Head First Design Patterns
by Eric Freeman; Elisabeth Robson; Kathy Sierra; Bert Bates
Head First Software Development
by Dan Pilone; Russell Miles
Head First C#
by Andrew Stellman; Jennifer Greene
Head First Java, 2nd Edition
by Kathy Sierra; Bert Bates
Head First Java, 2nd Edition
by Kathy Sierra; Bert Bates
Effective Java™, Second Edition
by Joshua Bloch
Head First Design Patterns
by Eric Freeman; Elisabeth Robson; Kathy Sierra; Bert Bates
Java Concurrency in Practice
by Brian Goetz; Tim Peierls; Joshua Bloch; Joseph Bowbeer; David Holmes; Doug Lea
Java Web Services: Up and Running, 1st Edition
by Martin Kalin
"Head First Object Oriented Analysis and Design is a refreshing look at subject of OOAD. What sets this book apart is its focus on learning. The authors have made the content of OOAD accessible, usable for the practitioner." Ivar Jacobson, Ivar Jacobson Consulting
"I just finished reading HF OOA&D and I loved it! The thing I liked most about this book was its focus on why we do OOA&D-to write great software!" Kyle Brown, Distinguished Engineer, IBM
"Hidden behind the funny pictures and crazy fonts is a serious, intelligent, extremely well-crafted presentation of OO Analysis and Design. As I read the book, I felt like I was looking over the shoulder of an expert designer who was explaining to me what issues were important at each step, and why." Edward Sciore, Associate Professor, Computer Science Department, Boston College
Tired of reading Object Oriented Analysis and Design books that only makes sense after you're an expert? You've heard OOA&D can help you write great software every time-software that makes your boss happy, your customers satisfied and gives you more time to do what makes you happy.
But how?
Head First Object-Oriented Analysis & Design shows you how to analyze, design, and write serious object-oriented software: software that's easy to reuse, maintain, and extend; software that doesn't hurt your head; software that lets you add new features without breaking the old ones. Inside you will learn how to:
Use OO principles like encapsulation and delegation to build applications that are flexible
Apply the Open-Closed Principle (OCP) and the Single Responsibility Principle (SRP) to promote reuse of your code
Leverage the power of design patterns to solve your problems more efficiently
Use UML, use cases, and diagrams to ensure that all stakeholders are communicating clearly to help you deliver the right software that meets everyone's needs.
By exploiting how your brain works, Head First Object-Oriented Analysis & Design compresses the time it takes to learn and retain complex information. Expect to have fun, expect to learn, expect to be writing great software consistently by the time you're finished reading this!
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Based on 43 Ratings
Not for those new to Java. - 2009-03-29
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Although the books appears easy to understand it it littered with Java code examples so do not buy this book if you aren't comfortable with the Java language.
For beginners in software development only - 2009-08-02
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I expected it is a nice book summing up and showing good examples, and list all valuable OOD principles. But it is not.
There is no clear and concise description of main points, all is around pictures on many pages.
Not all OOD principles listed.
OOP is not given as clear topic, just buy some pieces.
Examples and some terms definition is very quistionable.
I think authors should more crearly and in more details tell the basics.
Though it can be used as a book for total beginners in order to clarify hard questions and tie between OOP and Java.
Makes concepts easier to understand. - 2009-05-18
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I'm a software professional and I love this book. It helped me to remember some of the concepts that I have forgotten.
Value Depends on your Use - 2009-03-19
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The level of design skill needed depends on who you are. This book would not be of much good to a new developer. If you have built a serious program or more in OO then it will make more sense to you. It also makes more sense if you build bigger applications. My suggestion is put the book on your shelf and pick it up every three or four months as you learn OO. When you arrive the book will be a five. If you expect it to turn your software into five before you are familiar enough with project needs you are looking for being part of a magic solution. It takes experience with coding and business before you will grasp how to use these nuggets of gold.
great book - 2009-03-15
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It's my first experiment with head fisrt book, and it will not be the last, the book is wonderfull by all meanings of the word, now i can think about big systems implementation easy, now i have a lot of tools under my belt to analyse any system and put it into working software , i learned how to listen to the customer carefully and collect features and write uses case for each scenario and convert my customer words into classes and methods on UML diagram (big picture), and learned how to determine the architecturually siginificant features to begin coding , and learned which method to use : feature driven developement or test driven developement , and how to write test cases and learned alot of OO principles (the best part), when to use inheritance, delegation, interfaces, aggregation and composition and learned Open closed priniciple , liskov substitution principle, single responisibility principle and don't repeat yourself principle for better, extensible and easy to modify code , all that great stuff and more in the book illustrated by funny pictures ( i can't forget the head on a table say to it self: it really sucks to be abstract method. you don't have a body) and programmers discussion and puzzles and dogs barking , really iam proud to read this book , and i canot wait to read Head first networking and i hope it releaed soon .
Top Level Categories:
Computer Science
Programming
Software Engineering
Sub-Categories:
Computer Science > Coding
Programming > Java
Software Engineering > Design Patterns
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