is a very good book for the beginner of web development using oracle.The book explains how to develope the Web application using the Oracle techology in a simple and understandable way. It includes the whole cycle of development such as step by step installation of the database, Web Server and Application Server, how to design the web page then how to use different techology (java servlet,jsp, psp,html) to code the web pages. The Author explains and compares the advantage and disadvantage of different language which make us to know when to use the corrent language. Also, the book can make you clearly understand how oracle achieve different new techology (jsp, servlet,psp,pl/sql) in Application server and Apache Server. If you want to understand how Oracle can achieve the internet techology , this is a great book to start.
Rating:  Summary: Good for an intro, but promotes bad design Review: This book will give you a decent intro to Oracle's PL/SQL Web Toolkit, but its examples promote very poorly structured applications -- the recommendations for how application logic is segmented into procedures are very weak. Use this to get started, but you'll need to check with some folks who have built real-world PL/SQL Web Toolkit applications (via Oracle user groups, OTN, or newgroups) for insight on good application architecture. It would also be a good idea to get a good book on DHTML, CSS, and JavaScript to round out the picture.
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