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Comprehensive coverage of Ruby 1.8 and 1.9
"The New Most Important Ruby Book" JudeJude 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 NutshellThe 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 NutshellThe 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 NotebookAmazon 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 JavaI 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. |
November 26, 2007Surprise!In the post below I hinted at a secret contributor, besides Matz and myself, to the Ruby book. Amazon now displays the latest cover design for the book, and all can now be revealed.... To find out who's contribution I am honored to have in this book, click on the Amazon.com link to the right to visit the pre-order page for the book. This will let you see the cover at a readable size--look for the "see larger image" link. If you've been working with Ruby for a while, you will recognize the new name on the cover. And when you've recovered from your surprise, you can pre-order your copy of the book! :-) Update: the name has now disappeared from the cover. I don't know why. When I first posted this, it read: "with drawings by why the lucky stiff" November 13, 2007Ruby book into productionI've submitted my Ruby book to the production department at O'Reilly.They're going to allow me to make last minute changes as the final details (mainly IO encoding issues) are implemented in Ruby 1.9, but it really is going to get printed in very early 2008. (At the risk of repeating myself, let me suggest that you pre-order it now!) In other news, the cover (which you can see enlarged in the post below) is being modified to add another name alongside mine and Matz's. I'm keeping this a surprise for now, but I will say that the name is well-known within the Ruby community, and that I think everyone will be happy with this person's contribution to the book! November 08, 2007O'Reilly Animal for my Ruby Book: SungemsMy upcoming book, The Ruby Programming Language, now has cover art!. Here it is (hotlinked from amazon):
The birds on the cover are Horned Sungem hummingbirds. (Ruby-throated hummingbirds would have been nice, too, but these are beautiful birds and have "gem" in their name!) Here are photos showing the "horns" on the male and the cool-looking tail. The Wikipedia entry has this to say about horned sungems:
The book is nearing completion and I hope it will be available within one month of the release of Ruby 1.9. Pre-order it today! Your enthusiastic (I hope :-) pre-orders will help O'Reilly know how many copies to print. And amazon.com offers an additional 5% discount on these early orders. November 01, 2007New Book: The Ruby Programming LanguageI am pleased to announced that I'm nearing completion of The Ruby Programming Language, an updated and expanded version of Matz's Ruby in a Nutshell. It will be published by O'Reilly in early 2008 and is available for pre-order now at Amazon.com Here's how I describe the book in the preface:
If you're going to be at RubyConf this weekend, my editor from O'Reilly will have drafts of the book that you can take a look at. If you're not going to be there, you can't see the book itself, but you can browse the table of contents to get an idea of the breadth and depth of the language coverage. (This TOC includes a relatively short table of examples. The book actually contains quite a bit of example code, but most of the examples are unnumbered and don't appear in the TOC.) I've been working on this book for about a year now and am very excited about it. My hope is that it will be for Ruby what JavaScript: The Definitive Guide is for JavaScript!
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