By Eric M. Burke, Brian M. Coyner
March 2003
Pages: 288
Series: Cookbooks
ISBN 10: 0-596-00387-0 |
ISBN 13: 9780596003876
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(Average of 2 Customer Reviews)
Brimming with over 100 "recipes" for getting down to business and actually doing XP, the Java Extreme Programming Cookbook doesn't try to "sell" you on XP; it succinctly documents the most important features of popular open source tools for XP in Java-- including Ant, Junit, HttpUnit, Cactus, Tomcat, XDoclet-- and then digs right in, providing recipes for implementing the tools in real-world environments.
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Book details
First Edition: March 2003
Series:
Cookbooks
ISBN: 0-596-00387-0
Pages: 288
Average Customer Reviews: ![]()
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![]()
![]()
(Based on 2 Reviews)
Featured customer reviews
Perfect cookbook for the novice, April 13 2004
Great ! In short that is the all I can use with regards to this book. Comment holding good for all aspects
- Content
- Presentation of concepts
- Examples that can be used in real time
I should admit here, I had almost no prior experience to XP. All I had in terms of XP exposure was literary confirmatio that it was something of benefit. Using this book I am glad to state that I have actually beging to reap the actual benefits in real time. Now to go back and look the learning curve was not very steep. A lot has to do with this book.
Thanks for the wonderful book. Introduces a lot of practical concepts. I personally found the testing sections to be extremely helpful.
Java Extreme Programming Cookbook Review, June 30 2003
Instead of digging through the documentation of your open-source tool, take a look at this book. The first two chapters give an overview of extreme programming (XP), but the rest of the chapters are focused on the tools of XP. Each of the chapters on the tools begin with a brief description of the tool (and I mean brief). The rest of the chapter is sub divided into sections. Within each section, a problem that one might encounter with the tool is introduced, then a solution is proposed and discussion of the solutions follows (with an example).
The tools covered are Ant, Junit, HttpUnit, Mock Objects, Cactus, JunitPerf and Xdoclet. Tomcat and JBoss are addressed in a chapter together. Because of the brevity and focus of the book, probably not everything that you want to know about a tool is mentioned. After you already know why and when to use a tool, this book can help with the how.
The book is a good reference tool and could save someone a lot of time, but look elsewhere for more in-depth explanations.
Media reviews
"...having this book will help you expand your horizons. If you are a Java developer using the XP methodology, get this book to learn the tools you need to make your build and testing process flow correctly. Even if you don't practice XP, the automated build and testing tools will help you to write better code."
--Thomas Duff, Portland Domino/Notes User Group, October 2003
http://www.valu.org/QuickPlace/pd-nug/Main.nsf/h_Discussion/F8ABA41B2886C0A286256DC500111B7E/?OpenDocument&Form=h_PageUI
"This book offers a lot of great solutions and should not be missing in any bookshelf. 5 out of 5 stars."
--Java User Group Walldorf, July 2003
http://de.geocities.com/jug_walldorf/books_en.html#xpcook






