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JavaWorld November 2000 Jeremy Blosser |
Explore the Dynamic Proxy API In Java 1.3, Sun introduced the Dynamic Proxy API, which can basically mimic any interface. Add that to an abstract data model, and you can conform any loosely typed data to a strongly typed interface. This article discusses some of the Dynamic Proxy API's many benefits... |
JavaWorld July 2001 Tarak Modi |
Clean up your wire protocol with SOAP, Part 4 Here's a framework based on the dynamic proxy classes in the Java 2 Platform, Version 1.3. This framework will make creating SOAP clients just as easy and intuitive as creating SOAP services... |
JavaWorld August 2001 Jeff Friesen |
Object-oriented language basics, Part 5 Every Java class has a superclass. In the absence of an extends keyword, Object is that superclass. Object takes center stage as this article presents its 11 methods... |
JavaWorld July 2001 Michael Cymerman |
Device programming with MIDP, Part 3 This article explores the methods of communication between the MIDlet and the world at large. Using the APIs contained in Java 2, Micro Edition's Mobile Information Device Profile (MIDP), developers can interact with external systems... |
JavaWorld September 2001 Jeff Friesen |
Object-oriented language basics, Part 6 Learn why Java's standard class library contains empty interfaces (such as Cloneable and Serializable). Also, examine the power of interfaces and learn why they provide more than a workaround for Java's lack of multiple implementation inheritance support... |
JavaWorld August 2002 Guy Gur-Ari |
Empower RMI with TRMI Transparent Remote Method Invocation (TRMI) extends RMI to simplify the creation of distributed applications by allowing centralized RemoteException handling and by allowing any interface to be used remotely. This article tours TRMI's inner workings. |
JavaWorld July 18, 2003 James Carman |
Get down to business In this article, you will learn how to structure your applications such that modifications to the business object implementation do not require changes to the user interface using a simple framework for accessing your business objects. |
JavaWorld March 2002 James Carman |
Write once, persist anywhere Most J2EE applications strive to abstract the database tier by employing the Data Access Object design pattern. This article shows you a DAO pattern framework that you can reuse on all your projects, regardless of object type... |
JavaWorld January 2001 Brian Goetz |
Design for performance, Part 1: Interfaces matter Many common Java performance problems stem from class-design decisions made early in the design process, long before most developers even start thinking about performance... |
JavaWorld June 2002 Dirk Laessig |
Score big with JSR 77, the J2EE Management Specification The specification's core is based on the model of managed objects, explained in this article. JSR 77 also defines an Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB) component for easily accessing these managed objects. |
Linux Journal May 2000 James Norton |
Dynamic Class Loading for C++ on Linux A technique that will provide developers with much flexibility in design. |
JavaWorld September 2001 Wm. Paul Rogers |
Maximize flexibility with interfaces and abstract classes Most introductory Java texts take an implementation-centric stab at how to use interfaces and abstract classes. However, few provide a clear design distinction for choosing between these two similar object-oriented constructs... |
JavaWorld September 2001 Wally Flint |
Access control for partial exposure With Java's built-in access control, you can't expose fields and methods to some classes in a package, while hiding them from others in the same package... |
JavaWorld October 2001 Jeff Friesen |
Object-oriented language basics, Part 7 This final installment of Java 101's object-oriented programming series explores Java's support for polymorphism and investigates how abstract classes accommodate generalities in class hierarchies. |
JavaWorld January 2001 Wm. Paul Rogers |
Thanks type and gentle class Confusing the concepts of object and class deserves an askance look. Failing to distinguish between type and class, however, typically goes unnoticed. Yet the battle to separate implementation and interface concerns requires type-oriented thinking... |
JavaWorld November 2000 Abhilash Koneri |
Eliminate tedious programming: Recover data with XML and Reflection The parsing of ResultSets forms one of the most significant tasks involved in retrieving data from a database. But, as a repetitious and uninteresting assignment, it is not a favorite among developers. How to supplant ResultSet parsing in the data access objects... |
JavaWorld September 2002 Jeff Friesen |
Packages organize classes and interfaces Professional Java developers organize frequently used classes and interfaces in class libraries for later reuse. Learn what constitutes a package, how to create a package of classes and interfaces, how to import packaged classes and interfaces into a program, and more. |
JavaWorld May 2002 Ryan Daigle |
Eliminate JDBC overhead Most J2EE and other types of Java applications interact in some way with information persisted in a database. Interfacing with that database involves several iterations of SQL statements, connection management, transaction lifecycles, result processing, and exception handling. The many parts of this ritualistic dance are common in all contexts; however, this replication doesn't have to exist. This article outlines a flexible framework that remedies the repetition of interacting with a JDBC-compliant database. |
JavaWorld October 2002 Jeff Friesen |
Java's character and assorted string classes support text-processing Text-processing is one of the more frequent activities in which computer programs engage. Java supports that activity via the Character, String, StringBuffer, and StringTokenizer classes. This article explores each class and introduces you to an assortment of those classes' methods. |
JavaWorld April 2001 Geoff Friesen |
Object-oriented language basics, Part 1 An introduction to object-oriented programming and how to declare classes and create objects from those classes... |
JavaWorld October 2001 |
Java 101 study hall Brush up on Java terms, learn tips and cautions, and enter the first Java 101 reader challenge |
JavaWorld April 2001 Piet Jonas |
Secure type-safe collections A framework that overcomes the standard Java Collections Framework's main problem: its containers lack the ability to restrict themselves to storing objects of a specific type. The solution uses reflection, wrapper classes, and a collection of static factory methods... |
JavaWorld October 2000 Bruce Eckel |
Everything is an object, Part 2 Eckel takes you through name visibility and using components from other libraries; the static keyword; and comments and embedded documentation. By the end, you should be able to build your first Java program... |
JavaWorld January 2002 Jason Cai |
Combine the Session Facade pattern with XML This article explores the benefits and advantages of using the Session Facade pattern. The author discusses when to use the pattern with value objects, and when to use it with XML. He also provides a detailed implementation of the Session Facade pattern integrated with XML... |
JavaWorld July 2000 Bill Venners |
Objects versus documents for server-client interaction, Part 2 In this three-part series, Bill Venners compares the traditional approach to defining client/server interaction, using protocols and documents, with Jini's strategy of using objects and interfaces. |
JavaWorld February 2002 Dirk Reinshagen |
Connect the enterprise with the JCA, Part 2 This article demonstrates a simple JCA (J2EE Connector Architecture) adapter implementation. After you read this article, you'll possess a good understanding of how to build your own JCA adapter... |
JavaWorld February 2002 Thierry Janaudy |
Accelerate EJB 2.0 development with EJBGen EJBGen is a free command-line tool that limits your code editing to just one file, the bean class. Step-by-step, this article shows you how to use EJBGen to speed your Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB) 2.0 development, especially for entity bean container-managed persistence... |
JavaWorld October 2001 Tony Loton |
JavaMail quick start This article shows the first steps on the road to building Java-based email applications. If you fancy building your own email client to replace Microsoft Outlook, or a Web-based email system to rival Hotmail, this is the place to start... |
JavaWorld June 2000 |
Letters to the Editor (June 23, 2000) Jason Hunter addresses a gripe with calling instanceof when using JDOM; Mark Johnson responds to feedback on his XML series; reader challenges Tony Sintes about whether it truly is impossible to write a swap method... |
JavaWorld November 2000 Geoff Friesen |
Applications, applets, and hybrids This article establishes our bearings and sets sail to the land of applications, applets, and hybrids (an unusual category of Java programs)... |
JavaWorld February 2002 Jeff Friesen |
Classes within classes As with fields and methods, Java allows classes to be members of other classes. This article explores Java's support for class nesting... |
JavaWorld October 3, 2003 Paul Philion |
Beware the dangers of generic Exceptions Java provides a rich exception-handling framework, but many programmers find it easier to ignore that richness and simply use generic Exceptions. This article explores the risks of throwing, catching, and ignoring generic Exceptions. |
JavaWorld May 2001 Jeff Friesen |
Object-oriented language basics, Part 2 In this article, you'll gain an understanding about fields, parameters, and local variables and learn to declare and access fields and methods... |
JavaWorld June 2001 Jeff Friesen |
Object-oriented language basics, Part 3 The author explores composition and demonstrates its value in object-oriented programming. Composition and inheritance are design consepts related in a manner similar to both sides of the same coin... |
JavaWorld March 2001 Jean-Pierre Dube |
Printing in Java, Part 5 This article concludes the design of the print framework, covering graphic primitives, the print-preview feature, and handling text... |
JavaWorld November 2001 Michael C. Daconta |
Practice makes perfect One pitfall stumbled on while porting an Extensible User Interface Language (XUL) game to Java and two pitfalls sent in by readers... |
JavaWorld February 2001 Brian Goetz |
Design for performance, Part 2: Reduce object creation Many common Java performance problems stem from class design decisions made early in the design process, long before most developers even start thinking about performance. The author discusses some techniques for reducing temporary object creation... |
JavaWorld September 2000 Bruce Eckel |
Everything is an object, Part 1 This two-part article, excerpted from Chapter 2 in Thinking in Java 2nd. ed., moves you to the point where you can write your first Java program. Bruce Eckel gives an overview of the essentials... |
JavaWorld July 2000 Jacob Weintraub |
Learn how to store data in objects In this second installment of Java 101, Jacob Weintraub delves into storing data in Java and the various ways you can use that data. Specifically, he examines how objects store data and how you can pass data to objects in method calls... |
JavaWorld July 2000 Patrick Sean Neville |
Crafting Metadata Like a classic plot retold in a new setting, software applications have extended lifetimes when decoupled from their contextual details. This article exposes how traditional configuration files, XML-based properties, and cryptography help keep such details out of code. |
JavaWorld December 2001 Brian Goetz |
Exceptional practices, Part 3 Exceptions provide a powerful mechanism for handling error conditions in Java programs. Part 3 covers message catalogs, a technique you can use to simplify the process of localizing your application for foreign markets. The use of message catalogs has additional benefits beyond localization -- they make it practical for documentation writers and human interface designers, rather than developers, to control the error messages. |
JavaWorld October 2002 |
Letters to the Editor Is JAAS responsible for retaining user data? Do the JVM and compiler share literal pool responsibilities? Is there a tool that performs manifest version incrementing? JavaWorld authors answer those questions and more in this month's Letters to the Editor. |
JavaWorld October 3, 2003 Allen Holub |
Create client-side user interfaces in HTML This article presents a variant on Swing's JEditorPane that makes it possible to specify an entire screen of your client-side user interface (UI) in HTML. |
JavaWorld September 2000 Michael C. Daconta |
Steer clear of Java pitfalls Avoiding Java programming problems can save you considerable time and frustration when developing programs. This month, Michael Daconta presents two API pitfalls and a long-standing bug. |
JavaWorld March 2001 Brian Goetz |
Design for performance, Part 3: Remote interfaces Many common Java performance problems stem from class design decisions made early in the design process, long before most developers even start thinking about performance. This article examines performance issues specific to remote applications... |
JavaWorld February 2003 Laurence Vanhelsuwe |
Unwrap the package statement's potential The package statement is a very powerful Java language feature. Yet most Java programmers, even experienced ones, fail to correctly exploit this power. Intrigued? Read on and see how a simple language feature can have massive repercussions downstream. |
JavaWorld January 2, 2004 Allen Holub |
More on getters and setters This article provides one of several possible programmatic solutions to the get/set-elimination problem. In particular, it demonstrates how to construct both Web-based and client-side user interfaces without exposing your object's implementation to the entire program. |
JavaWorld November 2000 M. Jeff Wilson |
Get smart with proxies and RMI RMI enables developers to either get a remote reference to a distributed object, in which all method calls are forwarded to the server object, or get a copy of the remote object and invoke on it locally. You can combine these approaches in a way that is transparent to the client code... |
JavaWorld December 2000 Michael C. Daconta |
When Runtime.exec() won't This installment of Java Traps discusses one new pitfall and revisits another from the previous column. Originating in the java.lang package, the pitfall specifically involves problems with the Runtime.exec() method. |
National Defense July 2004 Michael Peck |
Pentagon Setting Guidelines For Aircraft Interoperability As the number and types of unmanned aircraft continues to grow in the U.S. military services, the Pentagon is pushing the notion that UAVs should have standard interfaces so they can interact with each other. |