Who Should Read this Book


Although this book speaks from an XP perspective, you need not practice XP to benefit from it. Anyone who needs help automating testing and integration can benefit from the tools and practices outlined herein. If you know nothing about Extreme Programming, you should probably read the rest of this Introduction, along with Chapter 1 to get a sense of the practices covered in this book, both alone and in their XP context. In particular the Introduction touches on the value of automated testing and continuous integration for all developers.

This book assumes you are at least a moderately experienced Java developer. Because it covers the application of testing and integration tools to the J2EE platform, this book also expects familiarity with J2EE technologies and development practices. Those who are not interested in J2EE applications will still find plenty of worthwhile material, because most of these tools can be applied to almost any Java (or, in the case of JMeter and HttpUnit, even non-Java) software project. Developers who arent familiar with J2EE but who want to apply these tools and techniques to a J2EE application may also want to pick up a comprehensive J2EE book like Expert One-on-One: J2EE Design and Development by Rod Johnson.




Professional Java Tools for Extreme Programming
Professional Java Tools for Extreme Programming: Ant, XDoclet, JUnit, Cactus, and Maven (Programmer to Programmer)
ISBN: 0764556177
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2003
Pages: 228

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