Computers & Technology
Home Computing
Business & Culture
Programming
Software
Web Development
Certification
Networking
Security & Encryption
Computer Science
Operating Systems
Microsoft
Hardware
Databases
Graphic Design
Apple
Digital Music
Digital Photography & Video
Games & Strategy Guides
Project Management
Mobile & Wireless Computing
Education & Reference
Encyclopedias
Test Preparation
Studying & Workbooks
Schools & Teaching
Writing, Research & Publishing Guides
Foreign Language Study & Reference
Atlases & Maps
Dictionaries & Thesauruses
Words, Language & Grammar
College & University
Trivia & Fun Facts
Consumer Guides
Business & Investing
Industries & Professions
Management & Leadership
Organizational Behavior
Personal Finance
Small Business & Entrepreneurship
Popular Economics
Marketing & Sales
Finance
Skills
Business Life
Economics
Job Hunting & Careers
Biography & History
Reference
International
Real Estate
Investing
Women & Business
Science & Math
Mathematics
Technology
Reference
Earth Sciences
Physics
Biological Sciences
Behavioral Sciences
Nature & Ecology
Astronomy & Space Science
History & Philosophy
Experiments, Instruments & Measurement
Agricultural Sciences
Table of content
Mac OS X for Java Geeks
Authors:
Iverson W.
Published year: 2005
Pages: 1/105
Buy this book on amazon.com >>
1
2
Main Page
Main Page
Table of content
Copyright
Preface
Organization
Conventions Used in This Book
Comments and Questions
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1. Getting Oriented
1.1 All Those Confusing Names
1.2 Why Now?
Chapter 2. Apple s Java Platform
2.1 Apple JVM Basics
2.2 Apple s JVM Directory Layout
2.3 Additional APIs and Services
2.4 Going Forward
Chapter 3. Java Tools
3.1 Terminal
3.2 Code Editors
3.3 Jakarta Ant
3.4 Additional Tools
Chapter 4. GUI Applications
4.1 Swing and Aqua
4.2 An Example Swing Application
Chapter 5. Apple Extensions
5.1 The Mac OS X Finder
5.2 Native Access
Chapter 6. Cross-Platform Programming
6.1 GUI Construction
6.2 New Line
6.3 File Encoding
6.4 Threading
6.5 File Separator
6.6 Testing Cross-Platform Compatibility
6.7 For More Information
Chapter 7. Standalone Applications
7.1 Packaging
7.2 JAR Files
7.3 Application Bundles
7.4 Building an Application from Scratch
7.5 MRJAppBuilder
7.6 Next Steps
Chapter 8. Web-Delivered Applications
8.1 Applets
8.2 Java Web Start
8.3 GUI Application Delivery Comparison
8.4 Next Steps
Chapter 9. The Mac OS X Speech Framework
9.1 The Speech API
9.2 Putting Speech to Work
Chapter 10. QuickTime for Java
10.1 Getting Started
10.2 The QuickTime API
10.3 The SimplePlayer Application
Chapter 11. The Mac OS X Spelling Framework
11.1 Getting Set Up
11.2 The Spelling API
11.3 Spelling in Action
Chapter 12. Databases
12.1 Basic Concepts
12.2 Mac OS X Databases
12.3 Next Steps
Chapter 13. Servlets, JSP, and Tomcat
13.1 Apache Tomcat
13.2 Database-Driven JSP Applications
13.3 Frontending Tomcat with Apache
13.4 Next Steps
Chapter 14. EJB and JBoss
14.1 JBoss
14.2 Getting Started with J2EE
14.3 Pushing the Envelope
Chapter 15. Web Services
15.1 RPC
15.2 XML-RPC
15.3 SOAP
15.4 Additional Reading
15.5 Final Thoughts
Colophon
Index
1
2
Mac OS X for Java Geeks
Authors:
Iverson W.
Published year: 2005
Pages: 1/105
Buy this book on amazon.com >>
Book categories
Computers & Technology
Certification
Cisco (57)
Networking
Networks, Protocols & APIs (394)
Education & Reference
Studying & Workbooks
Study Guides (9)