Review: “Java EE 6 Pocket Guide” by Arun Gupta
Abstract
The Java Enterprise Edition 6 platform provides capabilities that make it easier for Java programmers to develop and deploy enterprise and Web applications. This handy guide provides an overview of the main technologies in the Java EE 6 platform, including extensive easy-to-understand code samples that demonstrate many improvements. Whether you’re familiar with Java EE 5 or a Java programmer approaching the enterprise edition for the first time, this book will quickly get you up to speed on Java EE 6. Discover how Java EE 6 provides a simplified developer experience and improves on the developer productivity features introduced in Java EE 5. Delve into Java EE 6 profiles, including a comprehensive profile for lightweight, standards-based modern web applications. Explore how the platform enables extensibility with open source libraries and frameworks. Learn how specifications such as Contexts & Dependency Injection, Java API for RESTful Services, and Servlets 3 make the platform more powerful.
Book: ‘ Java EE 6 Pocket Guide‘
Language : English
Paperback: 204 pages
Release Date : September 2012
ISBN-10: 144933668X
ISBN-13: 978-1449336684
The Author
Arun ( @arungupta) is the Java EE evangelist at Oracle. He has over 15 years of experience in the software industry working in the Java platform and several web-related technologies. In his current role, he works to create and foster the community around Java EE and GlassFish. He has been with the Java EE team since its inception and contributed to all releases. Arun has extensive world wide speaking experience on myriad of topics and loves to engage with the community, customers, partners, and Java User Groups everywhere to spread the goodness of Java. He is running a well know blog named ‘ Miles to go…‘
The Content
204 pages is a good size for a pocket guide. It covers the basics you need to know of Java EE 6 and gives good examples of all relevant parts. Chapter 1 introduces you to the Java Enterprise Edition in general. Chapter 2 follows with a brief introduction to Managed Beans and their overall life-cycle. Chapter 3 dives into Servlets and all relevant parts. Chapter 4 introduces the Java Persistence API beginning with Entities and the surrounding happenings. Chapter 5 dedicates content around the Enterprise JavaBeans specification. Thins includes Stateful, Stateless, Singleton and Message-Driven up to the Embeddable API and the EJBLite specification. Chapter 6 is about Contexts and Dependency Injection including the portable extensions. The Chapter 7 covers JavaServer Faces very briefly and introduces you to the main concepts. Chapters 8 and 9 are about SOAP-Based Web Services and RESTful Web Services with simple and understandable examples. Chapter 10 covers the Java Message Service with a message send example. The book closes with Chapter 11 about Bean Validation and how it integrates with JPA and JSF.
Writing and Style
This is a pocket guide which is comprehensively written. I could follow all examples and it was a good read overall. No complicated constructs and clear writing. Walking from chapter to chapter works, but it isn’t designed like that. It is more like a reference book to look up the most important topics in Java EE 6 at one point. It isn’t watered-down by complex examples and sticks to the most important characteristics of the covered specifications. If you ever have seen one of Arun’s presentations or tutorials you know that he is good in explaining things and this style found the way into the guide.
Conclusion and recommendation
I’m obviously not neutral here :) GO GET IT! It is the only book you probably will need about Java EE 6! It is comprehensive, wonderfully written and covers everything you need in your daily work. It is not a complete reference but provides a great shortcut to the things you need to know. To me it is a good beginners guide and also works as a companion for advanced users. Get it while it’s hot! Thanks Arun for sharing your knowledge!
Reference: Review: “Java EE 6 Pocket Guide” by Arun Gupta from our JCG partner Markus Eisele at the Enterprise Software Development with Java blog.