Advanced Java: Internet Applications



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Advanced Java: Internet Applications


Third Edition

Book Development Proposal


Art Gittleman

California State University, Long Beach


Introduction
The authors propose to draft an all-new third edition of the book: Advanced Java: Internet Applications with a new look, philosophical bent, and completely updated coverage of the latest Java APIs.
Philosophy / Approach

Extreme Programming (XP), Test-centered-design, and practical software development techniques using professional development tools will be strongly stressed in the book.


Read the source, Luke.

There are literally MILLIONS of lines of well-documented, open-source Java software available on the Internet. It seems prudent to leverage this trove of riches and encourage our students early on to download, read, and learn from well-written application software.


To facilitate what might be a very unfamiliar process to many prospective consumers of this book; we have taken the liberty to include full source code for the Open-source Jetty JSP/Servlet web container along with a chapter in the Appendix that gives an architectural overview of the application.
LJade

One of the most frequently cited frustrations with the previous editions of Advanced Java: Internet Applications was the difficulty in obtaining and successfully installing the correct versions of the Sun Java SDK and other tools. We propose a novel solution to this problem. Our Linux Java Application Development Environment (LJADE) is a complete, stand-alone, CD-ROM-based software development environment. A student can insert the LJADE CD into any modern IBM-compatible PC and boot into a RAM-based software development environment (no local installation required) that contains all of the tools and utilities described in the text. The distribution is designed to permit students to save their work on a floppy diskette, a USB Flash device, NFS file server, or CVS repository. We plan to provide a web site dedicated to providing peer support to students using LJADE and lab technicians tasked with supporting the environment.


The LJade CD ROM is really a revolutionary tool for teaching software development. To the best of our knowledge, there has never been a completely pre-configured, ready-to-run, software development environment provided with ANY text or trade programming book. The benefits to the instructor and students are substantial, for example:

         a) LJade greatly reduces (or eliminates) the amount work necessary by an instructor or technical staff to configure a lab to support a class based upon the book.


         b) Student productivity is enhanced by providing a set of high-quality, professional software development tools and detailed instruction in their use.
         c) Students can work at home (or virtually anywhere else) with the same tool set they use in the lab on their homework assignments.
         d) Eclipse is hot. It has become the industry standard in Java development in just a few years. Any text that incorporates its use would be perceived as being on the cutting-edge.


The elevator pitch


AJIE 3rd Edition will be focused on practical development Internet techniques using the Java 2 Enterprise Edition 1.4 platform, combining current commercial practice with appropriately sized doses of Computer Science theory.

We will use the Java 2 Standard Edition 1.5, or 5, or Tiger, or whatever it is called, for the basic underlying Java.


We intend to make AJIE 3rd edition as accessible to the working professional as the Computer Science student. It is our desire that AJIE 3rd edition be offered to trade in conventional bookstores.
Target Audience
We expect this book to be used in Junior / Senior level courses in advanced programming technology. Highly-motivated individuals will also find the book to be an excellent guide for self-paced learning in Internet-related Java technologies. In any case, a successful reader of the book should have a minimum of 1-2 years of programming experience in Java and be comfortable writing 100-200 line programs.

Chapter Outline for the Third Edition




  1. Introduction

Objectives and philosophy


  1. Overview of Java 2 Enterprise Edition 1.4




  1. Development Methodologies

Extreme Programming (XP)

Why Unit Testing is important

Why using a Source code control systems is good for you


  1. Tools

Linux/Java development environment CD (LJava)

Eclipse Java Integrated Development Environment

Ant Java build tool

Concurrent Version System (CVS) revision control system

,JavaDoc – Documenting your classes

jUnit – Unit testing tool/fixture




  1. Application modeling

Understanding the Enterprise

Simple Entity-Relationship Modeling

Just enough UML

Writing a requirements specification




  1. Java Server Pages & Web applications

A Web page construction refresher

Using the Tomcat JSP / Servlet container

Adding dynamism to Web pages with JSP

JSP Applied – Building a Blog




  1. Servlets

The JSP/Servlet connection

Improving our Blog with Servlets




  1. Tag Libraries

What are they and why would you want to use them.

The Java Standard Tag Library (JSTL)

Writing your first Tag Library.

Blog revisited – Enhancing our Blog with Tag Libraries




  1. Model-View-Controller Design pattern

A brief intro to design patterns and software engineering

Type 1 vs. Type 2 Web applications

Building a Type 2 Web application the hard way

Introducing Struts – Type 2 made a bit easier.

An Even Better Blog – Rewriting our Blog using Struts


  1. Java Database Connectivity

A practical guide to JDBC

Using JDBC - Storing our Blog data in a Relational Database




  1. Extensible Markup Language (XML)

The Lingua Franca of the Internet

Entities, Attributes, Schemas and DTDs




  1. Web Services

What are Web Services and what can I do with them?

Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP)

Introducing Apache Axis

Adding a Soap interface to our Blog




  1. Authentication, Authorization and Accounting

Java Authentication and Authorization Service (JAAS)

Making our Blog private – Using JAAS to secure our Blog.




  1. Enterprise-class Applications

What makes an Enterprise-class application special?

n-Tier applications

Implementing business logic



  1. Enterprise Java Beans (EJBs)

Session, Entity, and Message Driven EJBs

When NOT to use EJBs

Writing a simple Session EJB

Persisting application data with Entity Beans





  1. Applying EJB Technology

Simplifying EJB development with Xdoclet


  1. Non-Browser application clients

Writing a Blog desktop application with Eclipse (SWT)

Appendices





  • An introduction to J2SDK 1.5

Generics, Enumerated Types, Meta Data, and More


  • Tom Jewett’s Database Primer

An overview of Enterprise-Relationship modeling, Structured Query Language

(SQL), and data normalization.




  • Using Tomcat

The J2EE reference JSP/Servlet container implementation


  • The JBoss J2EE server – Sometimes, there is a free lunch







  • Ant command reference




  • JUnit for the testing-challenged




  • CVS command reference




  • JavaDoc revealed




  • UML in 30 minutes




  • Everything you ever wanted to know about Design Patterns




  • The Linux/Java Student Development Environment Technical Reference Guide




  • Exploring Jetty


GENERAL INFORMATION- Advanced Java

Name: (or business card)

Address you want your honoraria mailed to:

School you teach at:

Social Security Number:______________________

Tel:_____________________________ FAX:_______________________________


Email:________________________________

Please list the courses you usually teach. Circle those for which you’re willing to review manuscripts:

1. 2.

3. 4.


Course number ______ /Title/______________________________ for Advanced Java
approx. annual enrollment:____

Pre-reqs for course: ___had an intro Java course ___had some other programming language course ___none


What is the most recently-used textbook for this class?

_Author:____________________________________ Title: _­­­­­____________________________


Who else teaches this course besides you, and how can we reach them to review this or similar projects?

Name

Email or tel #














Are you considering any writing yourself?

If so, for what course?

=======================================================

Thanks for agreeing to review this material.

Please number your answers to correspond with these questions:




  1. Overall, what (if anything) looks attractive and desirable about the

proposal?
2. Overall, what (if anything) looks UN-attractive and UN-desirable about the

proposal?


3.Coverage : What topics missing from the Table of Contents which would prevent you from considering this text for adoption in your advanced Java course?(write them right on the outline if you prefer)

4. The authors plan on using Java 1.5, or 5, or Tiger, or whatever it’s going to ultimately be called. Do you see any places where they have neglected to use new terms or nomenclature?


5. If you had to select one chapter to review to give you an idea of the overall quality of this project, what chapter(s) would it be?
6. If you could have the author change one thing about this project, what would it be?
7 What (if anything) is/was your opinion of the previous edition of this title? (our database indicates we sent you a copy in Spring 2002) Did you teach out of it and if not, do you know why not?
8. Bottom Line: does this sound like it’s headed in a direction to be a text you adopt or vote to adopt? Why or why not?
You can mail it to us at

Scott/Jones Publishing, attn: Richard Jones



P.O. Box 696, El Granada CA 94018; or email it to jmcoston@charter.net
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