Core Java SE 9 for the impatient /
by Horstmann, Cay S.,
Edition statement:Second edition. Physical details: 1824 pages ; illustrations ; ISBN: 9780134694726.Item type | Location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Electronic Books | E-Resource Section | E-Books | 005.133 (Browse shelf) | Available |
Browsing Cagayan State University - Carig Library Shelves , Shelving location: E-Resource Section , Collection code: E-Books Close shelf browser
Includes index.
Chapter 1: Fundamental Programming Structures -- Chapter 2: Object-Oriented Programming -- Chapter 3: Interfaces and Lambda Expressions -- Chapter 4: Inheritance and Reflection -- Chapter 5: Exceptions, Assertions, and Logging -- Chapter 6: Generic Programming -- Chapter 7: Collections -- Chapter 8: Streams -- Chapter 9: Processing Input and Output -- Chapter 10: Concurrent Programming -- Chapter 11: Annotations -- Chapter 12: The Date and Time API -- Chapter 13: Internationalization -- Chapter 14: Compiling and Scripting -- Chapter 15: The Java Platform Module System
Readers familiar with Horstmann's original, two-volume “Core Java” books who are looking for a comprehensive, but condensed guide to all of the new features and functions of Java SE 9 will learn how these new features impact the language and core libraries. Instead of the meticulous detail that the much larger two-volume set provides, this condensed treatment focuses on practical examples and is presented in bite-sized chunks. As with Java 8, Modern Java idioms are no longer required and there is a much faster, easier pathway for learning Java. Horstmann quickly cuts to the chase without lecturing about the superiority of one paradigm over another or rehashing Java history. Given the size of the Java language and the scope of the new features introduced in Java 9, there is a great deal of new material to cover, but it is presented in small chunks organized so that you can quickly retrieve it when needed. This book covers all aspects of Java that a modern developer needs to know, including modularity, as well as the powerful lambda expressions that were introduced in Java 8. It will also tell you how to find out more about old-fashioned concepts that you might still see in legacy code, but won't dwell on them. -- Provided by publisher.
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