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Objects First With Java: A Practical Introduction Using BlueJ (4th Edition) | 
enlarge | Authors: David J. Barnes, Michael Kolling Publisher: Prentice Hall Category: Book
List Price: $103.00 Buy New: $76.00 You Save: $27.00 (26%)
New (24) Used (12) from $66.62
Rating: 26 reviews Sales Rank: 19712
Media: Paperback Edition: 4 Pages: 560 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.9 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 7.5 x 1
ISBN: 0136060862 Dewey Decimal Number: 005.117 EAN: 9780136060864
Publication Date: September 1, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description The BlueJ development environment was specifically designed to support introductory teaching of object-orientations and helps users grasp the complicated concepts of class structure. Unlike most books on the subject, this text uses BlueJ to get readers started on object-oriented programming from day one. Uses a spiral approach that introduces a topic in a simple context early on, then revisits it later to increase understanding; Offers an abundance of projects for hands-on practice; Chapters are ordered around software development concepts rather than language features; Language-feature introduction is naturally driven by problems to be solved; Chapters are based around distinct projects for more variety; Does not cover traditional topics like control structures. A useful reference for programmers.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 21 more reviews...
excellent service and care September 17, 2007 Jasmin Sarvida (chicago, illinois) 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
i received the book on time. the condition of the book was brand new as stated. thank you for providing such great service!
NOT GOOD for Beginners... August 11, 2007 J. Sanders (KCMO USA) 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
I bought this book because it was required for a course. Out of all of the exercise books I have used, this is by far the hardest to follow. There are not enough examples to actually teach you the information. There are no answers, so you never know if what you're doing is correct. Overall, the book is vague in its descriptions and has not given me any kind of useful Java skills. I'm sure it would be good for someone who already knows a little about Java or that has a teacher standing right by them to explain everything. Even the exercises were not very clear and hard to understand. I would recommend searching for a different book.
Nice intro book May 9, 2007 I. Tang (Van, BC, Canada) most intro to programming books expect/assume you to know about programming before you can begin. This book actually teaches you the very basic and doesnt assume that you know anything. :-) Its probably the best one for beginners.
not worth the money March 18, 2007 Paul Lutskovsky (Portland, OR USA) 0 out of 7 found this review helpful
I purchased this for use in a Java class. The instructor swore by this book. In the end, it just wasn't worth the money. All the information I needed were already available online at through Sun and other Java resources.
Different form the rest! Objects first, objects alive - what OOP is about. January 24, 2007 H. Lenzi (Porto Alegre, RS Brazil) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Most other books on Java are practically carbon copies of each other. They'll take you through the same boring sequence of learning. When you get to objects, you're just overwhelmed with (what seems to be) information of little practical relevance - or at least, no fun. One hardly gets the feel for what the Object Oriented programming hype is all about. BlueJ gives you an IDE and code. Like most professional programmers, you won't be writing HelloWorld.java. Instead, you'll begin with code that was already writen by others. The book will take you on a tour in which you'll be exploring the behavior of objects. You'll be asked to reimplement classes, and observe the effects your changes have on the program's behavior. The IDE shows you class diagrams, so you can begin to analyze dependencies. Objects in BlueJ are "live", and you inspect their behaviors on the fly. This is unlike most other books, where you are required to use a text editor. This is miles ahead from the other 99% of tutorial books. BlueJ almost feels like the Java programmer is in a Smalltalk environment. BlueJ gives the beginer a real feel for code reuse, modularity, and objects, and the IDE is an integrated tool in the development process, just like it is for a professional Java programmer. An outstanding book. Having gone through piles of Java tutorial books, this is the one to learn from. This one's truly for learning OOP.
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