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I just wanted to say that the Java Multimedia Cyber Classroom Training Course, Second Edition is greatlove it. It's great to see an applet work using the skills I've gained from this course Joseph Casale, Principal Chemist, Connecticut Department of Health. I recently purchased The Java Multimedia Cyber Classroom. I found this multimedia disc to be the best investment I ever made. This interactive way of presenting Java is aweso. Introduction to Computers, the Internet and the Web. Introduction to Java Applications.
Introduction to Java Applets. Control Structures: Part 1. Control Structures: Part 2. Object-Based Programming. Object-Oriented Programming.
Strings and Characters. Graphics and Java 2D.
Basic Graphical User Interface Components. Advanced Graphical User Interfaces. Exception Handling. Multimedia: Images, Animation, Audio and Video.
Files and Streams. Java Database Connectivity (JDBC).
Remote Method Invocation (RMI). Data Structures.
Java Utilities Package and Bit Manipulation. Appendix A: Demos. Appendix B: Java Resources. Appendix C: Operator Precedence Chart. Appendix D: ASCII Character Set.
Appendix E: Number Systems. Appendix F: Object-Oriented Elevator Simulator.
Appendix G: Creating HTML Documentation with javadoc. Appendix H: Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB) Web Resources. Appendix I: Jini Web Resources.
If after attempting installation with the following directions you have questions regarding software intallation, please contact technical support by email at or call 1-800-677-6337. How do I install the software from the CD-ROM included in the back of Java How to Program, Third Edition? NOTE: The following instructions assume you are familiar with the Microsoft Windows® Operating System (Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows NT or Windows 2000). If you are not familiar with Microsoft Windows, please ask your teaching assistant or professor for help. NOTE: The following instructions assume that you install each piece of software in its default installation directory.
There are three products included on this CD-ROM:. from Sun Microsystems. NOTE: The latest version of this is Java 2 SDK version 1.3 and is available from. The examples in this book will work with version 1.3.
from Borland. NOTE: The name of this product has changed to JBuilder Foundation Edition.
A more recent version of this product can be found. The new version is more robust and faster than the University Edition included on the CD in Java How to Program, 3/e. from NetBeans. NOTE: NetBeans is now owned by Sun Microsystems.
The name of this product has changed to Forte for Java. A more recent version of this product can be found at. Each of these pieces of software has its own installation program.
All of these installation programs are linked to the Welcome.html document located in the root directory of the CD-ROM (Note: On some computers running the Windows operating system, this file name may display as simply Welcome). Please read this file carefully. If you use Microsoft Internet Explorer as your Web browser, you can open the Welcome.html file from the CD-ROM. This file links directly to the installation programs for each of the products listed above. When you click the installation link for a specific program, Internet Explorer will display a dialog box asking if you would like to open the file from its current location or save the file to disk. Choose open the file from its current location and click OK.
This will execute the installation program for the product. Follow the prompts supplied by the installation program.
Unless you are an experienced programmer, you should keep all the default options specified by the installation program for the product you chose. More specific installation directions are provided for each product below. If you use Netscape Navigator/Communicator as your Web browser, you should still read the Welcome.html file from the CD-ROM.
Unfortunately, clicking the links to the installation programs for each product only gives you the option of saving the program to disk. Please see the more detailed installation instructions below for information on installing each product directly from the CD-ROM.
Installing directly from the CD NOTE: The latest version of this is Java 2 SDK version 1.3 and is available from. The examples in this book will work with version 1.3. Open Windows Explorer. Select the CD-ROM drive in the Folders pane (i.e., the left side of Windows Explorer). Be sure to click directly on the CD-ROM drive and not the + to its left.
This will display the contents of the CD-ROM in the contents pane (i.e., the right side of Windows Explorer). Double-click the Java2 SDK directory in the contents pane to display the contents of that directory. The README.html file in this directory contains important information about system requirements and installation.Note: The installation links on this page link directly to the Sun Microsystem's Web site, so you will need to be connected to the internet to see those pages. Double-click the Win32 directory. The directory contains the directory jdk1.2.1, the file jdk121-doc.zip (which may display as jdk121-doc) and the file jdk121-win.exe (which may display as jdk121-win). The jdk1.2.1 directory contains the Java 2 SDK on-line documentation. See for directions on copying this documentation to your hard disk.
The file jdk121-doc.zip is an archived version of the documentation in the jdk1.2.1 directory. The file jdk121-win.exe is the installation program. Double-click the file jdk121-win.exe (on some systems, this will display simply as jdk121-win) to launch the installation program.
You will be lead through a series of steps by an installation wizard. In the Welcome window, click Next. In the Software License Agreement window, read the agreement, then click Yes if you agree to the terms. In the Choose Destination Location window, click Next.
In the Select Components window, click Next. The installer will copy files for the Java 2 SDK to your hard disk in the directory c: jdk1.2.1. Then, the installer will begin the installation for the Java 2 Runtime Environment. In the Software License Agreement window, read the agreement, then click Yes if you agree to the terms. In the Choose Destination Location window, click Next.
The installer will copy files for the Java 2 Runtime Environment to your hard disk in the directory c: Program File JavaSoft Jre 1.2. In the Setup Complete window click Finish. After the installation is complete, carefully read the file c: jdk1.2.1 README.html. It contains important information about the Java 2 SDK. You will need to create a PATH environment (, ) variable that helps your computer locate the Java compiler and Java interpreter on your hard disk. In the Java2 SDK Win32 directory on the CD is a directory called jdk1.2.1. This directory contains the documentation for the Java 2 SDK.
Simply copy this directory onto your c: drive. Doing so will create a docs subdirectory below C: JDK1.2.1. To view the documentation, open the file c: jdk1.2.1 docs index.html in your Web browser. The part of the documentation you will be most concerned with is the API (Application Programming Interface) Specification that can be found at c: jdk1.2.1 docs api index.html. On this page be sure to click the Help link in the upper-right corner of the page to learn how to use the on-line documentation.
Creating/Modifying the PATH environment variable in the AUTOEXEC.BAT file for. Click the Start button (lower-left corner of your screen). Select Run. Type sysedit and press OK. This displays the System Configuration Editor which allows you to edit the autoexec.bat file (and several others).
The default file to edit is C: AUTOEXEC.BAT (the window containing this file is in the foregound). As the last line in this file, add SET PATH=C: JDK1.2.1 BIN;%PATH%. In the File menu, select Save. In the File menu, select Exit. Restart your computer so the changes take effect. Creating/Modifying the PATH environment variable in.
Click the Start button (lower-left corner of your screen). Go to Settings.
Select Control Panel. In the Control Panel, double-click System. Click the Environment tab.
This tab contains two areas: System Variables and User Variables. In the User environment variables section, check if there is a PATH variable already defined (you may need to scroll through that part of the window). If not, skip to step 10. Click the PATH variable. This displays PATH in the Variable field at the bottom of the window and the current path setting in the Value field at the bottom of the window.
Click in the Value field and use the right arrow key to scroll to the end of the text in that text field. Type the following at the end (NOTE: Be sure to place a semicolon after the current value):;C: JDK1.2.1 BIN The semicolon is only required if there is not one already there.
Skip to step 12. If the PATH variable is not defined, click in the Variable field at the bottom of the window and type PATH. Click in the Value field and type C: JDK1.2.1 BIN. Click the Set button then close the window. It is extremely important that you click Set first, otherwise the new setting will not be saved. You are now ready to use the Java 2 SDK.
If you had any Command Prompt windows open before you set the PATH, these will need to be closed and re-opened for the new PATH setting to take effect. You do not need to restart your computer. NOTE: The name of this product has changed to JBuilder Foundation Edition. A more recent version of this product can be found.
The new version is more robust and faster than the University Edition included on the CD in Java How to Program, 3/e. Open Windows Explorer.
Select the CD-ROM drive in the Folders pane (i.e., the left side of Windows Explorer). Be sure to click directly on the CD-ROM drive and not the + to its left. This will display the contents of the CD-ROM in the contents pane (i.e., the right side of Windows Explorer).
Double-click the Jb30edurt directory in the contents pane. Double-click the setup directory in the contents pane. Double-click the jbuilder directory in the contents pane to display the installation files for JBuilder3 University Edition. Double-click the file Setup.exe (on some systems, this will display simply as Setup) to launch the installation program. You will be lead through a series of screens by an installation wizard.
In the Welcome window, click Next. In the Software License Agreement window, read the agreement, then click Yes if you agree to the terms.
In the Installation Notes window, read the notes, then click Next. In the Choose Destination Location window, click Next. In the Setup Type window, click Next. In the Select Program Folder window, click Next. In the Start Copying Files window, click Next.
This will place the files into C: Jbuilder3. In the Product Notes window, read the README.txt file, then click Next. In the Setup Complete window, click Finish. NOTE: After the installation is complete, you can access all the Readme files for this product by clicking your Start button, selecting Programs, selecting Borland JBuilder 3 University and selecting the appropriate file ( Deployment Information, Hints and Tips, Installation Information, License Agreement or Readme). NOTE: When you run JBuilder3 and select Help Topics from the Help menu, you will find a Quck Start guide to help get you started using JBuilder. NOTE: This is not the complete professional version of JBuilder 3. It does not include many of the automatic code generation features that are part of the professional versions of the product.
This product does allow you to write and compile the programs in this book with the same restrictions as the Java 2 SDK (i.e., some additional downloads will be required for some of the high-end chapters). NOTE: NetBeans is now owned by Sun Microsystems. The name of this product has changed to Forte for Java. A more recent version of this product can be found at.
Follow the directions for installing the first. THIS IS REQUIRED!. Open Windows Explorer. Select the CD-ROM drive in the Folders pane (i.e., the left side of Windows Explorer).
Be sure to click directly on the CD-ROM drive and not the + to its left. This will display the contents of the CD-ROM in the contents pane (i.e., the right side of Windows Explorer).
Double-click the NetBeans directory in the contents pane to display the installation files for NetBeans Developer X2 2.1. Double-click the file nbdx221.exe (on some systems, this will display simply as nbdx221) to launch the installation program. You will be lead through a series of screens by an installation wizard. In the NetBeans DeveloperX2 2.1 - Welcome window, click Continue. In the Welcome window, click Next. In the Software License Agreement window, read the agreement, then click Yes if you agree to the terms.
In the NetBeans DeveloperX2 Readme window, read the notes, then click Next. In the User Information window, type your name and company/school, then click Next. In the Choose Destination Location window, click Next. In the Choose a Compatible Java Virtual Machine window, click Next. In the Start Copying Files window, click Next. This will place the files into.
In the Setup Complete window, click Finish. Note: After completing the installation, you will probably want to use the NetBeans DeveloperX2 tutorial to familiarize yourself with the product. When you run DeveloperX2, select Tutorial from the Help menu to access the tutorial. Also, the complete User's Guide is avaiable by selecting Contents from the Help menu.
Hi, I'm a student in CIS and I'm completely new to all this Java world so I got a couple of questions that maybe someone could answer for me, and I would appreciate. I got JBuilder 2 standard edition that came with the professional edition of BCB4 installed on my computer, I also have MS J enterprise edition installed. Like I said I'm a student and I'm taking a Java course next term, and with the book comes a version of JBuilder 3 University edition. My first question is, should I install this version on my computer or the standard edition of JBuilder 2 it's better? I never heard about a University edition, usually the software I can get at college is the professional versions, and the only difference is the price which is much lower. Is this university edition a professional edition of JBuilder 3?
My other questions are not 'related' to JBuilder but I'm sure that someone here would have more knowledge than me. What is the Java 2 SDK? This book comes also with the standard edition of this, is a good idea to install it?
Ebay banned the sale of murderabilia in 2001. In December 2008, the website launched and in February 2009, the website was redesigned to include a store to sell art, letters, hair and clothing obtained from infamous and news-worthy inmates. In 2006, Holler began writing and corresponding with inmates once again in preparation of building a new website. Telecharger youtube.
And what about NetBeans DeveloperX2? All this comes in the book's CD-ROM, and I don't know if is a good idea to install it or if its a worst version of something that I probably have installed when installing JBuilder 2 professional or J enterprise. Thanks for reading, and happy programming.
Josh Fletcher (Borland) 00:00. Isaac, The 'University Edition' of JBuilder has no Designer. If you truly have the University Edition and not the 'Academic priced' version of JBuilder 3 then you will not be able to visually design your programs (which is probably a good thing if you are learning Java). Also note that JBuilder 2 uses JDK 1.1.6 whereas JBuilder 3 uses JDK 1.2. This may be an issue for your class as it is possible that code you write for 1.2 may not run in 1.1.x and visa versa.
Hope this helps, Josh - Josh Fletcher JBuilder Developer Support Mail sent to me from the newsgroups won't bounce but will be ignored. Please confine your posts to the newsgroups. Bug Reports and Feature Requests: Disclaimer James Cook 00:00.
Jbuilder Download
CodeGear Announces JBuilder 2007 URL: At 2:36 PM on Nov 20, 2006, wrote: Today, CodeGear, formerly known as the Developer Tools Group of Borland Software Corporation, announced JBuilder 2007, an enterprise-class IDE built on Eclipse to make collaborative development fast and reliable for Java, open source and the web. JBuilder 2007 accelerates developer velocity with Visual EJB and web services GUIs, provides balance between the worlds of open source and commercial software with TeamInsight, an integrated collaboration portal, and increases developer confidence, through better control over open source plug-ins. Improving on its acclaimed Rapid Application Development (RAD) and team collaboration capabilities, JBuilder 2007 (formerly codenamed 'Peloton') has been completely redesigned to leverage the Eclipse platform and help organizations be more successful and productive with open source. (from the press release) Borland announced over a year ago that the next version of JBuilder would be a souped up Eclipse - an announcement which produced a great deal of controversy I might add.
Just last week, Borland announced that it was splitting off its tool development division into a whole owned subsidiary, CodeGear. Hot on the heals of that announcement is the release of JBuilder 2007 for purchase. I'm not going to reiterate the entire press release, but suffice it to say, this sounds like a really exciting new tool. Team collaboration, EJB development, and of course the famed Borland (sorry, CodeGear) RAD tools. Loads of goodies.
Personally, I can't wait for someone to get a copy of this and write a review - either on a blog or (better yet) here on EclipseZone. Does anybody still believe that the latest and greatest JBuilder won't live up to its illustrious legacy? EDIT: As a correction to the above, it looks like I was wrong about JBuilder being available for download. Apparently I misread the Borland site. Anyway, the announcement just 'announces' JBuilder 2007. The IDE itself isn't available yet to the general public.
At 4:27 PM on Nov 20, 2006, wrote: Re: CodeGear Releases JBuilder 2007 From the press release. Pricing and Availability JBuilder 2007 will be generally available for purchase later this quarter, with introductory pricing for new users, upgrades and renewals.
Seems odd to release a big statement in the present tense, but then not have it available immediately. Unless, of course, they wanted to get the name (CodeGear) out there again immediately and piggyback the press. Which wouldn't be a terrible move, just a bit confusing for the end user. Notice it says they 'announced' it, not the.availability.
of it. Jens, MyEclipse,. At 7:30 PM on Nov 20, 2006, wrote: Re: CodeGear Releases JBuilder 2007 Crumb cake! Both you and Roman are quite right. I actually did check the 'Buy Now' link.before.
I posted, but for some reason I read 2006 as 2007. (only one char off, right?) Well, I'm officially eating crow: JBuilder 2007 has.not. been released, just announced. Which, I must say, suprises me a little bit since we already new that JBuilder 2007 would be based on Eclipse, so why put out a press release solely devoted to that fact?
Fabfilter saturn license key. An Easier Java ORM; Resource Injection for Java. At 10:35 AM on Nov 21, 2006, wrote: Re: CodeGear Announces JBuilder 2007 Hey Daniel, thanks for posting about JBuilder 2007. Regarding availability, it should be available to order today, and trial versions after Christmas. I'd like to repond to some of the comments on the thread. JBuilder 2007 is far from a pre-packaged Eclipse distro.
At 4:23 PM on Nov 21, 2006, wrote: Re: CodeGear Announces JBuilder 2007 Working for a rather large corporate who has an enterprise deal with Borland. When we entered that I thought great but JBuilder has gone down hill a bit recently. On my last project we used Eclipse and I generally preferred it (remote debugging with WebLogic was not so good). On current project switched back to JBuilder and felt as if I had gone back a bit in time (Using JBuilderX). That said the CodeGear announcement did excite me (OK I do not have to pay for JBuilder but projects in my place do NOT have to use it). On my current project I am also using Together 2006 (due to the need to import stuff from Rose - which does not work in JBuilder version of JBuilderX). Of course, no round tripping here.
At 10:51 PM on Nov 21, 2006, wrote: Re: CodeGear Announces JBuilder 2007 For now what I would like (and prevent me joining in the general winge of developers about Borland) is: Let me try to answer a few of the following. At 2:14 AM on Nov 22, 2006, wrote: Re: CodeGear Announces JBuilder 2007 Interesting. In the Q&A after the demo Borland gave us they (Borland technical reps) said that it did support WebLogic 8.1. Real shame that (it was not listed in your set of application servers), I fancied using it (after the first service pack) Ever the optimist, is WebLogic 8.1/Java 1.4 support planned for one of the early service packs? At 2:16 AM on Nov 22, 2006, wrote: Re: CodeGear Announces JBuilder 2007 3) Don't break the Eclipse way of doing things Major headache for people who like the JBuilder way of doing things. 4) Don't duplicate or try to 'out do' what's already great and available in open source What about keeping what's good in JBuilder instead of dropping it all and running headlong after the herd? the introductory price is identical to the regular price of the previous version The Enterprise edition is significantly lower cost (competetive with WSAD and BEA), and the Professional edition is new.
The Pro edition is hardly new. I know it was called the 'Developer edition' for a few years, but what's in a name? JB2007 Pro costs the same in the 'introductory offer' as what I paid for JB2005 Developer as the regular price. which was based on code Borland wrote themselves rather than getting free from others. We've always provided a free fully usable version of JBuilder.
Odds are if you learned Java in a University or from a text book then you probably learned on either the free JBuilder Foundation edition or University edition. We have always built I didn't. Text editors are and should be the preferred way to teach a language, not IDEs. the JBuilder business above the free basic's - our goal is always to increase individual and team productivity or 'value' by 25% to 33%. Ie help you And it's worked so far.
But I doubt you'll get that from selling Eclipse with some nice new graphics. get 1/3 more done per week, or with 1/3 fewer team members, or in 1/3 less time. We price the tools so that they are a small fraction of the value we're designing them to provide you. If you don't require Tell that to managers. They as a rule don't see things like that, most people I've ever worked with bought their own tools because their employers wouldn't fund them.
That's why you failed to 'gain the enterprise', the 'enterprise' doesn't care about developers or their needs. In fact, the larger the company the LESS likely it is to have a decently funded (per person) program for purchasing developer tooling (rather than multi million dollar application server farms). I've worked for multinationals where the development teams were working with either notepad or personal laptops with IDEs purchased from their own hard earned money because the company wouldn't allow them to purchase anything on company budget and wouldn't allow any software to be installed on the workstations either. At 2:12 AM on Nov 23, 2006, wrote: Re: CodeGear Announces JBuilder 2007 You're lucky then. I've worked for more than one multinational (though always as an outside contractor, maybe departments hiring those were the ones with lower tool budgets, it can happen) and rarely had access to more than an operating system and MS Office (or equivalent for other OSs). If there was other tooling, it was provided by appserver sellers (like Silverstream which came out of the box with something akin to an IDE).
If more tools were available there was always the nagging suspicion they were pirated. Noone'd ever seen CDs, license keys were written down in dogeared notebooks in between telephone numbers and addresses, things like that.
Summary: Looking at how to use Java, this guide offers a stronger emphasis on applications rather than applets. Chapters include such topics as Java database connectivity, servlets, JavaBeans and remote method invocation Item Description: System requirements: Borland Jbuilder 3, University edition: Intel Pentium 90MHz or higher; Microsoft Windows 95 or Windows NT; 24 Mb (32 Mb recommended) RAM; 50 Mb hard disk space.
Java 2 SDK, Standard edition, v. 1.2.1: Win32 Version for Windows 95, Windows 98 and Windows NT 4.0 on Intel hardware; 486/DX or faster processor, or Solaris/SPARC versions 2.5.1, 2.6 and 7 (also known as 2.7), or Solaris/Intel Versions 2.5.1, 2.6 and 7 (also known as 2.7); 486/DX or faster processor; 32 MB RAM minimum (48 MB recommended). NetBeans DeveloperX2 2.1: X86 platforms; minimum configuration, Windows 95/98/NT/Linux; Pentium 133; 48 MB RAM (Pentium 200, 96 MB RAm recommended), or Sparc; SparcStation 5; 170MHz; 96 MB RAM (UltraSPARC 5; 270 Mhz; 128 MB RAM recommended), or Macintosh; PowerPC 90MHz; 64 MB RAM (PowerPC 200MHz; 96 MB RAM recommended).
Physical Description: lx, 1355 p.: col. + Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references (p.
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