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Head First Java, 2nd Edition

Head First Java, 2nd Edition
by Kathy Sierra; Bert Bates

Head First Design Patterns

Head First Design Patterns
by Eric Freeman; Elisabeth Robson; Kathy Sierra; Bert Bates

Java Concurrency in Practice

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by Brian Goetz; Tim Peierls; Joshua Bloch; Joseph Bowbeer; David Holmes; Doug Lea

JavaServer Pages From Scratch teaches beginning users about the many techniques involved in JavaServer Pages by building an online auction house with an events calendar. In addition to discussing the planning and designing of an application, the book will also cover development of forms, validating data, registering new users, servlets, sessions management, enterprise javabeans, cookies and wireless protocol.

Amazon.com® Reader Reviews (Ranked by Helpfulness)

Average Amazon.com® Rating: 3.0 out of 5 rating Based on 24 Ratings

Great idea for book - but got lost in inconsistencies - 2002-02-04
Reviewer Rating: 1 star rating2 star rating3 star rating4 star rating5 star rating
I have been programming server side code for about 3 years. When my firm got a jsp project I immediately went browsing the local bookstore for some jsp books feeling confident that I could put my Java skills to work.

This book immediately caught my eye. It seemed to have everything I was looking for. While working through the first couple of chapters, I was utterly confused. The author tells you to name a page one name, but refers to the same page with a completely different name for its examples. this happens several times throughout the book. By trial and error I eventually got some of the code to work but with way too much effort.

This is not a simple walkthrough like the books title dictates. There are too many leaps from example to example and too many holes to fill. Most of my time was spent figuring out how to piece the several bits of code together to make the examples work. I am sure this is not the author's fault, but the publisher's rather. It's a shame, because this could have been a winner instead of the jumbling mess that it is. Also Que offers no errata to help out and the source code is just as confusing as the book!

If you wanna learn jsp quick, definately check out Wrox's Beginning JSP Web Development, or Forta's JSP book, and "scratch" this one of your list. Shame on you Que.

A book for those who love code errors - 2001-12-02
Reviewer Rating: 1 star rating2 star rating3 star rating4 star rating5 star rating
Most of the negative reviewers are right about this book. Don't see how you can rate this book very high unless you really don't need to read it in the first place. There are a lot of code errors. The author seems to be making assumptions that you already know enough to make getting through this disaster a breeze.

despite the other reviews - 2002-09-10
Reviewer Rating: 1 star rating2 star rating3 star rating4 star rating5 star rating
I read all the negative reviews and still bought the book. And as a student of JSP, I'm glad I did because I found it conceptually good and well written. And more importantly, easy to understand. It has definately given me a greater knowledge base of JSP.

Way to many editing and coding errors. - 2001-12-10
Reviewer Rating: 1 star rating2 star rating3 star rating4 star rating5 star rating
As a very skilled web page designer and beginning java programmer wanting to learn JSP, the coding errors in the text of this book made it nothing but frustrating. The author makes huge assumptions about the readers skill level, or the "intermediate" rating from Que is way off. That on top of the very frustrating editing errors in the sample code makes this book a burden and a waist of time for any non-java expert. If you like a challenge to make you learn a subject, then searching through the java doc finding the stupid capitalization errors in the sample code in this book is for you.

Nice idea. Poor implementation. - 2001-07-13
Reviewer Rating: 1 star rating2 star rating3 star rating4 star rating5 star rating
I agree with Dan Green. The author has a hard enough job putting his work together, let alone fixing every typo. That's the publishers job. As far as I am concerned Maneesh Sahu has been let down by would-be vanity publisher QUE. There are typos galore and just too many code errors. It's as if QUE printed the wrong draft. I am just glad I am an experienced enough developer to see around the bugs. This work has the potential to rank amongst the better jsp books. Buy it if you have some programming skills, but still expect problems. Else get Web Development with Java Server Pages by Duane K. Fields and Mark A. Kolb. To quote Dan Green, "QUE get it together"...

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