A couple of weeks ago yet another ADF book was released. This time it was Grant Ronald’s turn. He managed to write a “Quick Start Guide to Oracle Fusion Development”. I was somewhat worried because it is seemingly impossible to write a Quick Start Guide to Fusion Development. However after reading the book I was [...]
18/4/2010 - 3:56 pm
Tags: bam, book, book review, BPEL, business rule, edn, mediator, review, soa suite 11g
Posted in Books, General, Oracle, SOA & Oracle Fusion Middleware | No comments
Getting Started With Oracle SOA Suite 11g R1: A Hands-On Tutorial
Authors: Demed L’Her, Heidi Buelow, Jayaram Kasi, Manas Deb, Prasen Palvankar (aka Oracle Product Management for SOA Suite)
A hands-on tutorial is what the cover of the book promises, and that is exactly what you get. A quick, very hands-on introduction into the most important components [...]
3/10/2009 - 9:00 am
Tags: book, book review, dom, jaxb, jdeveloper 11g, sax, trax, XML, xsd, xslt
Posted in General, Java, JEE, OAS and WebLogic Server, Oracle | 2 comments
A few months ago I came across a relatively new book: Processing XML Documents with Oracle JDeveloper 11g by Deepak Vohra (370 pages, Packt Publishing, ISBN 978-1-847196-66-8, February 2009).
It is an interesting mix of topics, all having to do with XML and most directly related to JDeveloper. The topcis and chapters do not at [...]
Title: Mastering Oracle SQL, 2nd Edition
Authors: Sanjay Mishra, Alan Beaulieu
ISBN:0-596-00632-2
Publication Date: June 2004
More info can be found at website of O’reilly. There’s also a sample chapter for download.
This weekend I finished reading this book on Oracle SQL. So it’s time to write a review.
After following the 7Up workshop given at AMIS (see: Description Oracle 7Up [...]
17/6/2006 - 1:30 am
I have read 1000 Java Tips, and it’s a very good book. I reccomend to everyone who wants to sharpen your skills.
Dave
http://www.newtechnologyblog.com
http://www.creditrepairfree.org
2/8/2006 - 5:17 pm
I am fully agree with previous poster, this book is a great collection of solutions for non trivial problems. Although it was published by Javafaq.nu, questions and answers there are not form FAQs…
I would say that they are not Frequently Asked Questions and that’s why it is difficult to find answers on them on the web
… only in thies e-book