Open AccessBook
The Java Programming Language
Ken Arnold,James Gosling,David Holmes +2 more
- 01 Jan 1996
1.9K
TL;DR: The Java (TM)Programming Language, Second Edition, is the definitive resource for all serious Java programmers and lets you in on the rationale behind Java's design, direct from the language's creator, as well as the tradeoffs involved in using specific features.
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Abstract: From the Publisher:
Co-authored by the creator of the Java technology and an experienced object-oriented developer, The Java (TM)Programming Language, Second Edition, is the definitive resource for all serious Java programmers. This book will give you a solid foundation in Java programming language strategies and techniques. It features a concise introduction to the language; detailed descriptions of Java's commands, constructs, and libraries; and numerous real-world examples that show you how to exploit the language's power, portability, and flexibility. You will find in-depth and progressively advanced coverage of classes and objects, interfaces, exception-handling, threads and multitasking, and packages. In addition, the book describes the Java core library packages, including I/O, standard utilities, language types, and system classes. Thoroughly revised from start to finish, this second edition fully integrate, is the definitive resource for all serious Java programmers. This book will give you a solid foundation in Java programming language strategies and techniques. It features a concise introduction to the language; detailed descriptions of Java's commands, constructs, and libraries; and numerous real-world examples that show you how to exploit the language's power, portability, and flexibility. You will find in-depth and progressively advanced coverage of classes and objects, interfaces, exception-handling, threads and multitasking, and packages. In addition, the book describes the Java core library packages, including I/O, standard utilities, language types, and system classes. Thoroughly revised from start to finish, this second edition fully integrates Java 1.1 into both text and examples. This edition includes the changes introduced in Java 1.1, such as nested classes (including anonymous classes), threading issues, character-based streams, object-serialization, documentation comments, new utility classes, plus internationalization and localization. The book lets you in on the rationale behind Java's design, direct from the language's creator, as well as the tradeoffs involved in using specific features. With these insights, you will have the understanding you need to begin developing Java applications and applets.
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Citations
Efficient Java exception handling in just-in-time compilation
Seungll Lee,Byung-Sun Yang,Suhyun Kim,Seong-Bae Park,Soo-Mook Moon,Kemal Ebcioglu,Erik R. Altman +6 more
- 03 Jun 2000
TL;DR: Some mechanisms for removing overheads imposed by the existence of exception handlers are described, including on-demand translation of exception handling mechanisms, which expose more optimization opportunities in normal flow.
46
An infrastructure language for open nets
Lorenzo Bettini,Michele Loreti,Rosario Pugliese +2 more
- 11 Mar 2002
TL;DR: This paper addresses the problem of expressing dynamic changes of node connectivity at linguistic level and focuses on a slight extension of the language KLAIM, that is targeted to this aim, and is modular enough to be easily applicable also to other network-aware languages.
A Static Study of Java Exceptions Using JESP
Barbara G. Ryder,Donald Smith,Ulrich Kremer,Michael I. Gordon,Nirav Shah +4 more
- 25 Mar 2000
TL;DR: JESP is a tool for statically examining the usage of user thrown exceptions in Java source code, reported here are the first findings that most Java exceptions are thrown across method boundaries, trys and catches occur in equal numbers, finallys are rare, and programs fall into one of two categories.
•Book
Type systems for object-oriented programming languages
John C. Mitchell,Kathleen Fisher +1 more
- 01 Jan 1996
TL;DR: This study explains the link between inheritance and subtyping: object types that include implementation information are a form of abstract type, and the only way to produce a subtype of an abstract type is via extension, (i.e., by inheritance).
45
References
•Book
The C++ Programming Language
Bjarne Stroustrup
- 01 Jan 1985
TL;DR: Bjarne Stroustrup makes C even more accessible to those new to the language, while adding advanced information and techniques that even expert C programmers will find invaluable.
8.1K
•Book
The Java Virtual Machine Specification
Tim Lindholm,Frank Yellin +1 more
- 19 Sep 1996
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a detailed overview of the Java Virtual Machine, including the internal structure of the class file format, the internal form of Fully Qualified Class and Interface names, and the implementation of new class instances.
Programming the Internet in Ada 95
S. Tucker Taft
- 10 Jun 1996
TL;DR: The combination of the Ada 95 and Java technologies is found to be very natural and powerful, providing the best characteristics of both technologies, with essentially no loss in functionality.
37
Java as an Intermediate Language
Jonathan C. Hardwick,Jay Sipelstein +1 more
- 12 Aug 1996
TL;DR: It is concluded that Java is attractive both as a compilation target for rapid prototyping of new programming languages and as a means of improving the portability of existing programming languages.
22
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