Java Persistence With Hibernate
Christian Bauer, Gavin King
Manning Publications; Revised ed. edition (November 24, 2006)
ISBN-10: 1932394885
ISBN-13: 978-1932394887
904 pages
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About: Java Persistence With Hibernate If you are looking to buy a book on the use of Hibernate, this is one of the books you should buy. It is a thorough coverage of native Hibernate, JPA (the only reason that the General Assembly is the standard, it never hurts) and Hibernate implementation of the General Assembly. It also covers the object / relational mapping and various "architectural" alternatives to the use of solid objects in the application. This thick book - it should be, it covers a lot of land, and contains many details. I do not want to go, PDF versions, it weighs less, and you can use to read PDF searchable text. I will name a square: "BRU with Hibernate and EJB3". This book sends loads of excellent information. This is a great domain Model "caveat Emptor" should be used for the background on which much of the book is based on auction in the complications of technology. * Part 1 (about 150 pages) is an example of focus, and looks at how you can use Ant tasks, in turn, Java community, explaining the meta-data or in combination with XML, DDL / SQL, and vice versa. * The following 540 pages (Part 2 and Part 3 of Part One) constitutes a large part of the book. This part is more of reference. This material is very informative but slightly slogin, heavy current and dry periods. Instead, the burden of old brains! The model in general, namely:
--> Hibernate way of doing things. Sometimes this XML. Sometimes, with annotations.
--> EJB3 way.
--> How can Hibernate EJB3 compliment, and sometimes vice versa.
--> Summirovaniya two technologies.
- The last two chapters of Part 3 (following 200 pages) high, and what to do with the book really shine. They will return to a more simple to understand, such as watches and das all together. Penultimate chapter is good to talk about architecture. (Sorry, you must invest through a detailed reference section to better understand all). Moreover, it is interesting introduction to TestNG.
- The final figure will continue to show seams. In this framework, it lost some of the pitfalls and JSF. It certainly got oman their interest to learn Seam and rekindled their interest in JSF.
- A final note. This is also important SQL reference to the boat. Great Christian work and Gavin!
Resources
Author(s)
Christian Bauer is a member of the Hibernate developer team and a trainer, consultant, and product manager for Hibernate, EJB 3.0, and JBoss Seam at JBoss. Gavin King, a lead developer at JBoss, is the founder of the Hibernate project, and a member of the EJB 3.0 (JSR 220) expert group. He also leads the Web Beans JSR 299, a standardization effort involving Hibernate concepts, JSF, and EJB 3.0.Contact
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