Effective Java Programming Language Guide

Joshua Bloch

  • 出版商: Addison Wesley
  • 出版日期: 2001-06-15
  • 售價: $2,170
  • 貴賓價: 9.5$2,062
  • 語言: 英文
  • 頁數: 272
  • 裝訂: Paperback
  • ISBN: 0201310058
  • ISBN-13: 9780201310054
  • 相關分類: Java 程式語言
  • 已過版

買這商品的人也買了...

相關主題

商品描述


Description

Effective Java is an explicit (and acknowledged) homage to Scott Meyer's Effective C++. Josh Bloch shares the programming practices of the most expert Java programmers with the rest of the programming community. Distilling the habits of experienced programmers into 50 short stand-alone essays, Bloch has laid out the most essential and effective Java rules, providing comprehensive descriptions of techniques. The essays address practical problems that all Java programmers encounter, presents specific ways to improve programs and designs, and also shows how to avoid traps in Java programming. An enormously useful book, each essay contains top notch code examples and insightful "war stories" that help capture the students' attention.

CS0628:

Java--Intermediate Programming

Back to Top


Appropriate Courses



Back to Top


Table Of Contents

CHAPTER = Foreword. Preface.
Acknowledgements.
1. Introduction.
2. Creating and Destroying Objects.
Consider Providing Static Factory Methods Instead of Constructors.
Enforce the Singleton Property with a Private Constructor.
Enforce Noninstantiability with a Private Constructor.
Avoid Creating Duplicate Objects.
Eliminate Obsolete Object References.
Avoid Finalizers.

3. Methods Common to All Objects.
Obey the General Contract when Overriding Equals.
Always Override HashCode When You Override Equals.
Always Override toString. Override Clone Judiciously.
Consider Implementing Comparable.

4. Classes and Interfaces.
Minimize the Accessibility of Classes and Members.
Favor Immutability. Favor Composition Over Inheritance.
Design and Document for Inheritance or Else Prohibit It.
Prefer Interfaces to Abstract Classes. Use Interfaces Only to Define Types.
Favor Static Member Classes Over Non-Static.

5. Substitutes for C Constructs.
Replace Structures with Classes.
Replace Unions with Class Hierarchies.
Replace Enums with Classes.
Replace Function Pointers with Classes and Interfaces.

6. Methods.
Check Parameters for Validity.
Make Defensive Copies when Needed.
Design Method Signatures Carefully.
Use Overloading Judiciously.
Return Zero-Length Arrays, Not Nulls.
Write Doc Comments for All Exposed API Elements.

7. General Programming.
Minimize the Scope of Local Variables.
Know and Use the Libraries.
Avoid Float and Double if Exact Answers are Required.
Avoid Strings where Other Types are More Appropriate.
Beware the Performance of String Concatenation.
Refer to Objects by their Interfaces.
Prefer Interfaces to Reflection.
Use Native Methods Judiciously.
Optimize Judiciously.
Adhere to Generally Accepted Naming Conventions.

8. Exceptions.
Use Exceptions Only for Exceptional Conditions.
Use Checked Exceptions for Recoverable Conditions.
Runtime Exceptions for Programming Errors.
Avoid Unnecessary Use of Checked Exceptions.
Favor the Use of Standard Exceptions.
Throw Exceptions Appropriate to the Abstraction.
Document All Exceptions Thrown by Each Method.
Include Failure-Capture Information in Detail Messages.
Strive for Failure Atomicity.
Don't Ignore Exceptions.

9. Threads.
Synchronize Access to Shared Mutable Data.
Avoid Excessive Synchronization.
Never Invoke Wait Outside a Loop.
Don't Depend on the Thread Scheduler.
Document Thread-Safety.
Avoid Thread Groups.

10. Serialization.
Implement Serializable Judiciously.
Consider Using a Custom Serialized Form.
Write ReadObject Methods Defensively.
Provide a ReadResolve Method when Necessary.

References.
Index. 0201310058T04232001


Back to Top