Books & Tools Techniques

Comprehensive coverage of Ruby 1.8 and 1.9

"The New Most Important Ruby Book"
Peter Cooper,
rubyinside.com

Completely updated for Ajax and Web 2.0

"A must-have reference"
Brendan Eich,
creator of JavaScript

Jude

Jude is my Java documentation browser. It combines Sun's definitive javadocs with the easy-to-use format of Java in a Nutshell, and tops it off with easy keyboard-based navigation and full-text searching.

Jude is available for free evaluation.

See the user's guide for more info

Java in a Nutshell

The 5th edition is now out, with complete coverage of Java 5.0!

It includes a fast-paced tutorial on the language, and a compact quick-reference for the core Java API.

Java Examples in a Nutshell

The 3rd edition, updated for Java 1.4

This edition has all-new coverage of the NIO and JavaSound APIs, completely rewritten Servlets and XML chapters, and coverage of new Java 1.4 features (assertions, logging, preferences, SSL, etc.) added througout. A great book for those who like to learn by example. 193 working examples: 21,900 lines of carefully commented code to learn from.

Java 1.5 Tiger: A Developer's Notebook

Amazon incorrectly credits me as the main author on this book. I'm actually the second author: really more of a consultant. This is a good book about all the language changes in the latest version of Java.

Effective Java

I didn't write this excellent book, but I wish I had.

Author Josh Bloch is probably best known for the collections classes in the java.util package. His experience and wisdom are apparent in this book. I learned from it and recommend it highly.

May 27, 2004

Java 1.5, Beta 2

Beta 2 of Java 1.5 "Tiger" has been released.

Get it here.

Release notes are here.

A "What's New" summary is here.

May 14, 2004

Image ads on, comments off

I'm trying out Google's new image ads, though I doubt there are many relevant Java-related image ads to display yet. I'd ask readers to enter a comment if they see one, but I'm turning comments off (for now at least) since I'm tired of deleting comment spam, even with MT-Blacklist.

Update: turns out that Movable Type does not have a configuration to globally turn off commenting. I've hacked my template to remove the comment links, but that makes everyone's existing comments disappear, and I'm afraid it doesn't actually stop spammers from leaving their spam.

Update 2: There is probably a plugin to do it, but I just edited the database directly. Comments are now visible but "closed": readers and spammers cannot add any new ones.

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