The Elements of Java Style, written by renowned author Scott
Ambler, Rogue Wave Software Vice President Alan Vermeulen, and a
team of programmers from Rogue Wave, is for anyone who writes Java
code. While there are many books that explain the syntax and basic
use of Java, this book explains not just what you can do with the
syntax, but what you ought to do. Just as Strunk and White's
The Elements of Style provides rules of usage for the English
language, this book provides a set of rules for Java practitioners
to follow. While illustrating these rules with parallel examples of
correct and incorrect usage, the book provides a collection of
standards, conventions, and guidelines for writing solid Java code
which will be easy to understand, maintain, and enhance. Anyone who
writes Java code or plans to should have this book next to their
computer.
'The Elements of Java Style is perfect in what it tries to achieve. Each rule is sensible, hardly any are debatable, and there is no excuse for ignoring any of them.' JavaZone Book of the Week
Scott Ambler is president and a senior consultant of Ronin International, a software services consulting firm that specializes in software process mentoring and object/component-based software architecture and development. He is a contributing editor for Software Development magazine and a columnist for Computing Canada.
Inhaltsangabe
From the contents: Preface; Introduction 1. General principles 2. Formatting conventions 3. Naming conventions 4. Documentation conventions 5. Programming conventions 6. Packaging conventions; Summary; Glossary; Bibliography; Index
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