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Author - Eric Allen ... [Goo?] [Posters]This Paperback Book item from Apress was reviewed on 21-Jun-2008. Search ISBN:1590590619 offer from Abebooks or used books from Alibris. Bug Patterns In Java Reference Book. Classifications : Java Beginner's Guides JavaBeans Reference Servlets Programming Computers & Internet Subjects Books Debugging Languages & Tools Programming Computers & Internet Subjects Books Software Development Sof . Click the following link to view the cover of Bug Patterns In Java. Related topics: Java. Beginner´s Guides. JavaBeans. Reference. Servlets. Programming. Subjects. Books. Debugging. Languages & Tools. requestid: cc953111-993e-4958-9ca5-dc6af10a0a01requestprocessingtime: 0.0670920000000000 salesrank: 1031954 numberofitems: 1 packagedimensions: 3091055740 1) Paperback Book Bug Patterns In Java by Apress. Books that improve my technical communication skills are few and far between; either the advice is too general or it is simply repeating something Gerald Weinberg once said. Still, being able to explain something to a colleague without sounding authoritative is difficult. My belief is that conversations with a colleague should be collegial, and one thing that can set us on equal footing is checklists.
2) Paperback Book Bug Patterns In Java by Apress. Bugs. All code has them to one degree or another and they always seem to take twice as long to fix as the original code took to write. This book boils thirteen of the most common bugs down to their root causes and formulates them as ´bug patterns´. Each bug pattern describes how to identify the bug by the symptoms it exhibits, why the bug is occurring, and gives one or more suggestions to fix it and prevent it from occurring again. 3) Paperback Book Bug Patterns In Java by Apress. The author presents a different way to look on bugs and the debugging process. I could recognize most of the bug patterns as regular acquaintances from my daily work. What I liked most was the way he made clear how Java´s type system can be used to eliminate certain kinds of bugs but that there´s a trade off between static typing and duplication in code. In other words, to remove some sorts of duplication you sometimes have to forgo static typing in Java.¤ 4) Paperback Book Bug Patterns In Java by Apress. Time is a very valuable resource on every project, and this book can help conserve that resource. The first six chapters of the book present defect management within the larger concept of Agile development methods. Chapters 7-20 detail various bug patterns with symptoms, causes, cures, and preventions. The remainder of the book provides some nice resources like a diagnostic checklist, a glossary, a reference list, and an index. I recognized some of the patterns from the author´s column on developerWorks, but the book does a solid of pulling them together to present debugging as a rather orderly and scientific process. The author relies on his real project experience with the DrJava project to illustrate his examples. Various tables are available to link concepts with potential bug patterns or problems to a bug pattern that could be related. The patterns are explained and depicted with code with each chapter having a summary of the concepts at the end. Tips and variations on the patterns are sprinkled in the text. I found the glossary of particularly helpful. The text is easy to read and the examples are clearly explained. This book and "Bitter Java" may have a good "ROI" as required reading for Java developers.¤ 5) Paperback Book Bug Patterns In Java by Apress. A great Java resource for programmers of widely varying experience levels. Author found the perfect balance between theory and practical application. There is a wealth of useful information in the chapters devoted to detailed descriptions of the symptoms and cures for the most common and/or most troublesome Java bugs. The book is organized in a very friendly way, making it an excellent reference. I plan on keeping this book very handy.¤ 6) Paperback Book Bug Patterns In Java by Apress. Bug Patterns in Java presents a methodology for diagnosing and debugging computer programs. The act of debugging will be presented as an ideal application of the scientific method. Skill in this area is entirely independent of other programming skills, such as designing for extensibility and reuse. Nevertheless, it is seldom taught explicitly. Eric Allen lays out a theory of debugging, and how it relates to the rest of the development cycle. In particular, he stresses the critical role of unit testing in effective debugging. At the same time, he argues that testing and debugging, while often conflated, are properly considered to be distinct tasks. Upon laying this groundwork, Allen then discusses various "bug patterns" (recurring relationships between signaled errors and underlying bugs in a program) that occur frequently in computer programs. For each pattern, the book discusses how to identify them, how to treat them, and how to prevent them. ¤Page Updated: Robert N. Goolsby, 19-Jul-2008, 15905906199781590590614, 580-670-010-150-470-191-761-8
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