java 17 for absolute beginners

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Java 17 for Absolute Beginners - 2867753132

239,97 zł

Java 17 for Absolute Beginners APress

Książki / Literatura obcojęzyczna

Write your first code in Java 17 using simple, step-by-step examples that model real-word objects and events, making learning easy. With Java 17 for Absolute Beginners you'll be able to pick up the concepts without fuss. It teaches Java development in language anyone can understand, giving you the best possible start. You'll see clear code descriptions and layout so that you can get your code running as soon as possible. Author Iuliana Cosmina focuses on practical knowledge and getting you up to speed quickly-all the bits and pieces a novice needs to get started programming in Java. First, you'll discover what type of language Java is, what it is good for, and how it is executed. With the theory out of the way, you'll install Java, choose an editor such as IntelliJ IDEA, and write your first simple Java program. Along the way you'll compile and execute this program so it can run on any platform that supports Java. As part of this tutorial you'll see how to write high-quality code by following conventions and respecting well-known programming principles, making your projects more professional and efficient. Java 17 for Absolute Beginners gives you all you need to start your Java programming journey. No experience necessary. After reading this book, you'll come away with the basics to get started writing programs in Java. What You Will Learn Get started with Java 17 from scratch Use data types, operators, and the stream API Install and use the IntelliJ IDEA and the Gradle build tool Exchange data using the new JSON APIs Play with images using multi-resolution APIs Implement the publish-subscribe architecture Who This Book Is ForThose who are new to programming and who want to start with Java.

Sklep: Libristo.pl

Java: Programming Basics for Absolute Beginners - 2858439638

72,22 zł

Java: Programming Basics for Absolute Beginners

Książki

Sklep: KrainaKsiazek.pl

More Java 17 - 2866219191

302,36 zł

More Java 17 APress

Książki / Literatura obcojęzyczna

Work with the essential and advanced features of the Java 17 release. This book covers features such as annotations, reflection, and generics. These topics are then complemented by details of how to use lambda expressions, allowing you to build powerful and efficient Java programs. Furthermore, added to this edition you'll find topics on network programming, Java RMI, the process API, and custom runtime images. The authors provide a multitude of diagrams and complete programs to help you visualize and better understand the topics covered in this book. More Java 17, Third Edition starts with a series of chapters on the essential language features provided by Java before moving on to Java module development and packaging, and improved interop with other languages. After reading this book, you'll have the know-how of a professional Java programmer and be able to tackle most projects with confidence. This book's source code can be accessed at github.com/Apress/more-java-17. What You Will Learn Use essential and advanced features of the Java language Code Java annotations Work with reflection and generics Manage streams with the Stream API Who This Book Is For Those new to Java programming who are continuing the Java learning journey; it is recommended that you read an introductory Java programming book first, such as Java 17 for Absolute Beginners, from Apress.

Sklep: Libristo.pl

Programowanie dla początkujących - Mark A. Lassoff - 2836937532

12,96 zł

Programowanie dla początkujących - Mark A. Lassoff

Książki & Multimedia > Książki

Opis - Poznaj świat programowania! Dzięki tej książce: Poznasz podstawy programowania Nauczysz się korzystać z podstawowych konstrukcji - pętli, instrukcji warunkowych Wykorzystasz zmienne Pobierzesz dane od użytkownika oraz zapiszesz wyniki do pliku Zgłębisz podstawy języka Python Jeżeli chcesz się nauczyć programować, musisz poznać podstawowe zasady i typowe konstrukcje - pętle, instrukcje warunkowe i zmienne, które są wspólne dla wszystkich powszechnie używanych języków programowania. Jeżeli zamierzasz ugruntować fundamenty, by uczyć się konkretnych języków, sięgnij po tę książkę. Dzięki niej napiszesz i uruchomisz swój pierwszy program. Następnie nauczysz się pobierać dane od użytkownika, zapisywać wyniki w plikach oraz zrozumiesz, jak działają zmienne. Kolejny krok to nauka korzystania z pętli i instrukcji warunkowych - w ten sposób będziesz w stanie zaimplementować wiele nawet bardzo zaawansowanych programów. Mark Lassoff wszystkie koncepcje prezentuje na przykładzie języka Python, którego składnia jest zbliżona do innych języków, takich jak: JavaScript, Java czy C . Sięgnij po tę książkę i wkrocz w świat programowania! Czytając niniejszą książkę i samodzielnie pisząc przedstawione w niej przykłady, opanujesz podstawy programowania. Swój pierwszy program napiszesz już w pierwszym rozdziale książki . W drugim rozdziale, poznasz podstawowe zagadnienia wejścia-wyjścia . W rozdziale trzecim zaczniesz korzystać ze zmiennych - pojęcia mającego kluczowe znaczenie w każdym języku programowania. Rozdział czwarty został poświęcony instrukcjom warunkowym i pętlom ; natomiast w piątym poznasz struktury , przeznaczone do przechowywania różnych rodzajów danych. W ostatnim, szóstym rozdziale książki zaczniesz tworzyć klasy i obiekty , poznając tym samym podstawy programowania obiektowego . Wkrocz w świat programowania! Nazwa - Programowanie dla początkujących Oryginalny tytuł - Programming for Absolute Beginners Autor - Mark A. Lassoff Oprawa - Miękka Wydawca - Helion Kod ISBN - 9788328319080 Kod EAN - 9788328319080 Wydanie - 1 Rok wydania - 2016 Język - PL Tłumacz - Beata Pawlak, Piotr Rajca Format - 140x208 Ilość stron - 72 Podatek VAT - 5% Premiera - 2016-02-26

Sklep: InBook.pl

XSLT 2.0 and XPath 2.0 Programmer's Reference 4e - 2872013588

352,59 zł

XSLT 2.0 and XPath 2.0 Programmer's Reference 4e John Wiley & Sons Inc

Książki / Literatura obcojęzyczna

This book is primarily a practical reference book for professional XSLT developers. It assumes no previous knowledge of the language, and many developers have used it as their first introduction to XSLT; however, it is not structured as a tutorial, and there are other books on XSLT that provide a gentler approach for beginners. The book does assume a basic knowledge of XML, HTML, and the architecture of the Web, and it is written for experienced programmers. There's no assumption that you know any particular language such as Java or Visual Basic, just that you recognize the concepts that all programming languages have in common. The book is suitable both for XSLT 1.0 users upgrading to XSLT 2.0, and for newcomers to XSLT. The book is also equally suitable whether you work in the Java or .NET world. As befits a reference book, a key aim is that the coverage should be comprehensive and authoritative. It is designed to give you all the details, not just an overview of the 20 percent of the language that most people use 80 percent of the time.It's designed so that you will keep coming back to the book whenever you encounter new and challenging programming tasks, not as a book that you skim quickly and then leave on the shelf. If you like detail, you will enjoy this book; if not, you probably won't. But as well as giving the detail, this book aims to explain the concepts, in some depth. It's therefore a book for people who not only want to use the language but who also want to understand it at a deep level. The book aims to tell you everything you need to know about the XSLT 2.0 language. It gives equal weight to the things that are new in XSLT 2.0 and the things that were already present in version 1.0. The book is about the language, not about specific products. However, there are appendices about Saxon (the author's own implementation of XSLT 2.0), about the Altova XSLT 2.0 implementation, and about the Java and Microsoft APIs for controlling XSLT transformations, which will no doubt be upgraded to handle XSLT 2.0 as well as 1.0. A third XSLT 2.0 processor, Gestalt, was released shortly before the book went to press, too late to describe it in any detail. But the experience of XSLT 1.0 is that there has been a very high level of interoperability between different XSLT processors, and if you can use one of them, then you can use them all.In the previous edition we split XSLT 2.0 and XPath 2.0 into separate volumes. The idea was that some readers might be interested in XPath alone. However, many bought the XSLT 2.0 book without its XPath companion and were left confused as a result; so this time, the material is back together. The XPath reference information is in self-contained chapters, so it should still be accessible when you use XPath in contexts other than XSLT. The book does not cover XSL Formatting Objects, a big subject in its own right. Nor does it cover XML Schemas in any detail. If you want to use these important technologies in conjunction with XSLT, there are other books that do them justice. This book contains twenty chapters and eight appendixes (the last of which is a glossary) organized into four parts. The following section outlines what you can find in each part, chapter, and appendix. Part I: Foundations: The first part of the book covers essential concepts. You should read these before you start coding.If you ignore this advice, as most people do, then you read them when you get to that trough of despair when you find it impossible to make the language do anything but the most trivial tasks. XSLT is different from other languages, and to make it work for you, you need to understand how it was designed to be used. Chapter 1: XSLT in Context: This chapter explains how XSLT fits into the big picture: how the language came into being and how it sits alongside other technologies. It also has a few simple coding examples to keep you alert. Chapter 2: The XSLT Processing Model: This is about the architecture of an XSLT processor: the inputs, the outputs, and the data model. Understanding the data model is perhaps the most important thing that distinguishes an XSLT expert from an amateur; it may seem like information that you can't use immediately, but it's knowledge that will stop you making a lot of stupid mistakes. Chapter 3: Stylesheet Structure: XSLT development is about writing stylesheets, and this chapter takes a bird's eye view of what stylesheets look like.It explains the key concepts of rule-based programming using templates, and explains how to undertake programming-in-the-large by structuring your application using modules and pipelines. Chapter 4: Stylesheets and Schemas: A key innovation in XSLT 2.0 is that stylesheets can take advantage of knowledge about the structure of your input and output documents, provided in the form of an XML Schema. This chapter provides a quick overview of XML Schema to describe its impact on XSLT development. Not everyone uses schemas, and you can skip this chapter if you fall into that category. Chapter 5: The Type System: XPath 2.0 and XSLT 2.0 offer strong typing as an alternative to the weak typing approach of the 1.0 languages. This means that you can declare the types of your variables, functions, and parameters, and use this information to get early warning of programming errors. This chapter explains the data types available and the mechanisms for creating user-defined types. Part II: XSLT and XPath Reference: This section of the book contains reference material, organized in the hope that you can easily find what you need when you need it.It's not designed for sequential reading, though you might well want to leaf through the pages to discover what's there. Chapter 6: XSLT Elements: This monster chapter lists all the XSLT elements you can use in a stylesheet, in alphabetical order, giving detailed rules for the syntax and semantics of each element, advice on usage, and examples. This is probably the part of the book you will use most frequently as you become an expert XSLT user. It's a "no stone unturned" approach, based on the belief that as a professional developer you need to know what happens when the going gets tough, not just when the wind is in your direction. Chapter 7: XPath Fundamentals: This chapter explains the basics of XPath: the low-level constructs such as literals, variables, and function calls. It also explains the context rules, which describe how the evaluation of XPath expressions depends on the XSLT processing context in which they appear. Chapter 8: XPath: Operators on Items: XPath offers the usual range of operators for performing arithmetic, boolean comparison, and the like.However, these don't always behave exactly as you would expect, so it's worth reading this chapter to see what's available and how it differs from the last language that you used. Chapter 9: XPath: Path Expressions: Path expressions are what make XPath special; they enable you to navigate around the structure of an XML document. This chapter explains the syntax of path expressions, the 13 axes that you can use to locate the nodes that you need, and associated operators such as union, intersection, and difference. Chapter 10: XPath: Sequence Expressions: Unlike XPath 1.0, in version 2.0 all values are sequences (singletons are just a special case). Some of the most important operators in XPath 2.0 are those that manipulate sequences, notably the "for" expression, which translates one sequence into another by applying a mapping. Chapter 11: XPath: Type Expressions: The type system was explained in Chapter 5; this chapter explains the operations that you can use to take advantage of types. This includes the "cast" operation which is used to convert values from one type to another.A big part of this chapter is devoted to the detailed rules for how these conversions are done.Chapter 12: XSLT Patterns: This chapter returns from XPath to a subject that's specific to XSLT. Patterns are used to define template rules, the essence of XSLT's rule-based programming approach. The reason for explaining them now is that the syntax and semantics of patterns depends strongly on the corresponding rules for XPath expressions. Chapter 13: The Function Library: XPath 2.0 includes a library of functions that can be called from any XPath expression; XSLT 2.0 extends this with some additional functions that are available only when XPath is used within XSLT. The library has grown immensely since XPath 1.0. This chapter provides a single alphabetical reference for all these functions. Chapter 14: Regular Expressions: Processing of text is an area where XSLT 2.0 and XPath 2.0 are much more powerful than version 1.0, and this is largely through the use of constructs that exploit regular expressions. If you're familiar with regexes from languages such as Perl, this chapter tells you how XPath regular expressions differ. If you're new to the subject, it explains it from first principles.Chapter 15: Serialization: Serialization in XSLT means the ability to generate a textual XML document from the tree structure that's manipulated by a stylesheet. This isn't part of XSLT processing proper, so (following W3C's lead) it's separated it into its own chapter. You can control serialization from the stylesheet using an declaration, but many products also allow you to control it directly via an API. Part III: Exploitation: The final section of the book is advice and guidance on how to take advantage of XSLT to write real applications. It's intended to make you not just a competent XSLT coder, but a competent designer too. The best way of learning is by studying the work of others, so the emphasis here is on practical case studies. Chapter 16: Extensibility: This chapter describes the "hooks" provided in the XSLT specification to allow vendors and users to plug in extra functionality. The way this works will vary from one implementation to another, so we can't cover all possibilities, but one important aspect that the chapter does cover is how to use such extensions and still keep your code portable.Chapter 17: Stylesheet Design Patterns: This chapter explores a number of design and coding patterns for XSLT programming, starting with the simplest "fill-in-the-blanks" stylesheet, and extending to the full use of recursive programming in the functional programming style, which is needed to tackle problems of any computational complexity. This provides an opportunity to explain the thinking behind functional programming and the change in mindset needed to take full advantage of this style of development. Chapter 18: Case Study: XMLSpec: XSLT is often used for rendering documents, so where better to look for a case study than the stylesheets used by the W3C to render the XML and XSLT specifications, and others in the same family, for display on the web? The resulting stylesheets are typical of those you will find in any publishing organization that uses XML to develop a series of documents with a compatible look-and-feel. Chapter 19: Case Study: A Family Tree: Displaying a family tree is another typical XSLT application.This example with semi-structured data-a mixture of fairly complex data and narrative text-that can be presented in many different ways for different audiences. It also shows how to tackle another typical XSLT problem, conversion of the data into XML from a legacy text-based format. As it happens, this uses nearly all the important new XSLT 2.0 features in one short stylesheet. But another aim of this chapter is to show a collection of stylesheets doing different jobs as part of a complete application. Chapter 20: Case Study: Knight's Tour: Finding a route around a chessboard where a knight visits every square without ever retracing its steps might sound a fairly esoteric application for XSLT, but it's a good way of showing how even the most complex of algorithms are within the capabilities of the language. You may not need to tackle this particular problem, but if you want to construct an SVG diagram showing progress against your project plan, then the problems won't be that dissimilar. Part IV: Appendices: A ppendix A: XPath 2.0 Syntax Summary: Collects the XPath grammar rules and operator precedences into one place for ease of reference.Appendix B: Error Codes: A list of all the error codes defined in the XSLT and XPath language specifications, with brief explanations to help you understand what's gone wrong. Appendix C: Backward Compatibility: The list of things you need to look out for when converting applications from XSLT 1.0. Appendix D: Microsoft XSLT Processors: Although the two Microsoft XSLT processors don't yet support XSLT 2.0, we thought many readers would find it useful to have a quick summary here of the main objects and methods used in their APIs. Appendix E: JAXP: the Java API for XML Processing: JAXP is an interface rather than a product. Again, it doesn't have explicit support yet for XSLT 2.0, but Java programmers will often be using it in XSLT 2.0 projects, so the book includes an overview of the classes and methods available. Appendix F: Saxon: At the time of writing Saxon (developed by the author of this book) provides the most comprehensive implementation of XSLT 2.0 and XPath 2.0, so its interfaces and extensions are covered in some detail. Appendix G: Altova: Altova, the developers of XML Spy, have an XSLT 2.0 processor that can be used either as part of the development environment or as a freestanding component.This appendix gives details of its interfaces. Appendix H: Glossary Note: CD-ROM/DVD and other supplementary materials are not included as part of eBook file.

Sklep: Libristo.pl

THE BEST OF DAVID BOWIE CD DAVID BOWIE - 2860137206

99,39 zł

THE BEST OF DAVID BOWIE CD DAVID BOWIE WYDAWCA

Muzyka > Płyty kompaktowe

CD 1 1. Space Oddity 2. The Man Who Sold The World 3. Oh! You Pretty Things 4. Changes  5. Life On Mars? 6. Starman 7. Ziggy Stardust 8. Suffragette City 9. John, I'm Only Dancing 10. The Jean Genie 11. Drive-In Saturday  12. Sorrow 13. Diamond Dogs 14. Rebel Rebel 15. Young Americans 16. Fame  17. Golden Years 18. TVC15 19. Wild Is The Wind   CD 2 1. Sound And Vision  2. Heroes  3. Boys Keep Swinging  4. Under Pressure (With Queen)  5. Ashes To Ashes  6. Fashion  7. Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps)  8. Lets Dance  9. China Girl  10. Modern Love  11. Blue Jean  12. This Is Not America (With The Pat Metheny Group)  13. Loving The Alien  14. Dancing In The Street (With Mick Jagger)  15. Absolute Beginners  16. Jump They Say  17. Hallo Spaceboy (PSB Remix)  18. Little Wonder  19. Im Afraid Of Americans (VI)  20. Slow Burn (Radio Edit)

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