Absolute Java, 6th edition

Published by Pearson (April 15, 2015) © 2016

  • Walter Savitch University of California, San Diego
  • Kenrick Mock
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  • Loose-leaf, 3-hole-punched pages

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For courses in computer programming and engineering.

Beginner to Intermediate Programming in Java

This book is designed to serve as a textbook and reference for programming in the Java language. Although it does include programming techniques, it is organized around the features of the Java language rather than any particular curriculum of programming techniques. 

The main audience is undergraduate students who have not had extensive programming experience with the Java language. 
The introductory chapters are written at a level that is accessible to beginners, while the boxed sections of those chapters serve to quickly introduce more experienced programmers to basic Java syntax. Later chapters are still designed to be accessible, but are written at a level suitable for students who have progressed to these more advanced topics.

Chapter 1: GETTING STARTED

Chapter 2: CONSOLE INPUT AND OUTPUT

Chapter 3: FLOW OF CONTROL

Chapter 4: DEFINING CLASSES I

Chapter 5: DEFINING CLASSES II

Chapter 6: ARRAYS

Chapter 7: INHERITANCE

Chapter 8 POLYMORPHISM AND ABSTRACT CLASSES

Chapter 9: EXCEPTION HANDLING

Chapter 10: FILE I/O

Chapter 11: RECURSION

Chapter 12: UML AND PATTERNS

Chapter 13: INTERFACES AND INNER CLASSES

Chapter 14: GENERICS AND THE ArrayList CLASS

Chapter 15: LINKED DATA STRUCTURES

Chapter 16: COLLECTIONS, MAPS AND ITERATORS

Chapter 17: SWING I

Chapter 18: SWING II

Chapter 19: JAVA NEVER ENDS

Chapter 20: APPLETS AND HTML

Appendix 1 KEYWORDS

Appendix 2 PRECEDENCE AND ASSOCIATIVITY RULES

Appendix 3 ASCII CHARACTER SET

Appendix 4 FORMAT SPECIFICATIONS FOR printf

Appendix 5 SUMMARY OF CLASSES AND INTERFACES

INDEX 1215

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