Pages: 768 (Paperback) ISBN: 0764556177 Pub: John Wiley & Sons Pub date: 2004-04-23 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 372712
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Reader Reviews:A good book (0/0 people found this helpful)This book is usefull to understand a set of java tool for XP, but it can be only a starting point to learn and to use them. Beware - essential downloads not available (3/4 people found this helpful)Page xxvii of the book, reads: Great Content, Bad Editing (7/9 people found this helpful)I bought this book to gain an overview of the tools available in open source community, but whose documentation was lacking. It emphasized the use of Ant to automate everything, from unit tests (Junit, Cactus) to building and deploying J2EE applications. I have found it extremely usefull. I didn't know much about using Ant to start with and was confused by the documentation available on the Cactus website. This book cleared it up for me. The only complaint is that the book is fraught with errors. Especially the code. I haven't downloaded the code off the website yet, but I don't believe any code in the book would compile. On page 154, I found 9 errors in the code. Good book if you are setting up an automated development environment. You will probably want more than a little experience with Java and be willing to go to the online documentation for Ant to clear up some issues. Very useful and don't be put of by the XP moniker (3/4 people found this helpful)A very practical book which gets to the nitty gritty of coding and testing without insisting on pair programming (which is difficult for the many one person bands out there!). The book actually helps you quickly get the best out of Ant , Junit, JMeter etc , without re-inventing the wheel. The right (practical) way to start up a xp java team (11/12 people found this helpful)... I think it's hard to practice all 12 practices of the xp methodology but there are some, the more practical, that are very useful and necessary even if you don't want to make xp: the incremental test first programming, using JUnit, Cactus, HttpUnit and continuous integration, using Ant. The book is about these and more open source tools, which means that we can just download them, use them and if we can, improve them. And this is great. But open source tools often lacks in printed documetation and if you are not involved in their development it could be difficult to start using them. In this case this book is just what you need. Similar ProductsMaven: A Developer's Notebook (Developer's Notebooks) Head First Design Patterns (Head First) Java Persistence with Hibernate CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
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