Core Java, Volume II--Advanced Features, 11th Edition
©2019 |Pearson | Available
Cay S. Horstmann, University of Connecticut
©2019 |Pearson | Available
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Core Java® has long been recognized as the leading, no-nonsense tutorial and reference for experienced programmers who want to write robust Java code for real-world applications. Now, Core Java®, Volume II–Advanced Features, Eleventh Edition, has been updated to reflect Java SE 9, 10, and 11.
Core Java, Vol. II covers advanced user-interface programming and the enterprise features of the Java SE platform. It carefully explains the most important language and library features and shows how to build real-world applications with thoroughly tested examples. The example programs have been carefully crafted to be easy to understand as well as useful in practice, so you can rely on them as the starting point for your own code. All of the code examples have been rewritten to reflect modern Java best practices and code style. The critical new features introduced with Java SE 9, 10, and 11 are all thoroughly explored with the depth and completeness that readers expect from this title.
Preface
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1: Streams
1.1 From Iterating to Stream Operations
1.2 Stream Creation
1.3 The filter, map, and flatMap Methods
1.4 Extracting Substreams and Combining Streams
1.5 Other Stream Transformations
1.6 Simple Reductions
1.7 The Optional Type
1.8 Collecting Results
1.9 Collecting into Maps
1.10 Grouping and Partitioning
1.11 Downstream Collectors
1.12 Reduction Operations
1.13 Primitive Type Streams
1.14 Parallel Streams
Chapter 2: Input and Output
2.1 Input/Output Streams
2.2 Reading and Writing Binary Data
2.3 Object Input/Output Streams and Serialization
2.4 Working with Files
2.5 Memory-Mapped Files
2.6 File Locking
2.7 Regular Expressions
Chapter 3: XML
3.1 Introducing XML
3.2 The Structure of an XML Document
3.3 Parsing an XML Document
3.4 Validating XML Documents
3.5 Locating Information with XPath
3.6 Using Namespaces
3.7 Streaming Parsers
3.8 Generating XML Documents
3.8.5 An Example: Generating an SVG File
3.9 XSL Transformations
Chapter 4: Networking
4.1 Connecting to a Server
4.2 Implementing Servers
4.3 Getting Web Data
4.4 The HTTP Client
4.5 Sending E-Mail
Chapter 5: Database Programming
5.1 The Design of JDBC
5.2 The Structured Query Language
5.3 JDBC Configuration
5.4 Working with JDBC Statements
5.5 Query Execution
5.6 Scrollable and Updatable Result Sets
5.7 Row Sets
5.8 Metadata
5.9 Transactions
5.10 Connection Management in Web and Enterprise Applications
Chapter 6: The Date and Time API
6.1 The Time Line
6.2 Local Dates
6.3 Date Adjusters
6.4 Local Time
6.5 Zoned Time
6.6 Formatting and Parsing
6.7 Interoperating with Legacy Code
Chapter 7: Internationalization
7.1 Locales
7.2 Number Formats
7.3 Date and Time
7.4 Collation and Normalization
7.5 Message Formatting
7.6 Text Input and Output
7.7 Resource Bundles
7.8 A Complete Example
Chapter 8: Scripting, Compiling, and Annotation Processing
8.1 Scripting for the Java Platform
8.2 The Compiler API
8.3 Using Annotations
8.4 Annotation Syntax
8.5 Standard Annotations
8.6 Source-Level Annotation Processing
8.7 Bytecode Engineering
Chapter 9: The Java Platform Module System
9.1 The Module Concept
9.2 Naming Modules
9.3 The Modular “Hello, World!” Program
9.4 Requiring Modules
9.5 Exporting Packages
9.6 Modular JARs
9.7 Modules and Reflective Access
9.8 Automatic Modules
9.9 The Unnamed Module
9.10 Command-Line Flags for Migration
9.11 Transitive and Static Requirements
9.12 Qualified Exporting and Opening
9.13 Service Loading
9.14 Tools for Working with Modules
Chapter 10: Security
10.1 Class Loaders
10.2 Security Managers and Permissions
10.3 User Authentication
10.4 Digital Signatures
10.5 Encryption
Chapter 11: Advanced Swing and Graphics
11.1 Tables
11.2 Trees
11.3 Advanced AWT
11.4 Raster Images
11.5 Printing
Chapter 12: Native Methods
12.1 Calling a C Function from a Java Program
12.2 Numeric Parameters and Return Values
12.3 String Parameters
12.4 Accessing Fields
12.5 Encoding Signatures
12.6 Calling Java Methods
12.7 Accessing Array Elements
12.8 Handling Errors
12.9 Using the Invocation API
12.10 A Complete Example: Accessing the Windows Registry
Index
Core Java, Volume II--Advanced Features, (OASIS), 11th Edition
Horstmann
©2019
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Horstmann
©2019  | Pearson  | 1040 pp
Cay S. Horstmann is a professor of computer science at San Jose State University and a Java Champion. He is also the author of Core Java®, Volumes I and II , Eleventh Edition (Pearson, 2018-2019), Core Java SE 9 for the Impatient , Second Edition (Addison-Wesley, 2018), and Scala for the Impatient, Second Edition (Addison-Wesley, 2017). He has written more than a dozen other books for professional programmers and computer science students.
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