Books : Developing Enterprise Java Applications with J2EE(TM) and UML (Addison-Wesley Object Technology Series)
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In association with Amazon.com
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by: Khawar Zaman Ahmed, Cary E. Umrysh
List Price: $44.99Amazon.com's Price: $40.49 You Save: $4.50 (10%)Prices subject to change.
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 005.133
EAN: 9780201738292
ISBN: 0201738295
Label: Addison-Wesley Professional
Manufacturer: Addison-Wesley Professional
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 368
Publication Date: October 27, 2001
Publisher: Addison-Wesley Professional
Sales Rank: 790624
Studio: Addison-Wesley Professional
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Editorial Review:
Product Description: J2EE is especially well suited for building large-scale, robust enterprise applications; UML has rapidly become the industry standard for expressing the design of enterprise software applications. Increasingly, enterprise developers wish to use J2EE and UML together. For the first time, there's an expert guide to doing so: Developing Enterprise Java Applications with J2EE and UML. This book focuses on the key success factors associated with successful J2EE enterprise development: effectively communicating requirements, making proper analysis and design decisions, and identifying optimal implementation choices. Two leading consultants on UML and enterprise Java development cover every stage of the process, and every key issue analysts, architects, and developers will face. Coverage includes: mapping the Java language to UML; understanding the fundamentals of software architecture; using UML use cases to clarify customer requirements; translating requirements into initial designs; and using J2EE technologies to translate designs into working systems. To illuminate key concepts, a detailed case study is presented throughout the book. For anyone building enterprise software with Java and J2EE, including application developers, systems analysts, programmers, and Project/IT managers.
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - Good overview of UML -Java mapping
This book has a good chapter 4 on UML-Java mapping which is explained very clearly. Other books tends to be bombastic and theorectical and vomitting out dry, useless high level UML jargons. Since most developers knows attrbutes and methods better than say, trying to figure out what an association link is, the mentioned chapter is invaluable. I wish the authors expanded more on UML-Java mapping as developer can then relate a diagram to the Java code. I would have given the book 5 star if it had expanded ... Read More
Rating: - Not for code junkies
This is a book I have been waiting for, a book explaining the relationship between J2EE and UML in practical terms. Whilst the information is not in depth, it is at the right level to explain the concepts clearly, and it gives practical examples. You won't find pages and pages of Java code. But you'll find a case study built up during the first 15 chapters, and nicely summarised in the final chapter.
After a few introductory chapters, 5 chapters are devoted to explaining UML. Already familiar ... Read More
Rating: - Excellent Book - Great Work!
Grady Booch wrote the foreward to this book where he speaks highly of these two authors, and I'd have to agree with his positive assessment. I don't often give out top ratings, but in this case I was fairly impressed.
The book addresses these two key technologies and describes in very practical terms how to really use the UML to help create successful J2EE-based enterprise apps. Even though most of the chapters go into significant depth and detail, the book ... Read More
Rating: - a nice light weight treatment of j2ee & uml
this book gives a nice coherent detailed tutorial of j2ee and uml, and how to use the two together. it's a pleasant read.
the treatment are concise and coherent, but somewhat light weight. it covers the most important concepts of both j2ee and uml. for modelling, it uses the wae and jsr26 uml extensions. it also follows a customized/simplified RUP process.
the analysis and design chapters (chapter 7 & 8) are pretty good.
the most significant drawback is the case study ... Read More
Rating: - it's useful
i am just searching this kind of books. I was interested in UML and J2EE for a long time, but it's so regret that no one book fit me. This book appears, it looks good.
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