It lives! it lives!
We are now mere days away from shipping the new JDeveloper 11g Handbook - A guide to Fusion web development". 
Copies will be physically available next Monday just in time for Oracle Openworld. All of us authors will be there at OOW and we'll be more than willing to sign copies - if you can find us. I guess we could make it a kind of competition!
Hopefully the Oracle Bookstore in Moscone West will have a few copies to sell and you'll be able to flick though (and win!) a copy in the OTN Lounge
Comments:
Comment from:
Jean-Marc Desvaux [Visitor]
I'm sure you will like this info:
Pre-ordered October 2008 on Amazon ! One year ago !
Shipped 09 October 2009. Arrival in Mauritius scheduled 13 November 2009.
This one will have made a world tour by boat.
You now know how fanatics some ADF developers are ....
:O)
Jean-Marc
Pre-ordered October 2008 on Amazon ! One year ago !
Shipped 09 October 2009. Arrival in Mauritius scheduled 13 November 2009.
This one will have made a world tour by boat.
You now know how fanatics some ADF developers are ....
:O)
Jean-Marc
Comment from:
Daniel [Visitor]
Hello there! I write from South America - Bolivia, i work as a consultant for the government and we decided to go with ADF
so i ordered my copy a few days ago and hope it helps us to get through.
Would be nice if someone could recommend an ADF training if any exists.
so i ordered my copy a few days ago and hope it helps us to get through.
Would be nice if someone could recommend an ADF training if any exists.
Comment from:
Duncan Mills [Member]
Oracle University do actually have both a basic and and advanced ADF course that is available worldwide - check it out on education.oracle.com
Comment from:
Daniel [Visitor]
Thanks Duncan ;) , but actually we're desperately looking on site training !!
Comment from:
Sturla [Visitor]
Hi,
I got your book 2 weeks ago. I was wondering if you would make the sample code available. I didn't find it on the oraclepressbooks.com.
Anyway, congratulations with the book.
Sturla Thor
I got your book 2 weeks ago. I was wondering if you would make the sample code available. I didn't find it on the oraclepressbooks.com.
Anyway, congratulations with the book.
Sturla Thor
Comment from:
Duncan Mills [Member]
The sample application code is all available - Just go to www.tuhra.com and follow the link for the 11g book - this will navigate you to the sample code website.
Comment from:
Deryck Smith [Visitor]
On Page 346 of the text book Oracle JDeveloper 11g Handbook it says the components in the panelHeader component can be rearranged by drag-and-drop ... how is that done, because I cannot actually click (or select) any of them and then drag it to another location ... same in the Structure window
Comment from:
ruthbenj [Visitor]
Hello Duncan,
I read an old article of yours on using JDeveloper for developing web app, here:
"Swing or JavaServer Faces: Which to Choose?"
http://www.oracle.com/technology/pub/articles/nimphius-mills-swing-jsf.html
and it is quite informative.
I am not a web developer and know very little about it, but I have used Swing before for writing applets. My current tool is Netbeans IDE. I mainly develop (numerical) APIs and this is the reason that I know little about web development. I like the sounds of JSF for web UI.
There is a small app, that I am thinking of developing and since I am familiar with Swing UIs, which is easier to develop a J2EE desktop using Swing or JSF? I know I have to learn J2EE, but whichever tool that gives me minimal learning is the one I prefer. I like the idea of Swing-based J2EE desktop because there will be lots of interactive graphics (ie, dynamic plotings, x-y graphs and may be some Swing-based 3D).
Another question , if it is possible to do it in JSF, but just embed an applet in the app, that can deal with swing-based graphics UI?
Any tips would be much appreciated.
I read an old article of yours on using JDeveloper for developing web app, here:
"Swing or JavaServer Faces: Which to Choose?"
http://www.oracle.com/technology/pub/articles/nimphius-mills-swing-jsf.html
and it is quite informative.
I am not a web developer and know very little about it, but I have used Swing before for writing applets. My current tool is Netbeans IDE. I mainly develop (numerical) APIs and this is the reason that I know little about web development. I like the sounds of JSF for web UI.
There is a small app, that I am thinking of developing and since I am familiar with Swing UIs, which is easier to develop a J2EE desktop using Swing or JSF? I know I have to learn J2EE, but whichever tool that gives me minimal learning is the one I prefer. I like the idea of Swing-based J2EE desktop because there will be lots of interactive graphics (ie, dynamic plotings, x-y graphs and may be some Swing-based 3D).
Another question , if it is possible to do it in JSF, but just embed an applet in the app, that can deal with swing-based graphics UI?
Any tips would be much appreciated.
Comments are closed for this post.